âHelen is an incredible woman,â he said. âSheâs had arthritis for seven years
and it has affected her life badly. She has our two boys to look after but
sheâs an amazing woman and I donât know how she does it. She is in constant
pain but she gets on with life.â
Streetâs wife will be a spectator in Paris on Sunday when England hope to make
amends for missing out on home soil four years ago, their third consecutive
final defeat by New Zealand.
âLosing in the last World Cup final has been the sole motivation for the last
four years,â Street said. âThis is what we all came back to do. I remember
sitting in our first meeting back after the final.
âWe had the band back together and I said to them: âWhy have you all come
back? Why didnât you hang your boots up and all go home after that
disappointment?â
âThey said they wanted to come back because they wanted to win next time. They
said they wanted to do themselves justice. They wanted to get back to
another final to see if they could win it next time. Itâs not a fear factor,
itâs what has driven us to get where we are. It has been four years of hard
work to get here.â
Although Street and his assistant Graham Smith, a former Scotland A and
Moseley prop, are employed full time, Englandâs players are not and all of
them have made considerable personal sacrifices to combine international
rugby with careers outside sport.
As the opportunities for squad training sessions are limited, Street and Smith
spend many hours driving up and down the country for individual and group
coaching, often in the most unlikely places.
âI can remember coaching Katy Mclean once on a bit of grass in the middle of a
racecourse near Newcastle,â Street said. âI spend a lot of time in the car
driving from Twickenham up to Newcastle to see Katy and down to Devon to
work with the South West girls. There is a lot of travel but the girls make
an incredible commitment to play for England.â
Street, who played as a combative scrum-half for Aston Old Edwardians in
Birmingham and county rugby for Greater Birmingham and North Midlands, began
coaching womenâs rugby with Birmingham University in 1993.
He was recruited by the Rugby Football Union to run a pilot academy in Bath
which laid the foundations for Englandâs success at international level and
he enjoys the challenge of coaching women, who he believes are more
inquisitive than their male counterparts.
âThe biggest difference between the menâs and womenâs games from a coaching
perspective is that the women do question you more,â Street said. âThey are
genuinely interested, they want to know the game and to understand their
roles.
âWhen you do a session you really have to be right on it. You really need to
know what you are talking about. You canât say: âWe are doing this because I
say so.â The girls want to know how it is going to make a difference.
âIn terms of physicality, pound for pound, there is not much difference. The
biggest difference over the last couple of years is in goal-kicking. The
standard of goal-kicking in the World Cup has been outstanding, youâve got
Emily Scarratt banging them over from the touchline.â
Article source: http://www.edinburghnews.scotsman.com/news/40-rugby-players-catch-dressing-room-thieves-1-3505428
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