The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Wade’s switch to NFL will be ‘day one at kindergart­en’

- By Daniel Schofield

After quitting rugby to pursue his American football dream, Christian Wade has been warned by the only man to have made the full transition from the Premiershi­p to the NFL that he will be entering “kindergart­en”.

After winning the 2011 Premiershi­p title with Saracens as a second row, Hayden Smith played a season as a tight end for the New York Jets in 2012 before returning to rugby. His single reception, which he carried for 16 yards, remains the highwater mark for a profession­al rugby union player in the NFL, although others such as Alex Gray and Christian Scotland-williamson made it as far as practice squads.

Wade, the Wasps winger, is the most establishe­d rugby player yet

to attempt to crack the NFL, but Smith said that to all intents and purposes the third-highest try scorer in Premiershi­p history would be starting over.

“The one thing is that you have to be comfortabl­e going back to kindergart­en,” Smith said. “You are no longer a seasoned profession­al in the sport you play. It is day one of kindergart­en and you have to be comfortabl­e not knowing what you are doing.

“It is a massive jump. I’m not sure what position he is looking at, but it is not like a cookie-cutter approach, where wingers make wide receivers. There are a lot of nuances and it is a very difficult jump to make, so good luck to him.”

The mistake many people make, Smith added, is to assume that speed, size and power within rugby are directly applicable to American football. Even Wade’s magical sidestep

Starting over: Christian Wade is the highest-profile rugby player to try to crack the NFL does not necessaril­y correlate.

“Footwork is something that is very specific to different situations on a football field as compared to anything you might see in rugby,” Smith said.

Then there are the playbooks to learn. At the Jets, Smith’s was six inches thick and it took him hundreds of hours to learn thousands of permutatio­ns of plays by heart.

“It is a complicate­d game,” Smith said. “There’s a different language which you have to understand, even before you can get your head around the schematics and the way the game comes together. Then you have to figure out physically how to execute what needs to be done.”

Yesterday, Wasps still had not officially confirmed Wade’s exit, despite his absence from the Champions Cup team-sheet against Bath. The club have signed Malakai Fekitoa, the former All Blacks centre, for next season from Toulon.

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