From Super League to the silver screen: How 'walking contradiction' Mason did it against all odds

From a tearaway young offender to Super League stardom, and the depths of despair to a second career as an actor and published author, Keith Mason opens up to Sky Sports on his improbable story

Here are a few statistics from Keith Mason's rugby league career: 258 club appearances across 14 seasons in both Super League and the NRL with Wakefield Trinity, St Helens, Huddersfield Giants, Castleford Tigers, and Melbourne Storm; one Challenge Cup winners' medal (with St Helens in 2004); Two international caps for Wales, and selected by Great Britain U21s.

Since hanging up his boots in 2013, the former prop forward has racked up 11 film and television acting credits, been involved as a producer, and is set to head to Canada in May to begin filming for his latest project.

He is the author of two rugby league-themed graphic novels as well, and has an autobiography, Against All Odds, coming out at the end of February.

There is one statistic which does not reflect kindly on Mason, though. Between the ages of 10 and 14, he found himself in court for various offences on more than 45 occasions and admits he was fortunate not to be sent to prison. Had it not been for rugby league, life could have turned out very differently.

"I'm a walking contradiction," Mason tells Sky Sports. "I shouldn't really be living the life I'm living, but I had the drive inside of me that I wanted to be somebody.

"Rugby league was always something I was good at. It was always going to be my way out of a tough situation."

The Keith Mason story begins on a council estate in Dewsbury Moor as one of five children raised by a single mother.

Rugby league was part of his life from the age of six, starting out at the Dewsbury Moor community club which produced luminaries of the 13-player code such as the Burgess brothers, Ryan Sheridan and Matt Diskin.

Although he was rejected by Bradford Bulls, Castleford and Leeds Rhinos, where he was part of an academy team which included future 'Golden Generation' members Rob Burrow, Danny McGuire and fellow Dewsbury boy Diskin, Mason eventually earned his chance in Super League with Wakefield Trinity following a successful trial.

Mason credits the influence of his mother and his desire to repay her unwavering faith in him for him forging a career as a professional athlete.

"I think my mum was a big factor in that because she had five children, my brother was an alcoholic, my sister was hooked on drugs, and I didn't want to be the next kid who broke mum's heart," Mason said.

"She had my back all the way through being a young kid, when everyone doubted me, and I had to believe in myself."

Mason pulls no punches about how he could have easily gone down a very different path, though. Away from rugby, he spent much of his time hanging around with older boys from his estate, and was repeatedly kicked out of school along with constantly being in trouble with the police and a regular up in front of the magistrates for various offences.

The sliding doors moment for him came at the age of 14 when he agreed to a friend's request to help move some speakers for what turned out to be a house burglary.

The duo were swiftly arrested and charged, and their fate was to be determined in court. His friend was imprisoned for two years, while Mason received two years probation and a 12-month conditional discharge.

It was the wake-up call he needed, and even now Mason reflects on how fortunate he was to avoid being sent to prison as well.

"I was only 14 years of age and at that point, you don't think about the consequences or anything, and when I walked in the house I saw it was ransacked and I was like 'this is somebody's house' - but I was already too deep in," Mason said.

"I took the speakers out the house, the coppers caught up with us later...and I was very lucky I didn't get sent to jail.

"I just had this epiphany like 'This is it: You're either going to end up dead or in jail', and I always thought in my mind I'd always make it and get out of this situation.

"It was the fact this kid was in jail and I missed out on jail, I had this epiphany 'what do you want to be?'"

The day after his final court appearance, Mason resolved to focus on rugby, immediately cutting the bad influences out of his life. Returning to Dewsbury Moor's U16s, his performances on the back of training were good enough to earn selection for Yorkshire and the England Schoolboys representative teams.

The door to the professional ranks proved a tough one to unlock though, and rejections by Bradford, Castleford, and Leeds - where he was told they did not believe he would ever play in Super League - nearly derailed those ambitions.

