Christian Wade offers advice to Louis Rees-Zammit after NFL heartbreak
Gloucester wing Christian Wade has said that wearing the Kansas City Chiefs badge was a "success in itself" for Louis Rees-Zammit after the former Wales wing failed to make the Super Bowl champions' 53-man roster on Tuesday.
After only quitting rugby union in January to join the NFL's Internation Player Pathway programme, Rees-Zammit failed in his attempt to make the Chiefs' NFL squad at the first time of asking after only playing three games of American football in pre-season.
The 23-year-old still has a chance of being picked up by another team in the NFL, otherwise, he will end up in the Chiefs' practice squad, where he can still be called upon to join the active roster during the season.
Wade, who has filled the vacancy on the wing left by Rees-Zammit at Gloucester, found himself in a very similar position to the Welshman in 2019 after failing to make the Buffalo Bills' NFL roster. That came after a pre-season in which he scored a 65-yard touchdown with his very first touch.
The former England wing went on to spend three years in the Bills' practice squad before returning to rugby union with Racing 92.
Ahead of his return to the Gallagher Premiership, where he will be eyeing the all-time try-scoring record, Wade offered some advice to the 2021 British and Irish Lions tourist on how he can help out his team, while also explaining how differently sport works in the United States compared to Europe.
"A lot of the time people try and compare it to how sport is over here in England and Europe but there is no real comparison," the one-cap England international said.
"He wouldn’t have necessarily not made the team based on a bad performance or good a performance. There are a load of things that come into it that have nothing to do with him as a person or a player.
"The transition is hard for anybody, even the guys who have been playing from high school and college. The transition just is what it is. It is difficult but whatever you see on the TV and in games and selection, doesn’t really have anything to do with how hard the transition is.
"The way that the sport works, just to be in the NFL and be able to represent the badge is the goal. For him to do that is success in itself.
"Anything else he does is a bonus. Now it is up to him to try and put himself in a position to be able to contribute for as long as possible.
"By contributing, I mean whether it is just being in the building, giving good reps in practice, getting game-time, making good plays.
"That is all everyone is trying to do, just get to the league and once they get there just try to survive. That is what it is."
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500k registered players in SA are scoolgoers and 90% of them don't go on to senior club rugby. SA is fed by having hundreds upon hundreds of schools that play rugby - school rugby is an institution of note in SA - but as I say for the vast majority when they leave school that's it.
Go to commentsDon't think you've watched enough. I'll take him over anything I's seen so far. But let's see how the future pans out. I'm quietly confident we have a row of 10's lined uo who would each start in many really good teams.
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