Daily Mail

IT WAS AWESOME, BUT WEIRD, TO BE BACK!

Saints full back George Furbank is fired up and ready to ignite his England career

- by Will Kelleher

GEORGE Furbank is comparing two rugby games, 28 weeks apart, that could hardly have been more different. Northampto­n Saints’ 34- 21 defeat by Wasps on Sunday might have been the Premiershi­p game of the weekend but it was still an eerie, quiet affair — a world away from Furbank’s loud, fiery England debut against France in February.

‘It was two opposites,’ said the Saints’ 23-year-old. ‘At least this time I could hear team-mates!

‘It was a relief and awesome to be back but it was kind of weird rocking up to the stadium with no fans providing an atmosphere when you’re warming up. Once you’re into the game it’s OK — it’s like another game and you don’t notice too much difference.

‘Usually you block out the crowd noise anyway, but now when there is a break in play you think, “Wow, it’s really quiet”.

‘It’s always going to be weird playing behind closed doors, especially at Franklin’s Gardens where you’re used to our fans singing the whole game.

‘It was a frustratin­g result. We didn’t put our game on Wasps who had four or five chances and took most of them.’

That was one unhappy parallel with the Stade de France Test a lifetime ago.

During the Six Nations, Furbank was a shock call-up for the opener — England’s first game since the World Cup final which he had watched with mates over a beer. With the benefit for hindsight the full back is mature enough to admit he struggled.

‘ I got put in there when I probably wasn’t expecting to,’ he reflected. ‘ Looking back, I would have done a few things differentl­y but I was a new cap and hadn’t experience­d it before. You never know how you will react.

‘You’ve got so many different things to deal with, like the pressure with so many people watching. It was more the buildup to the game. Your phone is going crazy and there are a lot of distractio­ns. I didn’t deal with it as well as I could have. It’s something I’ve never had to deal with before. ‘I like to be focused and have my mind on the game with minimal distractio­ns. Going into that match, it probably wasn’t the case. When I definitely didn’t have the game I wanted, Eddie Jones spoke to me and gave me confidence going into the Scotland game.’ Furbank tried to work out what went wrong with RFU psychologi­st Andrea Furst, who helped him calm his mind before a stormy second cap in Scotland. ‘We spoke about breathing and meditation to clear the mind and take away any thoughts or distractio­ns that are going on in your head,’ he explained. ‘ For Scotland I felt more myself, more confident. I’d learned a lesson and had a better game because of it.’ It was perhaps understand­able that Furbank took a while to get going. Unlike most of his peers and the majority of the England senior side, he never represente­d his country at top junior level. In fact his school, Kimbolton, did not play rugby at all — so Furbank’s formative years were spent at Huntingdon Rugby Club, where he followed in the footsteps of father Tim and great-uncle Dick. At 14, he was selected as one of the best young talents of the area by the England pathway programme but, aside from a run- out for the Under 16 C team, that was it. After moving to Bedford School, he was snapped up by Northampto­n Saints — joining at the same time as housemate and fellow England hopeful Alex Mitchell.

‘It was frustratin­g,’ said Furbank of his lack of youth experience. ‘You see your mates playing England Under 18s and Under 20s and think “does this mean something?”. But I tried to keep my head down and keep working, hoping I would get an opportunit­y at Saints to show my worth.

‘You do get the feeling it isn’t going to happen, but I was never really a stand- out talent at the age-group levels, so I just worked hard at my basics and tried to be as good as I could at those. The opportunit­y doesn’t go until they say it’s gone.’

Furbank was also a strong cricketer at school and the sport kept him sane during lockdown.

With team-mates and housemates Alex Ribbans and Mitchell there were hours of backyard matches.

‘I’m not the best in the garden — I’m more of a free-flowing player than a Test match, softhands batsman!’ laughs Furbank, who does a passable impression of England opener Rory Burns.

‘I played Minor Counties for Huntingdon­shire as a teenager and they sent me to some winter nets at Leicesters­hire.

‘I enjoyed cricket more than rugby when I was really young and still miss playing it. I started out as a top-order batsman then moved to the middle order and bowled left-arm spin. I would say my bowling is up there for garden cricket — I can tweak a few out!

‘At around 14 I realised I was a bit better at rugby than cricket so the focus moved.’

Between those garden games and at-home training, Furbank also finished the fourth year of his Open University Geography & Environmen­tal Sciences degree while rugby was away — with a project comparing soil moisture variations in conservati­on and normal agricultur­e.

But at last he is back on familiar turf with the Saints, who can quickly bounce back from their Wasps loss with games against London Irish, Bath and Harlequins coming in the space of nine days from this Saturday.

‘It’s a brutal schedule but you do what you have to do to get the season done,’ said Furbank. ‘Hopefully there will be a decent amount of rotation and the boys won’t have to double up too much. No one is allowed to play every game anyway, no one could.

‘The mental side will be brutal too — even if you’re on the bench you’ll need to be in the right mindset. The good thing is that if you get two or three quick wins you’re straight back in the mix for the top four. That is the minimum aim, then we go for the title.’

Furbank hopes that when England come calling again, clear thinking will see him through.

‘The whole thing was a brand new experience, so I’ll know fully what to expect now and that gives me confidence,’ he concluded.

 ?? PICTURE: ANDY HOOPER ?? Back-yard batsman: Furbank turned to cricket to tackle the lockdown
PICTURE: ANDY HOOPER Back-yard batsman: Furbank turned to cricket to tackle the lockdown
 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Storming back: Furbank for Saints on Sunday
GETTY IMAGES Storming back: Furbank for Saints on Sunday
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