Fans react to Tompkins' Wales call-up: 'England, what have you done?'
Wayne Pivac has named his Wales squad for his first Six Nations in charge and there are some fascinating and unexpected calls.
In the weeks building up to the selection, a lot of focus had been on 18-year-old Gloucester winger Louis Rees-Zammit who had surged into contention after being named the Gallagher Premiership player of the month in December.
However, his selection has been eclipsed by Saracens centre Nick Tompkins whose call-up has blindsided many.
The 24-year-old comes in during an injury crisis in Wales at outside centre which sees the likes of Jonathan Davies and Willis Halaholo ruled out for the entire Six Nations.
This is a selection that Wales have flirted with for a while, and Pivac has taken advantage of the Saracens player having a Welsh grandmother. He could fill a major void in the midfield over the next few months.
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This comes as a surprise to many England and Saracens fans, who have thought the Allianz Park academy product was destined to play for England one day.
But despite being a world champion with their under-20s and a former Saxons player, Tompkins was never able to break into Eddie Jones’ team.
Many feel this is a missed opportunity and a regrettable mistake by England. Moreover, England’s loss is certainly Wales’ gain in this circumstance, as the centre has all the credentials to play Test rugby.
Tompkins has perhaps fallen victim to the strength in depth England has in the centres, which includes Owen Farrell, Manu Tuilagi, Henry Slade, Jonathan Joseph and previously Ben Te’o who have been the regulars in the 12 and 13 shirts over the past four years.
Likewise, the depth at Saracens has meant that Tompkins is not always a guaranteed starter in black, but he is still a hugely admired player nonetheless.
OptaJonny revealed that Tompkins has scored the most tries (15), made the most metres (843) and beaten the most defenders (75) for a centre since the start of the 2018/19 Premiership season, which is why Wales have made a very shrewd acquisition.
Tompkins is deceptively hard to put down which, alongside some searing lines, explains why he makes so much ground and beats so many players.
Allied with some deft hands and a brilliant offloading game, Saracens fans have struggled to see why there has been no interest in him from England.
Furthermore, it must have been frustrating for the player himself to see many of his Saracens team-mates, including fellow centre Alex Lozowski, play for England while he has not.
Ultimately, as much as England fans may regret this decision, this is a wise choice from a playing perspective as it allows Tompkins a chance to show what he is capable of on the international stage.
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Latest Comments
I'm honestly not so sure. I initially thought just reckless mainly because no player should be capable of doing that intentionally.
There's a strong argument that he's working both the eyes. It's his left hand he uses which is furthest from the ball he's contesting. His fingers are also clenched which I don't think is a natural way to try and rip a ball.
Go to comments"I see those teams, SA in particular, as only improving their performances in EPCR."
well, its gone the opposite direction so far!
"I don't like your model that requires them to reach Semi Final level in the Challenge trophy, given the bottleneck that will be URC with 16 teams playing for only 4 places."
my model would have given SA 3 spots in a 16 team CC this year, which is the same number as they have in the 24 team version that is actually taking place. But yes, if they keep getting worse it would get harder for them to get places. It would also get harder for you to argue that they deserve places though!
"I suggest by giving say Englands two semi finalist first seeds of the english teams, then the next best 4 on the league table as much better (it catches improving teams faster)."
interesting argument, but it doesn't always go that way. Gloucester are improving, but they improved in cup competitions before league fixtures started going their way. The same is true of Sharks, and the same was true of la Rochelle. I think maybe this is just an argument for allowing more teams to qualify via the challenge cup!
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