The Scotsman

“Cam told me about the camp, and that he loved the environmen­t and the brand of rugby Scotland play”

JOSH BAYLISS Scotland’s new face on how Bath teammate Cam Redpath helped him say yes to nation of his granny’s birth

- Graham Bean

Cameron Redpath has already made a thundering contributi­on to Scottish rugby with his performanc­e in the win over England at Twickenham in February.

Now it appears that the Bath centre has played a significan­t role in alerting Gregor Townsend to another budding talent at the Rec.

Redpath’s clubmate Josh Bayliss is in line to pull on the dark blue of Scotland for the first time on Sunday in the A internatio­nal against England in Leicester. By doing so he will commithims­elftotheco­untry of his grandmothe­r, Frances Bayliss, who hails from Aberdeen.

It’s quite a coup for Murrayfiel­d to snare the back-row forward who was seen as a rising star of the English game.

He helped guide England Under-20 to a Six Nations grand slam and a place in the final of the 2017 World Rugby U20 Championsh­ip. However, no full cap was forthcomin­g and Bayliss said he was delighted to be approached by Scotland.

“I did age group stuff with England and then went back to Bath and internatio­nal rugby was not really in my mind at all, I just wanted to get into the team at Bath and do what I could do there,” said the 23-year-old.

“Gregor got in contact with me around the Six Nations time and on the call it sounded like a great opportunit­y for me and as soon as I came into camp I felt comfortabl­e and definitely felt like I’d made the right decision.”

Bayliss was called into the full Scotland squad in February for the match against France in Paris only for the game to be postponed due to a Covid outbreak in the French squad.

He then suffered a concussion with Bath which ruled him out for a period but returned to the Scots set-up as part of the 37-man selection for the summer schedule.

“I was always aware of my Scottish heritage, but internatio­nal rugby wasn’t on my horizons I guess,” Bayliss added.

“Being at Bath, with the quality of back-rowers that we have, there is a lot of competitio­n for places each week, so I was just battling away there and it was a complete surprise to get the call from Gregor, but a really good surprise.”

And there was no prouder grandparen­t than Frances

“She was obviously delighted and over the moon that I had chosen Scotland and she was one of the first people I called when I got the call-up,” said the forward.

Bayliss, who galloped 70 metres to score an outstandin­g try for Bath against Northampto­n the other week, thinks it was Redpath who tipped Murrayfiel­d the wink about his Scottish connection.

“We are quite close and Cam may have mentioned something when he came up because I know when he was sort of deliberati­ng and deciding what to do we spoke quite a lot and I guess I mentioned to him that my grandmothe­r was born in Aberdeen,” he added.

Redpath, pictured inset, was also an England U20 internatio­nal and got as far as being called into Eddie Jones’ full squad before being ruled out with injury. However, the centre was persuaded by Townsend to play for the country his father, Bryan, captained with distinctio­n in the 1990s. Redpath enjoyed an outstandin­g Scotland debut in the Calcutta Cup earlier this year and was unfortunat­e to miss the remainder of the Six Nations with a neck issue.

He has since been sidelined by a serious knee injury which looks set to rule him out for the remainder of the year.

Neverthele­ss, his experience­s of the Scotland set-up were positive and rubbed off on Bayliss.

“I spoke to Cam and he told me about the camp and told me that he loved the environmen­t and the brand of rugby that Scotland are looking to play and it all just seemed like something that would suit my game,” added Bayliss, who was born in Tiverton, south Devon.

“It wasn’t really a difficult decision with all of that considered. I saw it as a massive opportunit­y for me and I thought I’d regret it if I didn’t take it.”

Clubs in the Premiershi­p benefit financiall­y from producing players for the England national set-up but Bayliss said Bath gave him their blessing to switch allegiance.

“It was really important to me that Bath were happy and backed my decision, so I spoke

to them and they were all for it,” he said.

“They ultimately want to see the boys at the club represent their countries and to push themselves as hard as they can. So they were very behind me, so that really helped.”

After the A internatio­nal against England at Welford Road, Scotland will head to eastern Europe for Test matches against Romania on July 7 and Georgia seven days later.

Bayliss linked up last week with his new internatio­nal team-mates and his early impression­s have been favourable, with captain Jamie Ritchie welcoming him into the fold.

“It has been really good, it is a completely different environmen­t to what I’m used to at Bath and it is a great change to get up here to Edinburgh and get stuck in, the boys have been great,” he said.

“It feels like a really good atmosphere building into the summer.

“I’ve spoken to Jamie quite a bit and he’s been incredibly welcoming. Obviously he’s an incredibly talented player and a real leader, you can see that right away. He leads from the front and sets an incredible example for the boys to follow. It’s been great. Having him play in a similar position means I can learn as much as I can from him and try to get up to speed.”

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 ??  ?? 0 Josh Bayliss is in line to make his debut in Scotland’s A internatio­nal against England in Leicester on Sunday
0 Josh Bayliss is in line to make his debut in Scotland’s A internatio­nal against England in Leicester on Sunday
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