"To be honest, I went home and broke down crying and didn't know what to do," Mason said, recalling the aftermath of being told the Rhinos would not offer him a full-time contract.

"I remember someone coming up to me saying 'give it one last shot, Keith' and Wakefield came in for me.

"I had a trial game and it wasn't the best, but [head coach] John Harbin said 'listen, he's got it - we're going to sign him'."

After starring for a Wakefield academy team which featured other future Super League stars in Danny Brough, Ben Westwood and Gareth Ellis, Mason got his first taste of top-level rugby league in two games at the end of the 2000 season at the age of 17.

The following year he played 21 times and was called up by Wales, but little did Mason know he had been attracting interest from further afield until told by team-mate Willie Poching that Melbourne Storm wanted to sign him.

At 19, Mason became the youngest British forward to play in the NRL - turning down an approach from Leeds, the club which had previously rejected him, to move to Australia.

While the likes of Will Pryce and Kai Pearce-Paul have recently become the latest English talents to move to the NRL, at the turn of the century it was a rarity for any player from these shores to head Down Under.

So, naturally, Mason's first call when arriving in Australia was to meet up with the other British player in the competition and fellow prop Adrian Morley, then playing for Sydney Roosters.

"Back then, there was only one English player there - someone I looked up to and played against a great many times - and that was Adrian Morley," Mason said.

"When I went out there, we went on a night out and I had the worst hangover the next day! He came to meet me the next day and we had a coffee at Coogee Bay.

"I wanted to meet him because he was someone I looked up to, and it was just me and him out there."

Early on in his time at Melbourne, Mason shared a house with future Australia great Cameron Smith (pictured) and found himself in a side with a clutch of players who would go on to make a huge impact.

Although he would ultimately make only four first-team appearances for the Storm, along with appearing regularly for their reserve-grade Queensland Cup side, it is a period of his life Mason looks back on fondly.

"When I first moved over, I lived with Cameron Smith and his wife," Mason said. "Billy Slater was coming through at the time, Cooper Cronk, Jake Webster, Semi Tadulala - all these players who were in the squad.

"Melbourne was an amazing experience...the list goes on and on.

"Mark Murray was the coach the first year, then Craig Bellamy came in and he liked me, but then all of a sudden there was all this stuff about me going back to England and signing for a Super League club."

Returning to Super League midway through the 2003 season, Mason joined reigning champions St Helens and immediately established himself as a regular.

Grand Final glory would evade him and the team during his time at Knowsley Road, but the forward did claim a major honour in 2004 as he helped Saints to a 32-16 victory over old rivals Wigan Warriors in the Challenge Cup final at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium.

An unhappy loan switch to Castleford which ended two games into the 2006 season following a disagreement with head coach Terry Matterson led to a move to Huddersfield Giants, where Mason would end up spending nearly half of his playing career.

Despite 150 appearances in a Giants shirt and returns to the Challenge Cup final in 2006 at Twickenham and 2009 at Wembley, losing to St Helens and Warrington respectively on each occasion, Mason's time at Huddersfield ended acrimoniously following the 2012 season when he was sacked over a social media post and later won a claim for unfair dismissal against the club, being awarded a six-figure sum.

It was an experience which tarnished Mason's love of rugby league, but his 18-year-old son Lukas now being part of Wigan Warriors' academy set-up has seen him rediscover that as he supports the promising second row's journey.

"He's got a big, big future ahead of him if he works hard," Mason said.

"I'm a rugby fan again now because of my son doing what he's doing and he's got a bit more skill than me."

After one final season with Castleford in 2013, Mason decided to call time on his playing career.

However, like numerous professional athletes before him and since, he struggled to adapt to life without that day-to-day routine and structure.

"When I retired, I was in a massive state of depression for two years," Mason said. "I was in this mad fog and couldn't see my life going anywhere.

"You lose your team, you lose your discipline, and lose all of those things which make you great in the first place.

"I lost my house and ended up back at my mum's in a box bedroom, and I was trying my hardest but wasn't living a healthy life."

