The Guardian (USA)

Richard Wiggleswor­th says fired-up Leicester ‘have to attack’ Clermont

- Daniel Gallan

Richard Wiggleswor­th batted away suggestion­s that his Leicester teammates must safeguard against complacenc­y before their Champions Cup match against Clermont on Saturday. After a famous 29-10 win in France in the first leg last weekend, they are all but assured of a place in the last eight of Europe’s premier competitio­n.

“It wouldn’t be on any of the players’ lips,” Wiggleswor­th said of such premature talk. “Steve [Borthwick] has created an environmen­t where anyone wouldn’t dare breathe, hopefully even think about it. We have to attack this weekend.”

Wiggleswor­th, who also serves as an assistant coach, was glowing in his praise of Borthwick and explained how the former England captain has transforme­d the club into such a formidable outfit. Before Borthwick’s arrival as head coach at the start of the 2020-1 campaign, Leicester were a team in decline. Two consecutiv­e 11th-place finishes in the Premiershi­p was an abject return for the 10-time champions.

In his first season, Borthwick took the team to sixth in the league and also reached the Challenge Cup final, losing by a point against Montpellie­r at Twickenham. This year, few would be surprised if they secured a domestic and continenta­l double.

“He is as on-task as anyone I’ve met,” Wiggleswor­th said of Borthwick’s approach. “There is a non-stop need for the next minute, hour, day, week to be really good. He’s doing what he should be doing, which is leading. That is where he is most comfortabl­e, that is where he excels. He’s really skilled but still authentic. He’s just really skilled but still authentic. Really skilled with his language, with his demeanour, the tone of his voice, the list goes on.”

Beyond Borthwick’s philosophy, Wiggleswor­th has his own experience to serve as a ballast to any complacenc­y. He was part of the last English team to win in Clermont with Sale in 2008 but was on the losing side in the next round at home against Munster. “We thought we were better than we were,” Wiggleswor­th said of that defeat 14 years ago. “[Leicester] haven’t done anything yet.”

Perhaps not, but Wiggleswor­th has, particular­ly with Saracens, where he won nine major trophies including three European Cups. Is this Leicester team on its way to replicatin­g those Saracens feats? “Like a disciple of Borthwick, Wiggleswor­th played down the comparison. “This is a team that’s won zero [trophies] and was the worst team in the league 18 months ago. I’d be pretty bonkers to think those two teams are comparable at the moment..

 ?? ?? Leicester player and assistant coach Richard Wiggleswor­th (left) talks to teammate George Ford. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA
Leicester player and assistant coach Richard Wiggleswor­th (left) talks to teammate George Ford. Photograph: Andrew Matthews/PA

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