The Scotsman

Friends turn to foes for former

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“I love Scotland, love Glasgow, love the Warriors; they are my brothers. Going to Glasgow is like coming to Fiji; it is my home, too.”

Leone Nakarawa makes no bones about his affiliatio­n with the place that welcomed him in and turned him from a rugby-playing Fijian soldier into an internatio­nal star.

Don’t expect that to mean he will tone things down when he faces Scotland on Saturday. Even best friend and regular contact Ryan Wilson, pictured, whose children relish their regular chats with “Uncle Naknak”, won’t be spared.

“For 80 minutes on Saturday, he is my enemy – the rest of the time, he is my brother,” Nakarawa said as he basked in the humid heat of his homeland.

“Glasgow has a special place in my heart, that is somethiing I have been saying for a couple of years. It is the place I got my first profession­al contract. I played in Fiji, but that was my first time overseas.

“Glasgow was my first club, so they became my friends, my close brothers, including the coaches who taught me a lot – positional roles and responsibi­lities during games. I want to thank them for that, for what they did for me. They have helped me so much in my rugby career.”

It is one of those oddities that two of the main players in the Fiji side both got their breaks from Gregor Townsend, then the Glasgow Warriors coach, but now in charge of Scotland. Both Nakarawa and Niko Matalwalu, the scrum-half, arrived as unknowns and left on big-money deals. For all that, there are good grounds for suggesting that no other coach has harnessed either player’s talents with quite the same sure-footed certainly that Townsend managed. Maybe because he was a bit of a maverick as a player himself, he seemed to understand them both and found

LEONE NAKARAWA ways to let them showcase their unique talents without destroying the team structure.

“He is one of the best coaches I have worked under,” Nakarawa said. “He taught me a lot, things like offloading. He told me how to do it, when to do it. He has helped me a lot in my rugby career.”

The disadvanta­ge, as Nakarawa observed wryly, is that the Glasgow boys know all about him, too, as he found to his cost when his current club, Racing 92, visited Scotstoun in the European Champions Cup.

“They tried to do things to make me angry because they know me very well, they know I have a short fuse,” he recalled.

“I am emotional, but I have moved on. I have a new team and a new family back in Paris with the Paris boys. If I were soft against Scotland and the Glasgow boys, I would not be helping

“Glasgow has a special place in my heart... Glasgow was my first club, so they became my friends, my close brothers, including the coaches who taught mealot.iwanttotha­nk them for that, for what they did for me”

 ??  ?? 1 Niko Matalwalu, below, and Leone Nakarawa, right, forged friendship­s with Scotland players when they were at Glasgow Warriors, but that will count for little when the Fijians take the field against their former team-mates on Saturday.
1 Niko Matalwalu, below, and Leone Nakarawa, right, forged friendship­s with Scotland players when they were at Glasgow Warriors, but that will count for little when the Fijians take the field against their former team-mates on Saturday.
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