The Rugby Paper

Brown: I’m still ready for you Eddie

Paul Rees talks to Newcastle full-back Mike Brown about his hopes for club and county

- By PAUL REES

MIKE Brown is primed and ready to add to his 72 England caps – even at the age of 36.

Brown, who began his new career at Newcastle Falcons with a try last Saturday against Saracens, says age should be no barrier in the modern era.

“I loved my time in the England shirt and I would not turn down a call from Eddie Jones,” said fullback Brown, who was a rock for Halequins during his 18 years with the club.

“All I would say is never write anyone off. Quade Cooper is back in Australia’s side at the age of 33 and justifying his place. Players can definitely go back into the England side at a certain age and prove themselves.”

In an exclusive intervoiew with The Rugby Paper, Brown adds: “When you reach a certain age, people talk about you as if you are about to fall off a cliff. They think you cannot do it any more, but some of the best sports people in the world are at least well into their 30s and still some of the best in the game: Ronaldo, Tom Brady, Thiago Silva and Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c to name a few. Then there is Jimmy Gopperth at Wasps, still winning matches, and Nick Easter scored a try hat-trick for England when he was 37.

“The obsession should not be with age but what a player is producing. I feel good and can still do it mentally and physically.”

Brown acknowledg­es, though, that there are younger candidates, saying “there is some talent in the 15 jersey with Freddie Steward and Max Malins just a couple of names to talk about”.

But the young talent he really wants Jones to nurture is his former Quins fly-half Marcus Smith.

“Marcus is on his way to becoming the world class player he has the potential to be,” said Brown. “I hope he is given the opportunit­y in the white jersey: he just needs a team built around him with a framework that suits him, one that would allow him to flourish.

“Eddie has an exciting group of players: chuck a few older boys in and they will be a decent team. I just hope they are allowed to express themselves and show what they are about.

“That does not mean playing Fiji Sevens rugby because there always has to be a balance between attack and defence, but if they are shackled to a restrictiv­e gameplan, it would be a waste, in my opinion.

“England have the potential to win the World Cup.”

Mike Brown has started a new phase in his playing career at a time when most of his contempora­ries have unlaced their boots. The England and Newcastle full-back is 36 years young, bursting with the same aspiration­s and enthusiasm he had when he made his debut for Harlequins as a teenager in 2005.

Brown left Quins, the club where he had envisaged spending his entire senior career, in the summer after being deemed too old to merit a new contract. Not long after, Cristiano Ronaldo, his senior by seven months, made a muchherald­ed return to Manchester United on a two-year contract worth several million pounds with the option of a third.

“When you reach a certain age, people start going on about the next best thing and talk about you as if you are about to fall off a cliff,” said Brown, who made a try-scoring Premiershi­p debut for Newcastle at Saracens last week. “They think you cannot do it any more, but some of the best sports people in the world are at least well into their 30s and still some of the best in the game: Ronaldo, Tom Brady, Thiago Silva and Zlatan Ibrahimovi­c to name a few. Then there is Jimmy Gopperth at Wasps, still winning matches, and Nick Easter scored a try hat-trick for England when he was 37.

“The obsession should not be with age but what a player is producing. I feel good and can still do it mentally and physically. It should not matter how old I am, but certain people get preoccupie­d by it and it was ultimately why I left my last club, which was unfortunat­e. Just look around the world of sport and see what people of my age and older are doing.”

Brown is looking to the future by entering the world of agents, believing that the current system, with some exceptions, does not work for players outside the negotiatio­n of contracts. It should not be taken as a sign that he is thinking about bringing his 16 years as a player to an end.

“Retiring any time soon is not on my mind,” he said. “This was an opportunit­y that came up and there are other things I want to pursue as well. I am enjoying being at Newcastle and my family have settled in well here. The only downside was a little rib-fracture I picked up in a pre-season game which delayed by league start, but it was good to have a nice easy opener against Saracens!

“A try on debut was pleasing, but I would rather have won the game. We could have got something out of it and it came down to small margins which showed where we need to improve. There is so much potential here and we are aspiring to win big. Get the little things right, and we will get there. We have given Harlequins and Saracens a fright in the last few weeks and we are yet to hit our stride fully with players to come back.”

Far from thinking about when he will make his final appearance, Brown has not extinguish­ed the hope that he will add to his 72 England caps. Never mind whether his ambition is realistic, it adds to the fire of one of the most competitiv­e and driven players of any era.

“I loved my time in the England shirt and I would not turn down a call from Eddie Jones,” said Brown, “but there is some talent in the 15 jersey with Freddie Steward and Max Malins just a couple of names to talk about. All I would say is never write anyone off. Quade Cooper is back in Australia’s side at the age of 33 and justifying his place. Players can definitely go back into the England side at

a certain age and prove themselves.” Brown says he is an England fan now, anticipati­ng an autumn campaign rather more exciting and fulfilling than the one last year with Jones having picked a number of dynamic young players in his squad last month, not least Brown’s former outside-half colleague at Harlequins, Marcus Smith. “Marcus is on his way to becoming the world class player he has the potential to be,” said Brown. “I hope he is given the opportunit­y in the white jersey: he just needs a team built around him with a framework that suits him, one that would allow him to flourish.

“Eddie has an exciting group of players: chuck a few older boys in and they will be a decent team. I just hope they are allowed to express themselves and show what they are

“Some of the best sports people in the world are at least well into their 30s”

about. That does not mean playing Fiji Sevens rugby because there always has to be a balance between attack and defence, but if they are shackled to a restrictiv­e gameplan, it would be a waste, in my opinion.

“England have the potential to win the World Cup, but no one knows what Eddie is thinking, apart from him. He is an interestin­g character, to put it mildly. Who knows what he will do, but rugby in England is turning a bit and now has more of a balance between attack and defence, even if Harlequins and Bristol last week produced a bit of a basketball scoreline which you do not want to see too much of the time.”

When England kicked their way to success in last year’s Autumn Nations Cup, their tactics were based on the game being in a defensive cycle with adventurou­s rugby carrying a high load of risk given refereeing interpreta­tions. Jones now believes that, two years out from the World Cup in France, World Rugby is encouragin­g a bolder approach and he has tweaked his squad accordingl­y.

“My frustratio­n with Eddie then was he was talking about the game being in a defensive stage,” Brown says. “I thought, being the world class coach he is and his deep knowledge, why with the players at his disposal not be the team that says we are going to change this cycle to an attacking one?

“I hope he gives the players the framework to attack this autumn. If the Lions had played a bit more rugby rather than try to take on South Africa at their own game in the summer, they would probably have clinched the series. When Quins won the title last season, we kicked the ball more than most. It was to put teams under pressure and try to create unstructur­ed play rather than doing it for the sake of it and letting the opposition have the ball back. It was an attacking weapon.”

Talking of attacking weapons, Newcastle’s wing Adam Radwan, who scored a try hat-trick on his England debut against Canada in the summer, was named the Premiershi­p’s player of the month last week and Brown has been tasked with mentoring one of the game’s quickest players.

“He is an unbelievab­le athlete,” said Brown. “I will try to help him with bits of his game, such as positionin­g and the mental side. He can become one of the top wings in the world and he is so athletic. He is one of the reasons why I am excited by what the future holds for Newcastle.

“We tend to get left to ourselves which means people do not see much of the potential here. We can achieve a lot as a team if we have confidence and belief and go for it. I am relishing it here and can’t wait to get down to St James’s Park and savour the atmosphere now Newcastle United are in new hands... my four-year old son Jax is starting to pick up the Geordie accent!”

“I hope Eddie gives the players the framework to attack this autumn”

 ?? ?? Ageless: Mike Brown
Ageless: Mike Brown
 ?? ??
 ?? ?? Ageless: Jimmy Gopperth, left, and Quade Cooper
Ageless: Jimmy Gopperth, left, and Quade Cooper
 ?? ??
 ?? PICTURES: Getty Images ?? World class potential: Marcus Smith in action against Canada for England. Left: Mike Brown
PICTURES: Getty Images World class potential: Marcus Smith in action against Canada for England. Left: Mike Brown
 ?? ?? Talents: Freddie Steward, above, and Max Malins
Talents: Freddie Steward, above, and Max Malins
 ?? ?? Unbelievab­le athlete: Adam Radwan
Unbelievab­le athlete: Adam Radwan

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