The Rugby Paper

Rowlands finds a new direction

- ■ By ALEX BYWATER

WILL Rowlands admits making to-and-fro dashes from Wales to Coventry left him out on his feet and unable to hit the heights he wanted at internatio­nal level.

The giant lock had no option other than to spend non-Test weeks and weeks when he wasn’t selected by Wales back with his former side Wasps under Premiershi­p rugby rules.

Rowlands has had to deal with that for the 18 months in which he has been a Wales player and the second row has often turned out for Wasps while his Welsh team-mates are resting.

Now, after swapping Wasps for the Dragons this summer, the 29-year-old is looking at a new chapter.

“There was a point during the Six Nations this year when we’d played a lot of rugby in the Premiershi­p,” Rowlands said.

“We’d gone from the previous Premiershi­p final with Wasps basically straight into the new season. I think there was a bit of cumulative fatigue there which maybe I didn’t recognise.

“I was doing my best to ignore it and pretend it wasn’t there, but it did show itself in my general energy around the training pitch.

“Coming to play club rugby in Wales was a decision I made to hopefully put myself in the best position to go to another level or at least deliver my best performanc­es if selected for the national side. I do strongly believe that will be the case. I’m looking forward to doing my best to deliver on that.”

Rowlands has ten Wales caps, but the departure of his internatio­nal locking rivals Cory Hill and Jake Ball to Japan has opened up an opportunit­y.

The 29-year-old is set to rival Adam Beard as Wales captain Alun Wyn Jones’ second-row partner for a gruelling autumn campaign with New Zealand, South Africa, Fiji and Australia.

In a twist of fate, Rowlands will make his Dragons debut against his old side Wasps in today’s pre-season friendly in Coventry.

“I’m excited about it. It’s a bit of a weird one for my first game for a new club to be against my old one. It will be weird going to the away changing room, but it should be good fun,” he said.

“The constant back and forth from Wales to Coventry was pretty tough and it does take it out of you. “The hardest part I found was mentally. You come into a Test environmen­t where you’re playing for your country and you want to be 100 per cent committed to that.

“The next week you’re back at your club and you have to switch everything. That contribute­s to you being quite mentally exhausted, particular­ly when you have to do that multiple times.”

 ?? PICTURES: Getty Images ?? Exhausting: Will Rowlands playing for Wasps
PICTURES: Getty Images Exhausting: Will Rowlands playing for Wasps

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