Coventry Telegraph

Ross ready to take MAJOR risk Stateside

WASPS STAR REVEALS REASONS BEHIND MOVE TO SEATTLE WOLVES

- By BOBBY BRIDGE Rugby Reporter robert.bridge@reachplc.com

FOR a brief period Ross Neal was living out his rugby dreams. Plucked from the second tier of English rugby and given a shot by Wasps, the club he supported as a boy. Christian Wade’s departure to pursue the American dream opened a pathway to the first team the towering centre-turned-winger took with both hands, scoring Premiershi­p and European tries in the closing months of 2018. Fast forward a little over 12 months, it’s Neal’s turn to be heading Stateside. There’s no change of sport this time, however, but a shot at regular action with Major League Rugby side Seattle Seawolves.

“It is a risk worth taking,” said the 24-year-old. “It’s a good chance go see a bit of the world and playing different leagues is always good. The alternativ­e was seven months holding a tackle bag. Maybe getting a shot at a game, maybe not.”

It was following his final day at Wasps when I caught a few moments with the near two-metre tall back. My first engagement with the former London Irish player was when he was the only senior player to turn down a week off in favour of getting game time in a youthful Wasps squad defeated by Gloucester in the Premiershi­p Cup at Kingsholm in October 2018. That decision paid off. The 17-stone back played in seven more senior games before the end of the year. Appearance­s against superpower­s Saracens and Toulouse were ticked off.

“When I came here from London Scottish, I had a pretty poor rugby CV,” said Neal. “I’m leaving with Champions Cup tries, Premiershi­p tries and having played for the club I used to support when I was younger.”

But it wasn’t enough to fulfil him. A breakthrou­gh 2018 was followed by a stuttering 2019. Just three more senior appearance­s followed before the summer break and just one further appearance this term. Elliot Daly, one of his rivals for his preferred number 13 shirt had moved on, but the competitio­n remained fierce as World Cup winner Malakai Fekitoa pitched up at Wasps’ Broadstree­t RFC base.

Ross Neal

“When you’re not a main player, you may get one chance to show what you can do.

“My chance this year was against Saracens,” said Neal, reflecting on the Premiershi­p Cup game Wasps lost 50-28. “We didn’t play very well and I didn’t play very well. I guess for the coaches, it was case of next chance will come but you’ve got to wait. I didn’t take my chance, last year I took it against Bristol, and I worked really hard for it.

“Last year, when I wasn’t playing, felt different to this year.” Between his first and second seasons at Wasps, Neal had witnessed the ultimate example of a profession­al sportsman taking his chance. He was at Madison Square Garden to witness outsider David Ruiz Jnr shock the boxing world by defeating Britain’s Anthony Joshua. The land of opportunit­y delivering on its words.

It was while he was across the pond that talk of the fledgling Major League Rugby whet Neal’s appetite.

“I was like, if this next year starts the same way by about December I want to go, the writing would probably be on the wall then anyway,” he explained. “If you’re not playing you feel a bit useless. And that’s not a reflection on Wasps, that’s all clubs where you’ve got players like that. I felt I was probably about two, three injuries away in each position that I play from playing and I was like, I can wait around, but you’re not going to get signed by anyone else. You don’t want to get re-signed if you’re not playing, you don’t get fulfilled.”

Even when he was running in tries against Bristol Bears and knocking would-be-tacklers down for fun with his powerful running, Neal concedes his mindset wasn’t right. Something he has pledged to learn from.

“I had that long run of games and thought I’d done really well and but even then, I was under a lot pressure, if I make too many mistakes, I’ll be out which was the case,” said Neal. “I guess that’s a lesson for me about mental attitude. You can’t go out thinking ‘if I make a mistake, I’ll be dropped,’ then what you end up doing is just that.” He continued: “I’d had chats with Dai [Young, Wasps director of rugby] and I said to my agent I’m not sure how close I am here.

“I did mention it pre-season, it will be something I’ll be looking to do if nothing was coming up. And then

It is a risk worth taking. It’s a good chance go see a bit of the world and playing different leagues is always good.

three days later, he came back with an offer in Seattle.”

The exciting back-up plan that had been bubbling away was now a reality. However, there was no waiting until the end of the season, no long goodbye. Seattle Seawolves’ Major League Rugby campaign gets underway in February, with preparatio­ns already underway and warm-up games ahead this month.

“I had a day to think about it,” he said. “That was the Wednesday, on the Thursday I would have to ask Dai as they were travelling to Bordeaux the next day and I had to sign on that Friday. I literally had one day to decide, one day to ask. Asking your DOR to leave, it’s not an envious task. I spoke to Dai and he couldn’t have been better with it, to be honest.

“My family were all behind me, all the players here were really positive, saying they’re sad to see me go but buzzing for me to get the opportunit­y.”

Respectful­ly, Neal’s departure does not leave too sizeable a hole in the

Wasps’ squad. Even former Springbok centre Juan de Jongh is struggling for game time and Neal himself referred to Academy graduate Sam Spink as a ‘class’ player who will ‘become a regular Premiershi­p player within two years.’ There’s also three new wingers in the squad this season in the form of Zach Kibirige, Paolo Odogwu and another Academy graduate, Callum Sirker.

But you sense his departure will be more keenly felt in the day-to-day activities at the club. Neal has a voice and a personalit­y as imposing as his 196cm frame.

“We do something called ‘Any Other Business,’” he said. “We do a bit of the start of every Monday meeting, where we talk about birthdays, landmarks in players’ careers, things that are going on, someone has passed their driving test, graduated from this, make a little joke. And that’s something that myself and Rob Miller have brought in. Maybe in 20 years, they’ll still be doing it, these things start somewhere.”

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 ??  ?? Ross Neal celebrates after scoring a try against Bristol Bears last season and, inset left, on a rampaging run in the same game
Ross Neal celebrates after scoring a try against Bristol Bears last season and, inset left, on a rampaging run in the same game

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