Coventry Telegraph

Will fronts up about his prop issues

- By DUNCAN BECH

FORMER Wasps and Coventry star Will Stuart (pictured) 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.

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 pro rugby that he agreed to fill the number three jersey.

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 fivemetre push rule was still there.

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

“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.”

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