'I was very fortunate': Mike Tindall praises the Firm and his love for the royals in candid new interview with Aussie golf legend Wayne 'Radar' Riley
The 46-year-old former British rugby star, who is Down Under with wife Zara Tindall, 44, appeared in a relaxed, pre-recorded interview with Aussie golf legend Wayne 'Radar' Riley on his show A Round with Radar.
Filmed at the picturesque Royal Mid-Surrey Golf Club, the episode aired Thursday and saw the pair play nine holes while chatting about everything from family life and marriage to sport and life inside the Firm.
Radar didn't waste time getting to the big question: "What's it like going from a professional footballer into the Royal Family?" he asked.
"In your home, is it like, 'Righto, luv, go get the marmite out', like just normal?"
Mike chuckled: "Yeah, pretty much" before adding that he "hates marmite" while Zara "loves it".
But the conversation soon turned more heartfelt.
"As a family, they're sport loving," Mike said.
"With Princess Anne being the patron of Scottish rugby as well, and now, obviously, the Princess of Wales being the patron of England and Wales respectively, I was very fortunate that they knew a lot about rugby and had that sports side to them that they all love."
When Riley joked that Mike had "just cruised in there," the royal in-law replied: "I wouldn't say I cruised in there. It's a journey you never plan for. But they were just so good. And so open to me."
Elsewhere in the interview, Mike reflected on Zara's own sporting success and how being married to a fellow elite athlete has shaped their relationship.
"It's sort of something that's worked for us," he said.
"Especially, me being in a team sport, and her being in an individual sport… it helps us to understand each other.
"You can recognise what sort of framework they're in… when you understand people's routines and how to be supportive of each other at the right times."
He said their shared sporting background means they know when to help each other unwind.
"We're able to help each other relax when things don't go well, and you understand when it's time for a gag and time for a beer."
While most senior royals remain tight-lipped about private matters, Mike has occasionally peeled back the curtain, including in his 2024 book The Good, The Bad, and The Rugby: Unleashed.
The trio are currently touring Australia with a string of live podcast shows, as well as throwing their support behind the British & Irish Lions tour.
"Believe it or not, marrying into the Royal Family was pretty easy for me," Mike wrote in the book.
"They were always nice to me, and I was always nice to them. Simple really."
He described the family as "a very close family who loved each other dearly"- a stark contrast to fellow commoner-turned-royal Meghan Markle's more strained experience inside the institution.
Despite having no official royal roles or titles, Mike and Zara are known for their loyalty to the core family, particularly Princess Anne, King Charles, and the Prince and Princess of Wales.
Hashtags

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


West Australian
13 minutes ago
- West Australian
'I witnessed the birth of Oasis firsthand'
It's hard to think about the 90s without Oasis. Not only were they the most successful British group of the decade, the Gallagher brothers came to define the so-called 'lad culture' of those high times. As standard bearers of a genuine working-class revolution, they were caricatured as the drinking, drugging, brawling 'supayobs' — but Oasis were far smarter, and artier, than they were letting on. They combined the majestic power of the Sex Pistols and the melodic nous of the Beatles to create their own 'Sex Beatles', just like Nirvana was doing. Yet, unlike Kurt Cobain, they were more about redemption than nihilistic self-destruction. They were renegade outsiders who believed in the power of rock'n'roll as a means of escape; their life-affirming songs soundtracked a youthful optimism for better times. I got to know a pre-Oasis Noel Gallagher on the Manchester band scene whilst attending gigs in the late 1980s and early 1990s. He seemed to be at every gig, the Hacienda or the all-night raves in squatted flats in the then-bohemian wasteland of Hulme. He already had an in-depth knowledge of bands and music history, and was as passionate about the classics as great lost Manchester bands such as World Of Twist or Yargo. Soon after, when he started roadying for the Inspiral Carpets, I would see him at their gigs or at the band's office at New Mount Street, the hub of the 80s Manchester music scene. When he first formed Oasis in 1991, he gave me demos — which I still have including one of the band's very first, which he handed me on Whitworth Street near his then-flat in Manchester city centre. It was a demo full of hope of a band straining against a national music scene that had decided Manchester was over. Early Oasis rehearsed next door to my band in the Boardwalk rehearsal rooms around the corner from the Haçienda — the heart and soul of the Manchester music scene. Most of these bands would rehearse a couple of times a week, but Oasis seemed to be in there every day, grafting and plotting in the dusty damp of the cellar rooms. They were in there so much that they had even decorated their room, painting the brick walls white, adding a small pop-art Union Jack painting