Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

'I was horrendous' - England star's painful conversion from flyhalf to 132kg prop

By PA
Dejected England players convene under the posts /PA

Will Stuart is ready to take on Australia as England’s senior tighthead prop but the early stages of his conversion from fly-half left him questioning if the future mapped out in the front row was doomed to failure.

ADVERTISEMENT

Stuart’s memories of watching the 2003 and 2007 World Cups were not of scrummaging masterclasses by the likes of Phil Vickery or Andrew Sheridan, but of wanting to emulate Jonny Wilkinson’s brilliance as ringmaster.

Initially resistant to leaving the backs, it was only when a school coach told him that prop was his solitary route into professional rugby that he agreed to fill the number three jersey.

Video Spacer

Freddie Burns- Leicester’s drop-goal hero | RugbyPass Offload | Episode 39

Video Spacer

Freddie Burns- Leicester’s drop-goal hero | RugbyPass Offload | Episode 39

And early experiences as a Wasps academy prospect sent out on loan to second-tier clubs Blackheath, Nottingham and Coventry confirmed his worst fears over life at the coalface as he was schooled by a series of gnarly veterans.

“When I started playing men’s rugby I was horrendous at scrummaging. Terrible,” said the 25-year-old, who is set to start Saturday’s first Test against the Wallabies in Perth.

“I played in National One at Blackheath, I had my first ‘A’ league game there and I genuinely thought the five-metre push rule was still there.

“So they drove me over about 10 metres for a push-over try and I was complaining to the ref because I had no idea that the rule had stopped. I was dreadful for a good year and a half.

ADVERTISEMENT

“I played against one experienced prop at Coventry, I nearly got red-carded for scrum infringements. The ref said ‘one more penalty and you’re getting red-carded’, so they subbed me off after 24 minutes.

“I was getting booed by the Coventry fans and they then realised that I was an academy player at Wasps so I was getting absolutely heckled.

“At that point, I was like ‘I don’t think I can be a prop, there’s no way I’m going to be good enough’. I had a few of those afternoons.”

At a time when the second division of English club rugby is fighting for survival amid cuts in funding, Stuart has only praise for what he views as an important development tool for young props looking to break into a Premiership starting XV.

ADVERTISEMENT

Related

“Specifically for front-rowers, there is a real value to going out on loan because you need to go into the cauldron a bit,” Stuart said.

“As a prop, your reps in training will be more limited so you just need to play as much as possible. I found the Championship so hard because I was having to improve at scrums and I found the Premiership easier because I’d been through that.”

The series opener against the Wallabies in Perth will be the first time Stuart has played outside of Europe at any level but as an avid watcher of any Ashes series, the rivalry with Australia is deeply ingrained.

Only four of his 20 caps have been starts due to the presence of Kyle Sinckler, but a back injury has forced the Bristol forward to remain at home.

“The tone has got to start in the engine room with set-piece, around the ruck, carries and tackling,” Stuart said.

“A big thing we’ve been speaking about was that 2016 was England’s first series win in Australia, so this is a chance to come out and be part of a second series win.

“It doesn’t happen often in cricket or any sport coming down to Australia, so especially as a front-five group that is something we’ve been quite excited about – getting stuck into it.”

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

2 Comments
S
Samuel 871 days ago

Can I just ask the thought process of a coach who sees a young fly half and thinks 'hang on, there's my new tighthead!'? Not as if the positions share too much in terms of skillset...

Load More Comments

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

N
NH 16 minutes ago
Battle of the breakdown to determine Wallabies’ grand slam future

Nice one John. I agree that defence (along with backfield kick receipt/positioning) remains their biggest issue, but that I did see some small improvements in it despite the scoreline like the additional jackal attempts from guys like tupou and the better linespeed in tight. But, I still see two issues - 1) yes they are jackaling, but as you point out they aren't slowing the ball down. I think some dark arts around committing an extra tackler, choke tackles, or a slower roll away etc could help at times as at the moment its too easy for oppo teams to get quick ball (they miss L wright). Do you have average ruck speed? I feel like teams are pretty happy these days to cop a tackle behind the ad line if they still get quick ball... and 2) I still think the defence wide of the 3-4th forward man out looks leaky and disconnected and if sua'ali'i is going to stay at 13 I think we could see some real pressure through that channel from other teams. The wallabies discipline has improved and so they are giving away less 3 pt opportunities and kicks into their 22 via penalty. Now, they need to be able to force teams to turnover the ball and hold them out. They scramble quite well once a break is made, but they seem to need the break to happen first... Hunter, marika and daugunu were other handy players to put ruck pressure on. Under rennie, they used to counter ruck quite effectively to put pressure on at the b/down as well.

3 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING Munster confirm the signing of an Irish rugby legend's son Munster confirm the signing of an Irish rugby legend's son
Search