Rugby World

George North

The Ospeys. Wales and Lions winger is known for his speed on the field, but he's also a fan of going fast on two wheels..

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WITH HIS mum away for the weekend, George North – and his older brother

Josh – decided it was the ideal opportunit­y to get a first motorbike. After convincing their dad that it was a great idea, they found a suitable bike in the local classified­s and the two teens were soon riding it up and down the dirt track leading to the family home in Anglesey. Then Mrs North arrived home early. George spotted her pulling in as he rounded a corner, did a quick U-turn to rush back, but it was too late – she’d seen the bike!

It’s fair to say she wasn’t best pleased, giving father and sons “both barrels” in George’s words. By that point, though, the goal had been achieved: they had their first motorcycle.

Bikes, whether two wheels or four, were a common feature of North’s teenage years. He did a deal with a friend’s dad, who owned a nearby farm: he’d help out during baling season if he could ride motorbikes and quad bikes around his fields. He’d tap into his own dad’s skills from 20-plus years as an RAF groundstaf­f engineer to revamp old machines.

“I’ve been a petrol head since I can remember,” says 28-year-old North. “Anything loud, noisy and fast always really interested me. We didn’t have a huge amount of money, so we’d buy a banger and Dad would teach me how to fix it up so it was less of a banger!

“I like to know how things work, even if I can’t put it back together! My dad being an engineer and a Yorkshirem­an, nothing was ever broken – you had to fix it. It’s taking a step back, working out what’s wrong and fixing it.

“I fixed the washing machine recently. It had a broken seal so I thought it would be a straightfo­rward job; it probably would have taken the washing machine guy an hour and it took me the best part of seven hours, but I do try to fix things around the house. If you have a go yourself, you might learn something along the way.”

It was while he was at Northampto­n Saints that North decided to get another fixer-upper, the tasks of stripping a bike back and rebuilding

it a good distractio­n as he

recovered from a long-term knee injury in 2017. It also provided a valuable lesson: don’t buy a bike unseen.

“It was a silly thing to do,” North reflects now. “When I went to pick it up, I sat on it and it was small, I didn’t really fit on it! I still got it to a place where it was really cool, then went on to the next one.

“At that stage in Northampto­n, I’d played for five or six years non-stop, I’d never really had a break and was always on the go in rugby. I’d worked so hard on rugby, I wanted to do something for myself with my time off.”

More recently he’s been working on a Triumph bike and is particular­ly proud of the finished result. He pays tribute to the work of Cid Motorcycle­s in getting to the end product, with brands like Motogadget, Motone, BAAK, Thornton Hundred and Öhlins also helping out. “It’s how to make it look cool. I might suggest certain things and they say, ‘That’s cool but have you thought about this?’ What I like is the transforma­tion.”

Rugby limits how often he can get out for a weekend ride – he’s desperate to do the North Coast 500 route in Scotland when time allows – but he has helped set up a motorcycle club with a few fellow aficionado­s. Baffle Culture was founded by Andrew Salter, the Glamorgan cricketer, and Sam

Daymond, with others like North also coming on board. What started as a way to connect people who like to ride has grown into a whole brand – there’s merchandis­e! – and even a venue.

Situated in Goytre, which is about 15 minutes from Abergavenn­y, Baffle Haus is a place motorcycli­sts can meet, socialise, have a coffee (North has the necessary food hygiene certificat­e to play barista) and then head off to ride in the Black Mountains, Brecon Beacons, Cotswolds… They recently staged an event where people could test-ride Royal Enfield bikes and hope to hold more when Covid restrictio­ns allow. So could this turn into a career post-rugby?

“I’m very fortunate that I’ve never really worked a day in my life so far because I do what I love for a living. If I could do that in the next chapter of my career, I’d be a very happy boy! In a perfect world that would be amazing, but we’ll have to see. It’s already grown massively but we’re all full-time (in other jobs) at the moment.”

Regardless of whether Baffle Culture turns into a successful business venture, North clearly enjoys the opportunit­y to socialise outside of rugby, to talk motorbikes rather than matches. He also appreciate­s the anonymity of his chosen hobby.

“It’s the freedom the motorbike gives you,” he says. “Putting the helmet on and getting out of the pressure pot is

worth its weight in gold. It’s like mountain biking or road cycling, with your helmet and shades on you’re just another person, which is quite nice after ten years of being shouted at! On the bike, you have your helmet on and visor down, you don’t have your phone or anything to distract you, so you can just enjoy your time on the ride.

“For me, I can’t switch on unless I completely switch off. You need that time away from rugby, then when I go to work I give it everything, whereas if I take work home it can drag on. To get the best out of me in work, I need to switch off completely.”

Lockdown provided a break from the mental and physical strains of pro rugby, and it also allowed him to spend quality time with wife Becky and newborn son Jac. It’s obvious he’s absolutely loving fatherhood as he peppers the conversati­on with words like “amazing” and “incredible” when talk turns to Jac.

Rugby is firmly back on the agenda now, though, with the 2020-21 Guinness Pro14 season now underway and a busy internatio­nal schedule ahead. North has played just 14 minutes of rugby since the Six Nations was curtailed way back in March, having been sent off for a dangerous tackle on Ashton Hewitt early in the Ospreys’ 20-20 draw with the Dragons in August. The subsequent four-match ban means he will have to wait a little while longer before he is back in action.

Reflecting on the red card – the first of his career – he says: “I’m not that person, I’ve not got any malice in me at all.

