Luke Sutton: Mental health, elite athletes and finding a 'new balance'
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Luke Sutton is trying to change the narrative around mental health and elite athletes, using lessons from his own story.
At the end of a long career in county cricket, team-mates staged an intervention over his alcohol-consumption and self-destructive behaviour. It led to in a spell in 'The Priory' and, ultimately, his recovery.
On retirement, Sutton became an agent for one of those concerned friends, record-breaking England Test bowler Jimmy Anderson. Since then the agency has expanded, taking on footballers, boxers and Olympians.
At the end of 2019, Sutton released a book called Back from the Edge, which recounts the mental descent during his time as a wicketkeeper-batsman and how he turned his life around.
TOPICS
Why did he take such a brutally honest approach to telling his story
The early signs of his alcohol problems
Why the strength of the athletes' personality can be a problem
The imposter syndrome of being 'just good enough to survive'... so he won all the fitness tests
Replacing a legend in the Lancashire side and the pressure that created
The intervention that led to his spell in the Priory
Meeting characters like 'Lenny'
The pressurised world of the athletes and how it is not that different from the general public
The reaction inside sports and outside sports to his problem
Why sport has to do better in its reaction to mental health
Has his experience made him a better agent?
How would Luke have coped with social media in his playing days?
How did Luke's family cope with his story going public?
Writing out his problems v Talking out his problems
The worrying statistics on cricketing suicides
The particular problems of a cricketer's retirement
Could Luke leave cricket behind?
Why society has to change its story of success
Have athletes come to him about their mental health after the book
Spotting problems earlier thanks to his experience
Being prepared to 'leave money on the table' in order to look after a client's mental health
How he started his agency
The reaction of young people to his book compared to the older generations
Lessons outside of sports from Luke's story
How does sport have to change long term
LINKS
Luke Sutton Twitter | LinkedIN
Activate Management Group Website | Twitter
Cricinfo article: How Luke Sutton came back to life
Telegraph article: 'A warning to players and clubs – professional sport is a breeding ground for addiction'