The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Barclay will be showing his old friend no mercy

Scarlets and Scotland captain aims to break Ryan Wilson’s heart in semi

- STeve scoTT

John Barclay’s close friend Ryan Wilson is “the heartbeat” of the Glasgow Warriors – but the Scotland captain plans to leave him broken-hearted at the end of tomorrow’s Guinness PRO14 semi-final at Scotstoun.

A former Warrior himself, Barclay will instead be leading out Scarlets in what could be his final game for the Welsh region – although quite clearly he would prefer that to be in the Grand Final in Dublin.

“It might be my last game and it might not,” he said. “I’m certainly aware it’s my last couple of weeks here (before he moves to Edinburgh in the summer). But there’s too much going on to think too much about that.

“It’s going to be tough. It’s a semi-final and that means you’ve got a couple of the top teams in the league going up against each other. We know it will be tough. The prize at the end of it is one more game in Dublin.”

And Wilson, not the stars Russell, Hogg or Jones, is the man Scarlets must target, believes Barclay.

“He’s captain and the heartbeat of that team on and off the pitch,” added Barclay. “He’s one of my best friends and I know he’s passionate about where he is trying to take Glasgow and what they can do, otherwise he wouldn’t have committed to re-signing for them.

“He’s a very important player to them. He’s involved in most of the good things they do, so it will be nice to have another game against him.

“I’ll want to get the better of the oneon-ones, but it is impossible to follow someone around the pitch much these days.”

Barclay does not think you can look too much into recent results, specifical­ly the way the Scarlets were beasted by Leinster in the European Cup semifinals or their comfortabl­e win over the Warriors in their last meeting a month ago.

“I don’t think it was that game was that one-sided,” he said of the last meeting. “We kind of got away from them in the second half.

“We played quite well and it was one of those days when they probably didn’t fire as many shots as they wanted to. We’ll have a look at it and find areas where we felt we did well against them, but I know how disappoint­ed they were after the game.

“They’ve had a really good season and their record at home is outstandin­g. “We know it’s a big challenge.” Barclay had just one season at Scotstoun before he left for Wales but even then felt the club had found its home at last.

“It did feel like that so I obviously felt a connection and sure enough, the growth of the club since the move has been incredible,” he said.

“I’ve not played there for a couple of years. I think our fixtures have been during the Autumn internatio­nal stuff, but it is always nice to go home and see some of the old faces

“My last game there was my 150th for Glasgow, but we had a semi-final the next week, so it didn’t feel like my last game. It was Graeme Morrison’s last game as well. Obviously, we are best mates so we ran out together, which is a nice memory.”

And if it starts this weekend or next, Barclay is due a well-deserved rest having been excused tour duty with Scotland – although far from voluntaril­y.

“I always want to play for Scotland but I understood that it was my heart rather than my head speaking,” he admitted.

“I’m gutted, disappoint­ed to miss the tour but there’s a lot going on in terms of moving clubs ahead of another long season. It was the right decision.”

 ?? Picture: SNS. ?? John Barclay, right, plans to leave good friend Ryan Wilson broken-hearted when Glasgow clash with Scarlets tomorrow.
Picture: SNS. John Barclay, right, plans to leave good friend Ryan Wilson broken-hearted when Glasgow clash with Scarlets tomorrow.
 ??  ?? John Barclay admits Scarlets “face a big challenge” against his former side Glasgow in PRO14 semi-final.
John Barclay admits Scarlets “face a big challenge” against his former side Glasgow in PRO14 semi-final.

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