The Scotsman

“The dream is to play for your country. It is my goal and it’s closer than it has been”

DAVE CHERRY The 30-year-old Edinburgh hooker on his hopes to realise a lifelong ambition – a first cap for Scotland

- By GRAHAM BEAN

Dave Cherry was one of three uncapped hookers named in Scotland’s 2019 Six Nations squad but while Jake Kerr and Grant Stewart went on to win full internatio­nal honours, Cherry is still chasing that elusive first cap.

Two years on, and the Edinburgh man is hoping he has caught Gregor Townsend’s eye.

The Scotland coach will name his Six Nations squad at lunchtime today and, with first-choice hooker Fraser Brown ruled out with a neck injury and back-up Stuart Mcinally struggling with a similar complaint, Cherry is sure to be on his radar.

George Turner of Glasgow Warriors looks to be in pole position to start against England on February 6 if Mcinally doesn’t make it but Townsend is expected to name three hookers in his squad.

For Cherry, who turned 30 earlier this month, playing for Scotland would be the ultimate.

“Absolutely, why does any young lad or lady start playing rugby?” he says. “The dream is to play for your country. That’s what I want to do. It is my goal and it’s closer than it has been, I’d say, so I just have to focus on myself and hopefully the stars will align.

“I get on really well with Stuart and you hate to see somebody injured, but rugby doesn’t stop and sometimes players just need a bit of an opportunit­y and I hope to show that with this game time I’m now getting.”

He played the full 80 minutes against Glasgow Warriors at Scotstoun on Saturday and although Edinburgh were pipped by a point, Cherry impressed. Next up are Zebre in Italy on Saturday “You can’t get ahead of yourself,” he said. “It is the here and now that is the important thing and my mind is purely focused on Zebre at the weekend.”

Despite the one-game-at-atime mantra, Cherry would be forgiven for allowing his thoughts to stray to Twickenham. Ten years one from playing at the 2011 Junior World Championsh­ip in Italy, that full cap is tantalisin­gly close.

And no-one can say he has not worked hard to get to this point. A product of Merchiston Castle School, Cherry was captain of Scotland under-18s. He played for Currie and was capped ten times at U20 level but struggled to win a profession­al contract in Scotland.

He went to university instead, studying geography and environmen­tal management at Northumbri­a before having another stab at the pro game, this time with more success. He played at London Scottish and then at Stade Nicois in France before signing for Edinburgh in 2018.

“It does give you a different perspectiv­e,” he said. “To get my first contract I really struggled. I had to call around a lot of coaches in the Championsh­ip and eventually through an agent I got to London Scot

tish. I had three years there where you’re doing every rep in training, you’re playing a lot of minutes and you’re training outside. It gives a bit of a reality

check after being in a suite in Murrayfiel­d. And then I was in France, which was a completely different kettle of fish, where there’s no touch judges

and it’s every man for himself. I guess that’s why I just focus on the here and now and my performanc­e, and hope that things fall into place.”

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 ??  ?? 0 Dave Cherry impressed for Edinburgh in the narrow defeat by Glasgow Warriors at Scotstoun.
0 Dave Cherry impressed for Edinburgh in the narrow defeat by Glasgow Warriors at Scotstoun.

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