and two Beatles posters. These were the psychedelic April 1967 photoshoot with American photographer Richard Avedon, and the shot of The Fabs on the steps of Brian Epstein's London flat on the day of the launch party for Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band. There was method in the madness. One of the smartest people I've met in bands, Noel always knew what he was doing. The three years on the road around the world with the Inspiral Carpets had been a crash course in how bands worked. He understood the dynamics and the graft as he sound-checked all the Inspiral Carpets' instruments, and had even tried out to be the band's singer when Stephen Holt, their original vocalist, had left. He also spent hours in the office on the phone or looking after the T-shirts. After Inspiral Carpets rejected his audition as frontman, he entered 1993 determined to make it with his own band. It wasn't easy — in the early days the band were overlooked despite his connections and drive. London bands like Suede were all over the music press, and it felt like Manchester bands were out of fashion. A few years later Noel said he felt like 'the last one of my generation to make it'. In that first year, it seemed like Oasis was a hobby built around Noel, with a quiet, 20-year-old Liam in tow. But Liam had rockstar looks and a wild self-belief. And both, growing up sharing a cramped bedroom on a council estate in Burnage, were united by the desire to escape the drudgery of life, the shadow of their errant, difficult father and their then-broken city. In fact it was Liam who had initially found a local band who made a great racket but needed a singer with star power. After coaxing Noel to join, they knew they had something powerful. The brothers' dynamic was fascinating: Noel would write and Liam would deliver his brother's lyrics in one or two perfect takes, just minutes after learning them. It was this innate understanding of his brother's emotions that contrasted so dramatically with the pair's many fall-outs. The brothers' psychodrama was described perfectly in 1997 by an 18-year-old Pete Doherty: 'I subscribe to the Umberto Eco view that Noel Gallagher's a poet and Liam's a town crier.' Still reeling from the effects of the post-industrial meltdown, late-80s Manchester was far removed from what it is today. The city's famous two Sex Pistols gigs in 1976 had sparked a post-punk revolution of the 'Manchester kids with the best record collections', as Tony Wilson once quipped, from the Buzzcocks, Factory Records and the Haçienda to Joy Division, The Smiths, The Stone Roses, and the Happy Mondays. The young Oasis became the final chapter in the city's transformation. Live Forever: The Rise, Fall And Resurrection Of Oasis by John Robb is out now. Oasis play Docklands Stadium, Melbourne, October 31, November 1 and 4 and Accor Stadium, Sydney, November 7 and 8. © John Robb / Telegraph Media Group Holdings Limited 2025

Mercury
an hour ago
- Mercury
World Aquatics Championships: Mollie O'Callaghan finishes second in 100m freestyle final
O'Callaghan was the strong favourite to win the two-lap sprint after taking out the 200m gold two days earlier, but the 21-year-old Queenslander couldn't muster the speed to hold off Dutch star Marrit Steenbergen on the last lap. The pair turned at the 50m mark dead-heated for third with identical times of 25.34 but Steenbergen turned on the afterburners to cover the second length 0.12 quicker than O'Callaghan. Steenbergen, who won gold at the last world championships, touched the wall first in 52.55 seconds with O'Callaghan claiming silver in 52.67. Asked how she felt, O'Callaghan said: 'Tired, very tired. 'I've been coming off last night and like I've said a thousand times, I haven't had the greatest preparation towards this and to do what I did tonight and last night and the nights before, I'm pretty proud. 'To be on the podium is something special and I'm always grateful for that. Obviously, I would love to win, everyone would love to win.' American Torri Huske, who won the silver medal behind Sarah Sjostrom at last year's Paris Olympics, collected bronze after leading at the halfway stage before being overtaken by the Dutch and Aussie speedsters. O'Callaghan had already won three gold medals in Singapore to lift her career tally to 11 golds at the world championships. That leaves her tied with Thorpe for the most by an Aussie but she still has the chance to surpass him with two relays still to come in Singapore, though she admitted she was battling fatigue. 'Absolutely. I'd be a superhuman if I said there wasn't,' O'Callaghan said. 'I've had the heaviest programme in the Australian team, so I've had to really get my act together as best as I could this week. I've got another few relays, which is exciting. 'It's nice to finish off with relays and for that, hopefully I can pick myself up again, get a flush, cool down and get going again.' A hard taskmaster, O'Callaghan was critical of her performance at the Paris Olympics when she missed out on the podium in the 100m free even though she had won three golds, a silver and a bronze in her other events. 'Obviously I was disappointed with Paris because I didn't think that's what I was capable of doing, but the Olympics are a beast like no other,' she said. 'You don't have comfort like worlds. Worlds, you get treated like a queen. Olympics, it's kind of like you're shipped on a bus for an hour and a half. It's not very high performance. 'You know what you sign up for at the Olympics. Again, at the Olympics, it was only two of us who did that 200m free and it's never been done before, the 200m and the 100m, so it just proves how hard it is to back up from that.' Australia also won a bronze medal in the men's 4x200m freestyle relay, behind Britain and China, but slipped to second place on the overall medals table behind the United States after Kate Douglass won gold in the women's 200m breaststroke. The Dolphins will have a great chance to add to their gold medal tally on Saturday after Cameron McEvoy qualified fastest for the men's 50m freestyle semi in 21.30. World record holder Kaylee McKeown also has a great shot at gold in the women's 200m backstroke after she took it easy to qualify fourth fastest for the final. McKeown's former coach Michael Bohl made a very public appearance on the pool deck to embrace his new star pupil Qin Haiyang after he won the men's 200m breaststroke final from the outside lane. The world record holder, Qin only snuck into the final as the slowest qualifier but stormed to gold from lane eight to earn a big hug from Bohl. 'That's so amazing. Have you heard of the Lane 8 miracle? You saw it tonight,' he said. In a move that sent shockwaves through Australian swimming, Bohl quit the Dolphins after Paris to help the Chinese prepare for the next Olympics in Los Angeles. One of the world's greatest swim coaches who oversaw the careers of Olympic superstars including Stephanie Rice, Emma McKeon and McKeown, Bohl is overseeing the preparations of more than a dozen top swimmers, including at least two of the 23 competitors who tested positive to trimetazidine (TMZ), the same prohibited drug that Sun Yang was once banned for. None of the swimmers were charged after the positive samples were deemed to be the result of eating contaminated food prepared in a hotel kitchen. Bohl is not the first Australian coach to join China. Denis Cotterell, one of Bohl's closest friends and former mentors, has long been a pioneer with Team China, overseeing the career of Sun, China's most successful and divisive swimmer. The obvious attraction for Aussie coaches agreeing to help China's swimmers is the eye-watering salaries on offer, with unconfirmed reports of some getting paid up to $1 million a year, more than five times what they get for doing the same work in their homeland. Better than Thorpe? Mollie closes on incredible swim record Originally published as World Aquatics Championships: Mollie O'Callaghan finishes second in 100m freestyle final


Perth Now
4 hours ago
- Perth Now
Royal wedding for Peter Phillips - Princess Anne's son gets engaged
Peter Phillips, the son of Princess Anne, has got engaged to an NHS nurse. The 47-year-old member of the British royal family - whose parents are Captain Mark Phillips and The Princess Royal, the younger sister of King Charles - has announced he is to marry Harriet Sperling after a year of dating with both families overjoyed with the news. A statement issued for the couple by Gerard Franklin read: "Mr Peter Phillips, the son of HRH The Princess Royal and Captain Mark Phillips and Ms Harriet Sperling, daughter of the late Mr Rupert Sanders and Mrs Mary Sanders of Gloucestershire, have today confirmed their official engagement. "Both families were informed jointly of the announcement and were delighted with the wonderful news of their engagement. "Their Majesties The King and Queen, The Prince and Princess of Wales have been informed of the announcement." At the moment there is no official date for the wedding. Peter - who is the nephew of King Charles and was the eldest grandchild of the late - was fifth in line to the throne at birth and remained so until the birth of his cousin William, Prince of Wales, in 1982. Peter has two daughters, Savannah and Isla, from his relationship with his ex-wife Autumn Kelly. The pair, who wed in 2008, announced their separation in February 2020 and their divorce was finalised in June 2021. A statement released at the time read: "Whilst this is a sad day for Peter and Autumn, they continue to put the well-being and upbringing of their wonderful daughters Savannah and Isla first and foremost. "Both Peter and Autumn are pleased to have resolved matters amicably with the children firmly at the forefront of those thoughts and decisions. "Peter and Autumn have requested privacy and consideration for their children as the family adapts to a new chapter in their lives." After his separation from Autumn, Peter was in a relationship with Lindsay Wallace for three years. While dating, they attended several royal family events together, including King Charles' Coronation Concert at Windsor Castle. Peter and Harriet - who has a daughter, Georgia - first went public as a couple in May 2024 when they were seen at the Badminton Horse Trials in Gloucestershire, England. Later that same summer they were seen enjoying Wimbledon sat in the royal box. Harriet has accompanied Peter to numerous events with other members of the royal family such as the Royal Ascot race meet. Peter and Harriet's engagement announcement comes just one day after Princess Diana's niece Lady Eliza Spencer took to Instagram to reveal she had got engaged to her long-time boyfriend, Channing Millerd in Santorini, Greece.