Western Mail

Wiggleswor­th hoping to make up for lost time after his call-up

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RICHARD Wiggleswor­th feared the 2015 World Cup would stand as a bitter final chapter of his England career.

Wiggleswor­th is set to make his first appearance­s since the group exit three years ago when Wales visit Twickenham in a mouthwater­ing NatWest 6 Nations showdown on Saturday.

The veteran Saracens half-back is poised to provide cover for Danny Care from the bench after Ben Youngs was ruled out for four months by the knee ligament damage sustained in Rome on Sunday.

The last of his 27 caps was won against Uruguay in the final match of Stuart Lancaster’s reign, and until Sunday he was stranded in Test exile due to Eddie Jones’ reliance on only two scrum-halves.

“That was one of the worst weeks of my life. There is no point sugar-coating it – you put that much effort into something and you mess it up,” Wiggleswor­th said.

“So many things go through your mind at the time and it being my last involvemen­t will definitely have been one of them.

“But a long time ago I stopped worrying about what I couldn’t control and I had to get back to worrying about myself.

“I use this line a lot – being able to look myself in the mirror and know that I had done everything I can to give myself a chance. I got on with that. Experience probably helped. I’m lucky to be at the club that I’m at – going back to something meaningful and being at the sharp end of tournament­s definitely helped me get over what happened at the World Cup.

“But that’s life, isn’t it? You can be as jealous as you want and want it as much as you do, but it’s other people who decide that for you. You can only decide your attitude and how you react.

“It feels good being back, but this is not the way you want to take the call. Having done a knee myself like Ben has, you always fear the worst.”

Wiggleswor­th waited by the phone in the aftermath of the 46-15 victory over Italy having been told by Jones that he would be in his thoughts should injury strike, and the call duly came.

Since his arrival at England’s Surrey training base he has been using a specially-designed app to swot up on the team playbook, but the squad’s oldest player, at 34, is back in familiar territory.

He has been an influentia­l figure for Saracens during their dominance of English and European club rugby, his game-management and kicking skills improving to the point he is enjoying the best form of his career.

“Scrum-half is one of the positions where you constantly learn and improve. You are at the sharp end of the game, so if you stay still then you are dead,” he added.

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