The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Hill in awe of driven Kruis

- By Alex Bywater

JONNY HILL spent the years before his internatio­nal debut looking on in awe at former England lock George Kruis, so it will be a special moment for him when the pair go head-tohead today.

Kruis will play his last game before retirement for the Barbarians against the country of his birth and will pack down opposite Hill — the man who filled his void when Japan came calling.

Hill’s England debut came in October 2020 and just a few months after Kruis had stepped away from Test rugby to move to the Far East. Last year, he followed in Kruis’ footsteps by becoming a British & Irish Lion.

‘I think George deserves the send-off he is going to get,’ said Hill, now back fit to feature for England after he missed the Six Nations with a stress fracture.

‘He’s given so much to

England and I am honoured to be playing in his last game because I did look up to him when he was playing. He was a really good operator.’

Hill is no mug himself and the giant Sale-bound forward was a big miss for England head coach Eddie Jones at the start of the year. Without Hill, England won just two Six Nations games.

‘To miss any campaign is frustratin­g and there were a few dark nights,’ said Hill. ‘I haven’t played for a while, so I’m really excited to be back.

‘I’m dying to play rugby. If it is five minutes or 80, I’ll take anything I can get.’

Hill’s return to England colours will not be the easiest. A Barbarians second-row pairing of Kruis and La Rochelle’s Will Skelton is a formidable one.

A fully-fit Hill will almost certainly be on England’s plane to Australia this week after he used his time on the sidelines to prepare for a move from Exeter to Sale for next season.

‘I have craved a change for a little while to be honest,’ he said. ‘I want to get the best out of myself and I feel as if a new environmen­t will do that.

‘It was honestly horrible, really, really hard (to leave Exeter).

‘It feels like walking out on my family a little bit. It was a similar feeling when I left home and went to Hartpury College at 16.

‘I stood up in front of the boys and I couldn’t talk. I barely spoke, I just cried.’

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom