
Meet the former EFL star who now charges £15,000 as a keynote speaker: Paul McVeigh opens up on 'second life' and reveals how teams can cope with the pressure of a play-off final
Paul McVeigh looked around the Tottenham dressing room for the first time.
The Northern Irishman, then 17, saw Sol Campbell, Jurgen Klinsmann and Teddy Sheringham among others.
'I didn't realise I had an inferiority complex,' McVeigh, who moved to England in his teens after growing up in Belfast, tells Mail Sport. 'All these top players, they're all lovely off the pitch so that wasn't the intimidating part.
'It was more the fact that I'd come from Belfast and I was one of only a few in our youth team who wasn't an English lad and assured in their own ability.
'Being around some of the best players in the world was really challenging for me.'
A friend then urged McVeigh - who went on to have a hugely impressive career for the likes of Spurs, Luton and Norwich - to read a book on performance psychology and mindset.
Awaken The Giant Within by Tony Robbins, a renowned self-help guru, author and motivational speaker, was the recommendation.
That 'opened the floodgates' as McVeigh admits, and led him on a journey of discovery.
'Maybe my friend saw something I was lacking,' adds McVeigh, who is intriguing company. 'I then had this real fascination of what is it that people are doing? Why are some people successful and other people aren't? Why isn't talent enough?
'It made me realise we're (footballers) all technically and physically at a level. From my perspective, I was always the smallest player in the team at five foot six, so what could I do to try and get an advantage over these other players?'
That journey took McVeigh through a career that saw him represent Northern Ireland 20 times, play in the Premier League and win two titles with Norwich, where he holds legendary status.
He retired in 2010 at the age of 32 after Norwich won League One in an attempt to finish on a high and also start his 'second life'.
McVeigh, who is the first Premier League footballer to secure a Masters degree in psychology, is now one of the most respected keynote speakers and performance psychologists around.
Such has his success been that the 47-year-old charges £15,000 per speech and possesses blue-chip clients including PWC, Microsoft, Investec and KPMG.
'It really does come down to the limits we place on ourselves,' adds McVeigh, who also works with one Championship club. 'That's one of the things that I talk about with my corporate clients.
'In that world, like the football world, there's a huge emphasis on technical quality to do the role. If you ask any player or coach, what do they spend 95 per cent of their time on? It's training and reinforcing technical and physical aspects, but the psychological aspect, how much time are players working on that?
'In my experience of having been in this world for 30 years, very little, if not nothing at all and it's the single greatest area of improvement and it's also the greatest point of differentiation.
'The same thing applies in the corporate world. If you have a brilliant accountant who's physically capable of doing the job, what's the difference? Why is one firm better than the other?
'And again it comes back to psychology. And all of these things are so far down the pecking order in an organisation and I'm constantly trying to bump it up and get it to the top.'
The £15,000 McVeigh, who is also an author, is able to charge is an eye-watering figure, but again it has all developed as a result of his mindset.
'When I stopped playing I went on a course in America and I was learning how to deliver a keynote speech from a guy who was at the time charging $10,000 an hour,' he explains.
'I'd never been paid one pound to speak in public, and I was learning from a guy who charged them $10,000 an hour! So you can see how my belief would be like, how is that possible? $10,000 an hour? That is something I'd love to do one day.'
McVeigh's first booking raked in £3,000 after he was initially unsure on what to charge.
'After that, I was like 'now I'm a three grand an hour speaker'. That was my figure through that first year and suddenly I became quite confident.
'I felt like my beliefs were growing, I liked what I was doing. And of course, I'm trying to put up my fee, and it goes up to £3,500.
'Then I got my Masters in psychology so I thought maybe I should put my fee up again. And then again, it keeps going up based on my self-belief and the companies I work for. So I'm constantly challenging my limited beliefs and what I think I'm worth.'
McVeigh, who also has a degree in sports science, readily admits psychology and mindset was never a priority for clubs during his playing days and he went above and beyond to focus on his own headspace.
The psychology departments clubs now possess are significantly larger than ever before, and McVeigh is full of belief that the footballing world has so much to share with the business world.
They are likely to be hard at work ahead of a bumper Bank Holiday weekend of EFL play-off finals, matches that have so much riding on them.
McVeigh was on the losing side in 2002 when Norwich lost the Division One final to Birmingham on penalties, although he quips it was probably his best ever game for the Canaries.
So, what advice would he have for the six teams stepping out at Wembley over the next few days?
'The problem when it comes to this is players end up playing the occasion and not going out to do what they know they're capable of,' he explains.
McVeigh urged those in play-off finals to focus on playing the game rather than the occasion
'That's generally why players get caught up in this situation of either feeling nervous or anxious and it's nothing to do with the game.
'It's more to do with the meaning the player has given to what's happening on the pitch because ultimately, the game is always the same, whether you're in training or in a match.
'Yes there's more riding on it, but I suppose the skillset of a professional is realising they can go in and play games.
'And no matter if it is the biggest moment of their career or a training game, they need to still go and perform at that level.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
13 minutes ago
- BBC News
T20 Blast: Sanderson hat-trick seals Northants win
Ben Sanderson produced incredible figures of 6-8, including a hat-trick, as Northamptonshire made it four wins out of four in the T20 Blast by beating Worcestershire by 31 runs at New Vasconcelos hit 59 off 39 balls as they posted a total of 190-5 and after taking two wickets at the start of Worcestershire's reply, Sanderson claimed four in an over as the Steelbacks moved to the top of the North Evans (62 not out off 26 balls) and Ollie Pope (53) provided the fireworks as Surrey defeated Kent Spitfires by 42 runs, while Kiran Carlson hit 93 off 57 balls as a six-wicket loss to Glamorgan left Essex with a 0-3 record in the South Gloucestershire also remain winless after being bowled out for only 119 against Hampshire, while Notts beat Derbyshire in a game interrupted by a power cut, and elsewhere there were victories for Somerset, Leicestershire and Birmingham Bears. Match scorecards North group - Steelbacks extend 100% start A second-wicket stand of 74 between Vasconcelos and captain David Willey (32) laid the foundation for a decent total of 109-5 by Northamptonshire, the trophy winners in 2013 and hit a six and seven fours before Ravi Bopara contributed 36 off 30 balls, and when Worcestershire began their reply, Sanderson quickly nipped out Rapids skipper Brett D'Oliveira and Kashif Rapids needed 33 off the final two overs, but Sanderson had Tom Hinley caught at deep mid-wicket from a full toss in the 19th and then dismissed Ben Dwarshuis, Adam Finch and Jacob Duffy with the final three balls of the over as they were all out for gave the seamer a straightforward return catch, Finch was caught at long-off, and Duffy edged to wicketkeeper Lewis McManus attempting to swing the ball to mid-wicket, as Sanderson became only the second Northants bowler after Andrew Hall to take six wickets in a T20 innings. Yorkshire skipper Dawid Malan carried his bat through their innings against the Bears at Edgbaston, with three maximums in his unbeaten 69 off 48 balls, which led his side to 164-7 from their 20 was not enough, though, as Alex Davies and Tom Latham began the reply by adding 103 before Latham fell to the off-spin of Dom Bess for was caught off Matt Milnes (3-23) for 65, made off 45 balls, but Sam Hain's unbeaten 24 guided the home side to 168-4 and a six-wicket win - their first of the competition - from the final ball of the penultimate Outlaws were 108-3 in the 13th over, having just lost Lyndon James for 43, chasing 163 against neighbours Derbyshire, when the floodlights went out in their game at power was eventually restored in the area after an hour's delay, a revised target of 120 meant Notts had to score 12 off 15 balls, but they only needed 14 of them as they reached 120-3 to win by seven wickets via the DLS Aneurin Donald launched five sixes in his 50 off 22 balls for the Falcons, but was then caught off Liam Patterson-White, and their innings ended on 162-9 after three wickets from successive balls, two for Dillon Pennington (3-40) and a run out. Captain Louis Kimber hit 51 off 27 balls and took 2-14 as Leicestershire Foxes came out on top by six runs against Durham at Grace Foxes made 193-8 and appeared to be cruising when the visitors were 94-6 in the 12th over, but Kasey Aldridge (44 not out) and Will Rhodes (43) added 91 in eight needed 13 off the final over but could only manage six of them as Rhodes was run out by Logan van Beek coming back for a second run. South group - when is a hat-trick not a hat-trick? As in Notts game, there was also a hat-trick - of sorts - at Canterbury where Surrey's Mitchell Santner dismissed Joe Denly and Tom Rogers at the end of the 13th over and produced the throw at the start of the next, bowled by Nathan Smith, to run out Zak Crawley for 46 attempting a second dismissal effectively ended any hopes Kent had of chasing down a target of 194, and although Santner's actual hat-trick ball at the start of the 17th over did not result in a wicket, he finished with 3-28 as they came up short on 151-9. Earlier, Pope hit a 29-ball 50 as he and Dom Sibley put on 83 for Surrey's first wicket, but the visitors slumped to 126-5 before Evans - who was dropped on 15 - smashed four sixes in reaching his own half-century from nine balls fewer as he and Ollie Sykes added 54 to help them post a score of Sophia Gardens, Glamorgan all-rounder Ben Kellaway's versatility brought about the downfall of dangerous Michael Pepper for 60 as Essex totalled 183-8 from their 20 been hit for two big leg-side sixes bowling right-arm as the Essex batter passed 50 off 27 balls, he switched to left-arm and had him caught at led the run-chase in an opening stand of 91 with Will Smale, but missed out on a hundred when he was caught behind by Pepper off Paul Walter with just nine runs needed and Glamorgan reached 185-4 with an over to innings of 42 off 39 balls by Ollie Price was the only score of note for Gloucestershire, who were held in check by Hampshire's pace attack at the Utilita Bowl, headed by John Turner, who took visitors needed early wickets after posting such a below-par total but although James Vince went for 17, opener Toby Albert breezed to an unbeaten 73 off 44 balls, with four sixes and eight fours, as Hampshire reached 121-3 off 15 overs to win by seven made it three out of three with an ultimately comfortable seven-wicket win over Sussex Sharks at Hove, where the home side posted 166-8, thanks mainly to John Simpson's 58 off 42 balls, with Matt Henry taking visitors lost Will Smeed early, but two of their four Toms - Kohler-Cadmore and Lammonby - shared a stand of 89 in nine overs before the latter fell to Jack Carson for continued to 64 off 43 balls and after he was bowled by Tymal Mills, Tom Abell and Thomas Rew finished the job, hitting a six each as they reached 169-3 with two overs in hand. Saturday's fixture Trent Bridge: Notts Outlaws v Worcestershire Rapids (19:00 BST)


BBC News
13 minutes ago
- BBC News
Pundits react to calamitous Iceland defeat
Michael Stewart on BBC Radio Scotland: "Very difficult [situation for Steve Clarke to manage Cieran Slicker now]."There is another game coming up, Angus Gunn looks like he's not going to be fit, and I think it is quite apparent that it will be a big call."Do you stick with him and hope he can put in a performance that gives him some belief and feels like he's capable, or do you go for damage limitation and recognise that he's not really going to be playing for Scotland in the future and give Robby McCrorie an opportunity?"I don't think there's a right or wrong way to play this. I feel for Slicker, it's a horrible situation to be in, but that is the ruthlessness of football at this top level, and it's been exposed there badly."Willie Miller on BBC Radio Scotland: "You have to find out what's in the player's mind as well, how he's feeling about it."What you're looking for is honesty from him [Slicker]. Does he feel like he can take on the challenge in the next game, or that he doesn't want to?"Does the manager want to take him out of the firing line?"There are a lot of questions there, and I think it's difficult for us to answer what decision the manager should make without knowing all of the facts and without having spoken to the player himself."Scotland striker Lyndon Dykes on BBC Scotland: "Football is a lot about momentum."When you're playing you need to be winning games. When you don't win them, and you're not winning, you don't perform, it's extra hurt, it's extra eyes looking in."I think we need to go back to our basics. We've been here before, people doubted us all the time. We need to make sure we get back to it and get the hunger back."Former Scotland forward James McFadden on BBC One Scotland: "There has to be a concern."We need to start building momentum going into this qualification campaign because it is a tough group."Former Scotland forward Steven Thompson on BBC One Scotland: "We're getting closer to the real stuff and it's been so long since we qualified for a World you go back only a very short period of time Steve Clarke could do no is still a defeat, at home, to a weaker nation than ourselves and questions will be asked. When you go into proper World Cup qualifying, these performances won't be tolerated.


BBC News
13 minutes ago
- BBC News
Wales heading to Belgium 'to win'
Wales winger David Brooks has backed his side to beat Belgium when the sides face off in World Cup qualifying on Monday. Belgium drew 1-1 with North Macedonia in their first qualifier, while Wales top the group with seven points from their opening three games after the 3-0 win over Liechtenstein.