Phil Morris (speedway rider)

Phil Morris
Born (1975-09-10) 10 September 1975
Newport, Wales
Nationality British
Website philmorris.info
Current club information
Career status Retired
Career history
1991–1996, 1998–2004, Reading Racers
1997, 2009 Stoke Potters
2001 Getingarna (SWE)
2002 Norpseed (SWE)
2004 Poole Pirates
2004 Lejonen (SWE)
2005 Newcastle Diamonds
2005 Arena Essex Hammers
2006 Belle Vue Aces
2007 Newport Wasps
2007–2008 Birmingham Brummies
2009 Lakeside Hammers
Team honours
1992, 2004 Elite League Champion
1993 Elite League Fours Champion
1992 Inter League Cup Winner
1998 Premier League KO Cup Winner
2004 Premier League Pairs Champion

Phillip (Phil) William Morris (born 10 September 1975 in Newport, Wales)[1] is a retired British motorcycle speedway rider, who has been playing an active role in the development of young speedway riders in Great Britain, he is the former Team GB Under 21 team manager. He was also the team manager of the Birmingham Brummies for two seasons.

Speedway career

Early years

Phil Morris was the Welsh Schoolboy grasstrack champion at the age of nine and within two years was also the British Youth Grasstrack Champion, a title he won a total of five times. Morris was also a talented rugby player and his physical strength also attracted attention from a Wrestling promotion who wanted him to train with the legendary World of Sport Wrestling great Kendo Nagasaki but Morris declined to concentrate on his first love of Motorcycle racing and he quickly adapted his grasstracking skills to the shale circuit and was signed by the Reading Racers a few days before his 16th Birthday.

Reading Racers

Plunged straight into first team action at the end of the 1991 season, the Welsh teenager was then named in the Racers starting line up for the 1992 season, and was part of the team that won the British League title that season. Morris later admitted in interviews that riding alongside established riders such as Per Jonsson, Jan Andersson and Armando Castagna helped him shape his speedway career. Morris became a key part of the Reading side over the next five seasons and although the club didn't repeat the success of the 1992 season, the Welshman was firmly established in the sport.

He spent the 1997 away from Reading, his home town club Newport Wasps look set to sign him but they changed their mind on a contract offer, so Morris joined Stoke Potters on loan from Reading, before re-joining his parent club for the 1998 season. In 1999 Morris proved himself as a force to be reckoned with in the Premier League and continued this form into the 2000 season, when he won the first speedway meeting of the year, at the New Year Classic on 2 January 2000 at Newport Speedway. The 2000 season was Morris' tenth on the books of Reading Speedway and he was granted a testimonial meeting, which attracted over 3000 people to Reading's Smallmead Stadium. The event was a great success with not only an excellent individual meeting on track which was won by Craig Watson, but also off track the likes of Reading F.C Captain Phil Parkinson and Morris' favourite magician Paul Daniels mingling with supporters.

In 2001 and 2002 Morris continued to prove he was one of the best riders in the Premier League, and he came third in the 2002 Premier League Riders' Championship at Belle Vue. A knee injury suffered in Sweden curtailed his 2003 season, but he was back in the saddle for 2004, and proved his fitness with a superb 12-point maximum in his first meeting back on a difficult track against King's Lynn Stars. This meeting was witnessed by two of his former Wrestling buddies Gez "The Anaconda" Goring and Pretty Boy Valentine, who introduced Morris to their manager Uppy McGuppy. McGuppy was to become firm friends with Morris and later became Morris' mechanic and mentor. Although 2004 was to be his last full-time campaign in Reading colours, he also achieved one of his finest moments in the sport, when he partnered Danny Bird to win the Premier League Riders Pairs Championship.

Life after Reading

For the 2005 season Morris signed with the Newcastle Diamonds, where he proved be a cult figure after flying in specially to meet the fans at a preseason gathering. Niggling injuries meant Morris did not quite live up to expectations. In 2006, he was signed by Elite League Belle Vue, where his long-time friend and multi-world champion Jason Crump was team captain. Morris finished the season with a 4 12-point average.

For the 2007 season, he received the offer to ride for his home town club Newport, some ten years after they had pulled the plug on his contract. Although Morris was their highest scorer in most meetings, the team struggled badly and crowds dwindled, which led to the club cutting costs and Morris agreeing to move on and join fellow Premier League side Birmingham.

Birmingham Brummies

Morris was signed on a full transfer by the Birmingham Brummies in 2008. After a terrific start to the campaign, Morris suffered serious internal injuries in a terrible crash at Mildenhall in early April and on his return to action in late May he suffered another injury, a badly dislocated shoulder at Rye House.

Final years

His injury problems were to have a lasting effect on the Welshman, and, although he returned to the saddle in 2009, signing to ride for the Stoke Potters in the Premier League and starting the season well with some good performances, problems with his shoulder meant his scoring slumped and he was axed from the side, going on to ride for the Workington Comets, where again he struggled for points. He also doubled up with the Lakeside Hammers in the Elite League, where he produced a number of good performances. However, he took a heavy fall at Workington in August, and once again the shoulder was badly dislocated. On the advice of medics he took the decision to retire from speedway to avoid permanent damage to the shoulder. Morris announced his retirement from competitive Speedway at the age of 34 in September 2009. Two years later, in September 2011, Morris staged his farewell meeting at Birmingham Speedway, where he rode 4 laps of the track to warm ovation from a large crowd, to be greeted on the centre green by his boyhood heroes The Chuckle Brothers Barry and Paul.

Management

With the sport in his blood and his obvious passion to be involved in management, he was appointed as head coach of the 2010 Great Britain under 21 team. This proved so successful that he was tasked with responsibility for the management, development and co-ordination of activities with regards to the riders aged 21 and below in British Speedway a role he continued in for the next 4 seasons, with many of the rising stars paying tribute to the hours Morris spent advising and advocating them.

In 2012 he was appointed Assistant Team Manager for the Senior Squad as well, a role he undertook for 2013 Speedway World Cup as well. Morris also successfully lead TeamGB to a series victory over Australia in a series of meetings held on Premier League tracks.

In 2012 Morris returned to the Birmingham Brummies to manage the team, alongside the incumbent manager and promoter Graham Drury. Morris and Drury formed a formidable management team, and in their first year as joint team managers and led the Brummies to the Elite League play-off's, for the first time since the club's reformation in 2006. For the 2013 season Morris took over the full team management duties, where he led the unfancied Brummies to the league's top slot at the end of the season, only to see them lose to Poole Pirates in the grand final. Morris resigned from his position at the end of the campaign, revealing unrest behind the scenes as his main reasons. Morris' decision proved right as the Birmingham Brummies folded early in the 2014 season, with many of Morris' reservations being proved right.

After playing a key role in the development of the newly formed Elite League Rider draft system, which saw young British riders fast tracked into the 2014 Elite League teams, Morris decided to tender his resignation from the role of under 21 coach at the end of the season. In December 2014, he was named the new FIM Race Director for the Speedway Grand Prix World Championship series as well as the Speedway World Cup,[2] following the retirement of Tony Olsson.

Life away from speedway

Outside of the sport Morris owns a chain of snack shops in South Wales and is a keen singer and dancer. In October 2005 he won a Karaoke contest at Pontins in Prestatyn, which led to him performing a duet with Sinitta on Channel Five. In the spring of 2009 under the guidance of Uppy McGuppy he formed a Boyzone tribute band along four close friends, Barry Williams, Joseph Mclaughlin, Andy Hutton and fellow speedway rider Tim Webster. Known as BOYOZONE they soon built up a cult following across Wales and headlined the 2010 Barry Island festival along with Ian "H" Watkins from Steps. Morris played the part of Keith Duffy, performing backing vocals and leading most of the dance routines. The band stopped performing after the 2011 summer season as Hutton who played the part of Ronan Keating quit to concentrate on other media and modelling projects. The band did re-form for a one off performance at The High Tide Club in Porthcawl during 2013 with another friend of Morris' "Mad Dog" Matthew Stringer taking on the role of the late Stephen Gately from McLaughlin.

Game show appearances

Morris has appeared on a number of UK television game shows including The Weakest Link, where he was voted off in the second round, Brainbox Challenge where he won several hundred pounds and Eggheads where his team lost, Morris blamed their performance on nerves, with his close friend Barry even forgetting his name at one point. Morris though had two big wins on national TV shows, he appeared on Dick and Dom's Are You Smarter Than A 10 Year Old? where he won £25,000, and The Colour of Money which with close support from his loyal friend McGuppy he won £63,000.[3]

References

  1. Oakes, P (2006). Speedway Star Almanac. Pinegen Ltd. ISBN 0-9552376-1-0.
  2. "Morris named FIM Race Director". SpeedwayGP. 5 December 2014.
  3. "Phil Morris proves he's a Brainbox". Birmingham Mail. 2008. Retrieved 9 November 2008.
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