Englandâs tour of New Zealand, which begins with the first of three Tests at Eden Park on Saturday, poses myriad challenges: there is their own depletion, their unparalleled opponents and the expectation of a rugby-rabid public for whom the gameâs culture makes up a large part of national identity.
Itâs a culture that Stuart Lancaster has looked to emulate since taking over as England coach following 2011âs ill-fated World Cup campaign and one that Matt Symons, Waikato Chiefsâ English lock, is in a position of rare authority to comment on having played the game at multiple levels in the country.
âItâs no secret that rugby is more than just a game here,â says the 24-year-old. âTeams, from youth and club level upwards, work hard to make the whole squad understand that rugby is about something far greater than themselves.
âThat was immediately obvious when I first arrived and was playing club rugby with two former All Blacks [Reuben Thorne and Aaron Mauger] â they were so down to Earth and everyone was desperate to play for them. I see it again now at the top level â the All Blacks guys who I play with at Chiefs, thereâs no ego there, theyâre all humble and approachable. Everyone talks to each other as equals and these ideas are deeply ingrained.â
Symons adds: âAs a pro, the best thing about the system here is its fluid nature. Guys who arenât in the Super Rugby matchday 23 will be sent back to play for their club on Saturday, which means youâre always playing, not just sitting in the gym. Skill-sets are always developing, it aids recovery from injury and the standards rise at lower levels as there could be six or eight Super Rugby guys â All Blacks even â turning out for their clubs. The step up at each level is a huge one â the intensity of collisions and speed of the game is immense in Super Rugby.
âOne thing I canât stop thinking, and I know itâs cliched, is what a lucky bloke I am to be playing here. There arenât many guys whoâve done what Iâm doing and I look around at training and in matches, which are the steepest learning curve â tactically, physically and mentally â and have to pinch myself occasionally.â
Symonsâs story â one beset by untimely setbacks â makes it a little surprise that he is so wide-eyed. At 17, he was a âscrawny, lanky thingâ and found himself laid-off by Saracens and left out of the south-east England Under-18s squad. At a loose end, his mother suggested he joined GB Rowingâs famed World Class Start programme.
âI had a frame which suited rowing, so gave it a shot and moved down to Reading which tied in nicely with my studies,â Symons says. He graduated in human geography from Reading University in 2012. âUnfortunately, because all the movements were new, I developed forearm problems pretty sharpish and had to have an operation in 2010. It was very frustrating and I set myself a deadline for getting back in the boat, but couldnât hit it.
âThanks to all the training, Iâd filled out a bit and was better suited to rugby. Luckily Esher gave me a chance to return to the game.â
Filled out he had, weighing in at 117kg and standing 6ft 7in. But with top-level opportunities not forthcoming, Symons wasnât the only graduate with itchy feet and a thirst to see more of the world. His younger brother Andrew put him in touch with High School Old Boys RFC in Christchurch.
âIâd never been to New Zealand but the club told me to head straight over,â says Symons. âAt first I worked in a fridge works packing yoghurts, training Tuesday, Thursday and playing Saturdays â the rugby was amateur but serious, full of guys working hard on building sites and living for gameday. Then I got a job full-time with the Earthquake Commission in Christchurch, which was interesting and it says a lot about rugby over here that I was given plenty of leniency to skip work and further my game.â
Having impressed at amateur level, Symons was selected for Canterburyâs ITM Cup side and, after one season at the highest domestic level, was approached by Tom Coventry, forwards coach at the Chiefs, for whom heâs turned out 10 times. Inevitably questions are now being asked about where Symonsâs international future would lie.
He would qualify for the All Blacks on residency grounds next year, but word is that England forwards coach Graham Rowntree â who famously keeps tabs on every forward available to him â is to pay him a visit during Englandâs tour. Itâs well-documented that those playing abroad arenât under consideration, so if Symons was to don the Red Rose, something would have to give.
âIâm honestly just focused on life with the Chiefs and Canterbury,â Symons insists. âEverything has happened so fast for me â Iâm only in my first season of top level rugby, so itâs one step at a time. Iâve certainly not heard anything from England and while Iâd love to play in the Premiership, Iâm loving life out here and itâs not on my mind right now.
âIâm a proud Englishman who grew up watching the great World Cup-winning team â they were my heroes and the ones who got us all out in the garden throwing a ball about â but rugby in New Zealand has been good to me and Iâm not going anywhere any time soon.â
Article source: http://www.bathchronicle.co.uk/Bath-Rugby-duo-Nick-Abendanon-Paul-James-cited/story-20959446-detail/story.html
Matt Symons: the English rugby lock plying his trade in New Zealand
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