Coventry Telegraph

Rigg’s route shows way as he grew from Cov to Prem rugby

- By PAUL SMITH

IN 1956 after a successful season as Oxford University’s fly half, Mike Smith won his first England cap in the Five Nations against Wales.

He went on to win 50 further caps drom 1958-72 – as a middle-order batter and popular captain of England’s cricket team – without again catching the eye at Twickenham.

Fast forward 68 years and it’s fair to say that being spotted in long shorts at Iffley Road is no longer such a well-trodden route into the England team. However, the alternativ­e pathways available to those journeying from teenage hopeful to red rose regular generate plenty of opinion.

In current times, the vast majority of players who go on to represent England begin their profession­al rugby journey in the Premiershi­p’s academy system.

Each season a reasonable-sized group of mid-teens join each club’s junior academy and over three years this squad is pared down to a handful of 18-year-olds who win a threeyear contract to train with the pros as paid apprentice­s.

All well and good... but what about those who don’t make the cut, or those late developers who never entered the academy system sausage machine in the first place?

English rugby is sprinkled with products of junior clubs and those who took up the sport in their late teens who often are from non-rugby playing schools. Among this list are some well-known names have successful­ly defied the odds.

Recent Exeter signing Will Rigg is living proof. The 24-year-old powerhouse centre is yet to reach the attention of the rugby public. However, there are plenty of experience­d rugby watchers that have the Solihull School product earmarked for a big future.

At the age of 15, Rigg was a talented sportsman at a school where – under the watchful eye of former England all-rounder Darren Maddy – they know a thing or two about turning out useful cricketers.

Although he also played in the school rugby team and for his local club Silhillian­s, Rigg was a regular in Warwickshi­re’s county cricket age group sides and well-known at Edgbaston. When he completed his A-levels, it was therefore no surprise that he headed off to Coburg CC in Melbourne for a winter developing his talents in the testing environmen­t of Australian grade cricket.

However, the tide soon began to turn for Rigg, who in his own words “fell out of love with cricket a bit” during his spell Down Under. As a result when he returned to the UK he embarked upon a degree in business management at Cardiff Met Uni and fancying a game of rugby turned up at the freshers’ trials with no thought of what might follow.

“I went to the trials thinking I’d enjoyed rugby at school and hoping I might get in one of the Cardiff Met teams,” he said.

“I obviously did something right because within a few weeks I’d made my first team debut. But Covid then came along and we didn’t play much in my second year or for some of my third year. To be honest, when we started again I wasn’t thinking about anything more than cementing a place in the BUCS first team.

“I managed to put some good performanc­es together and after a few conversati­ons with an agent decided to see if I might be good enough to make a go of rugby.

“Alex Rae at Coventry then approached me in March or April and it seemed like that would be a good move as it was close to my home, but more importantl­y because he convinced me there would be an opportunit­y for me to play plenty of rugby.

“I knew Alex had only been in post a couple of months and was building a squad with plenty of emphasis on younger players which meant it would be a fresh play for everyone. He told me there would be chances for me and that the environmen­t he wanted to create would reward those who performed well.

“Alex put together a group in which there were very few Premiershi­p drop-downs but instead most of us arrived from universiti­es or the

National Leagues. He obviously believed in his own recruitmen­t and managed to build a team that finished third in the league last year by adding this group to some players who were there then bringing in a couple with more experience.”

If student rugby launched Rigg on his way, he has no doubt that joining Cov where he received some outstandin­g coaching and learned rapidly in the ultra-competitiv­e Championsh­ip turned him into much more than a promising rugby player.

“Never having been involved in a pathway or profession­al team before, when I first arrived at Cov I relied on my own instincts and physical presence,” he said.

“Getting used to systems and some of the more techni- cal bits took time but once that came my confidence really grew. Putting together what I learned individual­ly from the coaches plus improved strength turned me from the raw player that left uni into someone who knows a lot more about the game and is a much better rugby player.

“Cov provide a great environmen­t for someone in my situation – you are given all the tools and it is then up to you to do the work to put things into place. I worked loads with (backs coach) Gordon Ross on passing and kicking but maybe my biggest improvemen­t came in defence where I used to sit down and look at match videos with (defence coach) James Scaysbrook.”

What would Rigg say to a talented teenager who has either failed to catch the eye of the Premiershi­p academies or fallen by the selection wayside at one of the top ten clubs?

“The only way to improve is by playing rugby,” he says. “From September 2022 to January 2024 I played around 40 competitiv­e games in the Championsh­ip or Premiershi­p Cup.

“The quality of the Championsh­ip gets missed a bit. For a young player having the chance to play at that level is vital to their developmen­t.”

The next stage on Rigg’s journey challenges him to start again in Devon and try to play as regularly in the Premiershi­p as he has in the Championsh­ip. In this respect he made a good start by scoring a couple of tries on debut for Exeter in a friendly against the Scarlets.

The demands of modern profession­al sport mean no-one will again follow in MJK Smith’s 1950s footsteps and represent their country at both cricket and rugby union, but alternativ­e routes to the top tier of English rugby clearly do still exist.

And could Rigg and Slade join Smith and Amiss in starring for both club and country?

Time will tell, but by making his Premiershi­p debut against Sale this weekend Rigg has stepped on to the conveyor belt to national honours.

And with the debate about funding the Championsh­ip and the competitio­n’s future at a critical point he has also sent the strongest possible message to those who run rugby union in England.

Tickets for Coventry’s next Championsh­ip home game against Cambridge on Friday night are available from www.coventryru­gby.co. uk/tickets/matchday-tickets/

Alex put together a group in which there were very few Premiershi­p drop-downs but instead most of us arrived from universiti­es or the National Leagues.

Will Rigg

 ?? ??
 ?? PICS: JOHN COLES ?? Will Rigg in action against Gloucester and Northampto­n (below).
PICS: JOHN COLES Will Rigg in action against Gloucester and Northampto­n (below).

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom