Philip John Vickery was born 14 March 1976 in Barnstaple, Devon, to Cornish parents. The family lived in Bude, Cornwall where Phil was educated at Budehaven School. His interest in sport developed as a youngster and by the age of 12 he began to play Rugby. It soon became clear that he had a natural talent for the game, playing for Bude, then Redruth, and Cornwall Colts and by the age of 16 he gained his first National Representational honour when he was selected for England Schools U/16 group.
Over the next few years Phil gained many more honours at Junior level, culminating with selection for the England Colts squad in 1994, alongside a number of other notable players, many of whom are playing professionally in the English Guinness Premiership.
In the summer of 1995 Phil took the important decision to leave Cornwall at the request of Richard Hill, the England 'A' coach and sign professional terms with Gloucester R.F.C.
His career flourished at Kingsholm, graduating through England U-21's, England Colts and England 'A' He made his full England debut on 21 February 1998 at Twickenham when he came off the bench to replace Darren Garforth against Wales, a match England won 60-26.
The summer of 1998 saw Phil taking part in the infamous "Tour from Hell", when a young and inexperienced England side was heavily defeated by Australia, twice by New Zealand, and by South Africa in the space of a month. Phil was one of the few young players to recover from the tour to retain their places in the England team.
In 1999 Phil played in his first World Cup, but a shoulder injury ruled him out of England's tour of South Africa the following year. His first British and Irish Lions tour, in which Phil played in all three tests, was to Australia in 2001, and in 2002 he captained a young England side, against the odds, to victory against Argentina in Buenos Aires.
While a back injury kept him out of the 2003 Six Nations, he recovered to take part in his second World Cup. On November 22nd 2003, at Telstra Stadium Sydney, the Raging Bull became a World Cup Winner after being an integral part of the England team that beat Australia 20-17. A great day for English rugby and a very proud day for Phil. He was awarded the MBE in the Queen's New Year's Honours list in 2004 along with the rest of England's victorious squad.