“It’s disappoint­ing to, one, have put the boys in that position of being a man down for pretty much most of the game. It’s not fair for me to do that to them; I’ve been on the flipside of someone being red-carded and it’s not fun, you have to dig in. I can’t apologise enough to them.

“It’s also disappoint­ing by my own standards. I’ve never done that in my whole career, it was poor from me and I missed the standards I set myself. It was nowhere near where I want to be as a player. I put Ashton in that position and it was reckless of me. I just completely mistimed it. These things happen in millisecon­ds but I made the wrong decision, put Ashton at risk and have to hold my hands up.”

Things have been disappoint­ing for the Ospreys generally of late. The region failed to win a single pool game in the Champions Cup last season and notched only two victories in a 15-match Pro14 campaign, while there has been plenty of turmoil off the pitch too with coaches

“It’s the freedom the bike gives you. Putting the helmet on and getting out of the pressure pot”

coming and going. Yet North is positive about what lies ahead, with

Toby Booth coming in as head coach over the summer (find out more about his vision on P82) and former Clermont fly-half Brock James also joining the back-room team as attack coach.

“The last few seasons have been tough and it’s been tough to get consistenc­y because there’s been a lot of change, a lot of movement happening. Toby has been in for a couple of months, he works the boys hard and we’ve responded to that well. Toby has knowledge and wisdom. His messages have been clear in how he wants us to play and how we’ll go about it, going back to the legacy of the Ospreys, winning in the Heineken Cup and Celtic League. We want to get back to when the Ospreys were invincible pretty much. There’s a good vibe in camp.”

It’s similar with Wales. The Six Nations was a new experience for North, who had played all his internatio­nal rugby previously under Warren Gatland. Even when he toured with the British & Irish Lions, Gatland was the top man. Now there’s a different Kiwi in change and he has enjoyed Wayne Pivac’s approach.

“Wayne has been brilliant with me. All I’d ever known was Warren before, so it’s been like a whole new day of school for me. Wayne and the new coaching staff haven’t had a huge amount of time to implement stuff, but there were definite glimpses of it in Six Nations, how the game we want to play is evolving. It takes a bit of time to learn that, especially the speed that the game is. From that point of view, it was certainly exciting to be involved and hopefully I’ll be involved going forward.”

Wales have a busy autumn. They kick off with a ‘warm-up’ Test in France on 24 October – a match North can’t play in due to his ban – before playing their final Six Nations match against Scotland seven months later than scheduled.

Then comes the Autumn Nations Cup, with fixtures against Ireland, Georgia and England before ‘finals weekend’. With so many Internatio­nals on the horizon, North could be celebratin­g a major milestone in the coming months: becoming a Test centurion. And the youngest one at that.

“I’d have gone home with my held high with one cap, so it would be amazing to get to 100 Wales caps”

Should Michael Hooper play in either of this month’s Bledisloe Cup fixtures for the Wallabies, he will become the first 28-year-old to win 100 caps, beating George Smith and Sam Whitelock, who were both 29 when hitting three figures. Yet North is six months younger than Hooper and needs just two more Test appearance­s to hit a ton when you include his Lions honours, while five more matches for his country will see him become only the sixth man to win 100 caps for Wales. It would be a significan­t achievemen­t.

“When I was 16 and left home to go to Llandovery College to give rugby a go, I’d have ripped your arm off for one cap and gone home with my head held high.

“Playing for your country any time is amazing and to be able to get to 100 is a dream for me. Not many players get to that and no one can ever take that away from you. That’s something I’d take pride in as not many people do that. It would be amazing to get 100 Wales Test caps.”

Whether running onto the rugby pitch or jumping onto his motorcycle, North is certainly enjoying the ride.

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 ??  ?? Common interests The Baffle Culture gang
Common interests The Baffle Culture gang
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 ??  ?? Showing his pace Attacking v England
Showing his pace Attacking v England
 ??  ?? Open road
Taking in the view during a ride
FACT FIL E
Age 28 (13 April 1992) Birthplace King’s Lynn, Norfolk
Region Ospreys Position Wing
Height 6ft 4in
Weight 17st 2lb Wales caps 95 (40T) Lions caps Three (2T) Instagram handle @george_north
Open road Taking in the view during a ride FACT FIL E Age 28 (13 April 1992) Birthplace King’s Lynn, Norfolk Region Ospreys Position Wing Height 6ft 4in Weight 17st 2lb Wales caps 95 (40T) Lions caps Three (2T) Instagram handle @george_north
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 ??  ?? Transforma­tion process Getting work done to his bike and, inset, grafting himself
Transforma­tion process Getting work done to his bike and, inset, grafting himself
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 ??  ?? Wheels and spiels Andrew Salter, one of Baffle Culture’s founders, talks to guests during an event
Wheels and spiels Andrew Salter, one of Baffle Culture’s founders, talks to guests during an event
 ??  ?? At work and play North in Pro14 action for the Ospreys and aboard his motorbike – before he had finished with his refurbishm­ent
At work and play North in Pro14 action for the Ospreys and aboard his motorbike – before he had finished with his refurbishm­ent
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 ??  ?? Social club
North chats to fellow riders at Baffle Haus and, right, a colourful display
Social club North chats to fellow riders at Baffle Haus and, right, a colourful display
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 ??  ?? Man of many talents
North turns barista
Man of many talents North turns barista
 ??  ?? Once-over Inspecting his Triumph
Once-over Inspecting his Triumph
 ??  ?? On display A bike at Baffle Haus
On display A bike at Baffle Haus
 ??  ?? New team Wales coaches Stephen Jones and Wayne Pivac
New team Wales coaches Stephen Jones and Wayne Pivac

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