Lauren James: Dad Nigel 'not surprised' as the England forward stars in Australia

  • Published
Nigel James with his children Reece and LaurenImage source, Lauren James
Image caption,

Nigel James (centre) flanked by his children Reece (left) and Lauren (right) at Stamford Bridge

"I pinch myself every day. Most parents would only dream to have one England international, never mind two."

The lashing rain just outside Marlow in Buckinghamshire is powerless to dampen Nigel James' beaming sense of pride at the recent events in the Adelaide heat.

Daughter Lauren James, younger sister of 23-year-old Chelsea and England men's star Reece, is leading the Lionesses' charge at the Women's World Cup in Australia.

The 21-year-old produced the standout performance of the tournament as she scored twice and assisted three goals in England's crushing 6-1 win over China on Monday.

But dad Nigel, who is the first father since records began to have children play for both the men's and women's England teams, says he is "not surprised at all" by his daughter's success.

Media caption,

Women's World Cup: Lauren James' dad Nigel on her incredible form for England

"Everyone who has seen Lauren play from six or seven-years-old knows how good she is," James told BBC Sport.

"It's brilliant, it's quality but that's Lauren. She has trained all her life, she's dedicated and she's been obsessed with being a footballer. It's all she has ever wanted to do.

"She always wanted to compete against boys and has trained against top academy players who are playing in the Premier League today."

When she was a child, Lauren played alongside brother Reece and the likes of Chelsea and England men's midfielder Conor Gallagher in a team James Sr coached.

James manages his own coaching business and aims to help young people achieve their ambitions.

Speaking to the BBC in 2021, he said the siblings played football every day growing up.

"If they weren't playing with friends after school, they were playing with each other. There are not many families that had the contact time they had; they had a field and all the equipment they needed. They had poles, goals, and football after football because I was a coach.

"There where times I coached them, but if I didn't, things were set up so that they went out and repeated what we'd done in a session, working on things."

Lauren was training with Arsenal women as a 13-year-old, before joining a newly formed Manchester United side in the Women's Championship. She moved to Chelsea in 2021 and made her England debut in 2022.

Image source, Nigel James
Image caption,

Lauren holds the Champions League trophy alongside older brother Reece after Chelsea beat Manchester City in the 2021 final

As James reflects on his daughter's journey to the highest level after his under-18s side played a pre-season friendly under the angry summer clouds, he conveys a sense of calm while the rest of the country begins to dream of World Cup glory.

He plans to travel to Australia for the latter stages of the tournament after having to watch the group stages on television because of his coaching commitments and his important duties as a father.

"I had to do some work at Lauren's place," he said. "Her mum is out there and I've been the removal man. Driving around in the van and carrying the washing machine around. I'm not there in Australia so I'm here and I feel like I'm doing something for my children.

"I've just been watching at home in my own peace with friends and family. When she scored we just looked at each other, and then at the screen, and then gave each other a cuddle.

"You just think, 'Wow'.

Media caption,

Women's World Cup 2023: Lauren James scores her second to extend England's lead to 4-1

"I've seen her do things like that before. She has an unbelievable technique that she has worked on for many years, but when you see it at the World Cup, it's amazing.

"I'm very proud to say we are the first family to produce two kids - one male and one female - playing for England [since records began]."

Following the game James shared a few quiet words of encouragement with his daughter on the phone.

"I spoke to her after the game and told her how proud I was," he added. "I told her how she had made the whole family and the country proud. To keep going, keep believing, get her rest and go again.

"She just said, 'Thanks dad'."

Having overseen Lauren's development from a young age, Nigel, whose non-league career was cruelly cut short by injury before he turned to coaching, says something would have been "really wrong" if his daughter did not hit the heights.

"There was a time where people were focused on fitness and her work off the ball but sometimes you have to focus more on what they can do and not what they can't do," said James.

"Me and her brothers had to keep drumming into her how fantastic she is. She manipulates the ball and it's easy and there is no pressure.

"We don't see too many Diego Maradonas or Ronaldinhos anymore, so to be on the female side, when you see a player like that, you have to think to yourself 'wow'."

James's three goals make her the joint-second top scorer in the World Cup, one behind Japan's Hinata Miyazawa.

Asked if she could become a future Ballon d'Or Feminin winner, James said: "She can take it as far as she wants. If she remains fit and keeps developing, why not?"

England's last-16 tie with Nigeria will be broadcast live on BBC One on Monday, 7 August at 08:30 BST.