England captain Hartley returning and 'confident' he can play until 50
England captain Dylan Hartley is ready to return to action after five months out due to concussion.
The polarising figure also made a stunning claim that he will be able to play rugby for a further 18 years, until age 50.
How many of those will be in the professional ranks remains to be seen, but if he can continuing playing into his forties he will join elusive company.
The hooker took a break from the game after suffering a third concussion in his career during the Six Nations clash with Ireland in March, meaning he missed England’s tour to South Africa.
The 32-year-old is in line to play for Northampton Saints against Glasgow in a pre-season fixture on Friday, as the English club prepare for the start of the new Premiership campaign.
After accepting he needed to step away from rugby to aid his recovery, Hartley is now keen to feature in Northampton’s league opener against Gloucester on September 1.
"I sought good advice and I trusted what they said," said Hartley.
"I am confident I will play rugby until I am 50.
"I had no concerns. I surrounded myself with the right advice and here I am, ready to play.
"At the time, [sitting out] was disappointing because you want to be involved in everything. You don't want to miss games.
"But once the decision had been made for me and we agreed on it, I had made peace with that.
"As soon as I took my foot off the gas and stopped trying to make it back every week, which I was trying to do, I felt myself instantly get better. Removing those kind of pressures has worked.
"I have had a good pre-season with the team and I am in a good place to compete for a spot in the next fortnight."
Hartley also took part in a three-day training camp with the national team this month and is one of Eddie Jones key players.
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Liverpool? OK, whatever you say 🤷♂️ You spelt Syringeboks wrong, need to calm down a bit and wipe the tears from your eyes.
Go to commentsThat absolute BS, when did you come up with this idea?
All three were well on track to being All Blacks. They simply decided it was smarter to take the money right now rather than slog on for another 3 or 4 years waiting for their opportunity to line up.
Many AB quality players have not even got the chance to earn a cap for heavens sake, it is simply as you suggest elsewhere, better utilization of global talent to have them qualify for another nation.
The only problem is that the ABs get all the best players, mostly because they pay more, and the island nations, even the home nations, just get those that can't make it or want a bit more limelight.
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