Little did he know it at the time though, but a chance meeting with Hollywood star Mickey Rourke in London following the 2009 Challenge Cup final would lead to an unexpected post-rugby career break.

Soon after the conclusion of the court case against Huddersfield, Rourke, who formed a friendship with Welsh cross-code icon Gareth Thomas as well, called up Mason and asked him to appear in a film he was starring in called Skin Traffik.

Playing the henchman of Rourke's character provided a springboard to more roles in film and television, along with producing and playing the lead role of DCI Jack Sullivan in detective drama Imperative, also titled The Punished in the USA.

Mason's next role is due to see him feature as a Northern Irish detective by the name of Kevin O'Brien - "It's a great role for me, although I'm having I'm having to work on the Belfast accent!" he admits - in supernatural thriller The Chosen, which begins filming in Canada in four months and is set to feature the likes of Colm Meaney, Craig Kelly, and possibly even his old acting mentor Rourke as a bishop.

Despite never having undertaken any formal acting lessons, Mason has found he has always thrived when performing in front of an audience whether on the rugby field or in front of a camera.

"I've always been a performer, even though in real life, although I've got a social media presence and that kind of stuff, I'm quite a private person," Mason said.

"I'm a bit of an introvert when it comes to being at home with the family and kids, but when I get an audience I thrive.

"I feel like now until I'm 50, this part of my life is going to be the biggest part of my life.

"I've got over all the messing about and feel better in myself."

Before that, however, comes a 10-day trip to Bangladesh to spend time with 40 doctors as part of the charitable work Mason does with the Tafida Raqeeb Foundation, which supports children who have suffered brain injuries.

Then there is the release of his autobiography next month.

Although Mason based the main character of his Rugby Blood graphic novels, David King, on himself, this marks the first time he has laid out his life story in full and he hopes its inspirational message of repeatedly triumphing over adversity resonates with anyone who reads it.

"It's all about overcoming and never giving up, because that's what kids need to see," Mason said.

"Life is about messing up and getting back up, and I've gone through that."

Against All Odds by Keith Mason is released on February 24 and is available for pre-order.

Support for our viewers

If you are affected by any of the issues covered in this article, please see the list of organisations below which can offer you help, support and further information.

Samaritans offer confidential, non-judgemental emotional support, 24 hours a day for people who are experiencing feelings of distress, despair or suicide. Call 116 123, email jo@samaritans.org or visit samaritans.org for more information.

Campaign Against Living Miserably (CALM) aims to prevent male suicide in the UK and offers anonymous, confidential listening, information, advice and support. Call 0800 58 58 58 (5pm-12am) or visit thecalmzone.net for more information.

Papyrus raises awareness and offers prevention training, provides confidential support and suicide intervention advice through HOPELineUK. Call 0800 068 41 41 (Monday - Friday 10am - 10pm, Weekends 2pm - 10pm, Bank Holidays 2pm- 5pm), email pat@papyrus-uk.org, text 07786209697 or visit papyrus-uk.org for more information.

Mind offers advice and support to empower anyone experiencing a mental health problem. Call 0300 123 3393 (Monday - Friday 9am - 6pm), email info@mind.org.uk, or visit mind.org.uk for more information.

The NHS website offers specific advice on ways to find information and support for your mental health. Visit nhs.uk/mentalhealth for more information.

Rethink Mental Illness is a charity which offers advice and support for all those affected by mental illness, including their carers, family and friends. Call freephone 0808 801 0525 (9.30-4pm Monday to Friday), 0121 522 7007, email info@rethink.org or find out more information at www.rethink.org.

YoungMinds are a mental health charity offering support for children, young people, and their parents. If you are a young person struggling to cope, text YM to 85258 for free, 24/7 support or visit their support pages at www.youngminds.org.uk. There is also a free support line for parents who may have concerns about their child/young person - 0808 802 5544 - open 9.30am-4pm, Monday - Friday.