'I watched it without getting too animated, but I care deeply'
If proof was needed that Henry Slade isn’t far from a return to the pitch with Exeter following the summer shoulder surgery that ruled him out from the England tour to Australia, then last Saturday’s rumbustious reaction to Patrick Schickerling’s last-gasp matchwinner was all that needed to be seen.
The game looked up for the Chiefs, as they trailed champions Leicester at Sandy Park with the clock in the red. However, the replacement prop’s try instantly changed everything and the exuberant reaction high up in the stands was captured by an eagle-eyed CameraSport photographer.
There was Slade with his arms punching the air in delight and a beaming smile across his face, a reaction mirrored by those around him - including Exeter club colleague Stuart Hogg. The pair had been together nine days earlier, sent to London by the Chiefs as their player representatives at the official new season launch of the latest Gallagher Premiership.
Slade couldn’t help being mischievous when it came to taking a humorous swipe at his travelling companion. “He knew today we coming up so he got his missus to fake tan him last night, so he looking orange today,” quipped Slade when interviewed by RugbyPass after the snappers had done their work and it was time to mingle with the written media present at Twickenham. “He is looking good in pictures but it’s not real.”
In contrast, Slade’s bronzed complexion was the real deal. The week before he had been on honeymoon in Mykonos, the break coming after he had built in big rehabilitation blocks on either side of his early August marriage to Megan.
The upside, though, was the England coaches keeping Slade in the loop, even visiting Exeter on August 31, and being at the club for a rare full pre-season even if he was training separately with some fellow injury rehabbers away from the main group. “We have had contact with the coaches and he [Jones] actually came down for a catch-up. It’s good to hear from him and the other guys. They are quite good at that, seeing how you are and checking in with you.
“I’m getting there. I’m in the latter stages of rehab now so in the next few weeks I will be good to go. I haven’t really had a pre-season because I haven’t been in training, but in terms of being at the club for a pre-season it has been different, it has been really good. It’s been good to get up to the meetings, to see a bit of training and see what the boys have been doing. It’s something I haven’t been able to do for a while.
“I’m doing my own gym work, my own running work. There is a good group of us injured in rehab at the same time who do the same stuff. We are separate from the main squad but it has been good. We used to miss the pre-season meetings (due to international commitments) but to have been there now was really good.
“The energy around the place is very positive, very good. From what I have seen the boys have been going hard and looking forward to the season. We lost a few boys from last year but have signed some really good exciting players and have also got a lot of the same boys here from the last few seasons.
“On the whole, a very unchanged squad but we have added to it and the boys who have come in have really bought into what we do. It’s positive energy and they look like they are really decent players as well.
“A couple of the South African guys [Ruben van Heerden, Aidon Davis] have been unfortunate, they picked up little niggles and have rehabbed with us guys, so I have got to see them and they are both top lads, big boys who are going to add a lot.
“Rory O’Loughlin in the centre seems like a really good guy… there are some exciting boys there. Solomone Kata looks like a really impressive tackler and carrier. We are excited to see how he goes as well. So some really good boys, some really good characters.”
Last term was a sobering experience for Exeter and Slade. They failed to reach the Premiership playoffs for the first time since 2015 while they were also unusually ineffective in Europe. Long-serving director of rugby Rob Baxter has since opted to have a lesser hands-on role and with the World Cup the incentive for the likes of stellar talents such as Slade, there is every ambition for the Chiefs to remind their rivals that they are still a powerhouse of the English game.
“It was a tough year for a number of reasons and the inconsistency was something that was very frustrating,” reflected Slade on what happened to Exeter in 2021/22. “I didn’t quite put a finger on it but we have had a fairly good reset this season, we have had some good honest chats as players, as players and coaches at the end of last season and the start of this pre-season.
“That has put us in a good position with a good energy about the team. The challenge will be now pushing forward into matches, can we maintain that regardless of what happens? Last season we had a couple of bad results at the start of the year and we probably let it affect us more than we thought… but it’s an exciting time for the club, a time to reset, a time to get to better and grow.
“We had a period of sustained success and to have that sort of dip last year gives us a real natural reset to get back. I’m excited to see how we do with the club this year and obviously with that comes the international stuff. I have to put my hand up by playing as well as I can for Exeter, it will help me to be seen in a good light.
“There is a World Cup at the end of the year which is a massive carrot, something that I would be dying to be involved in, dying to be a part of… and the reset has given us a new start just trying to get better and better all the time. That is what we have got to get back to, getting better each training session, getting better each day, each week and each game and not letting the ups and downs affect us.”
Ups and downs were crystal at the recent new season Premiership function in London. Whereas so many clubs talked optimistically that day about the weeks and months ahead, the grim story about the finances at Worcester hijacked the official Twickenham launch, a situation not lost on the 29-year-old Slade who has been around the league since his April 2013 debut for Exeter.
“Seeing the things circulate at the minute around Worcester, the uncertainty there and how hard that must be for the players and all the guys involved there, it is very reassuring for us Exeter boys as a group to see the progress being made on and off the pitch the last few seasons at the club. It’s a great place to be as a player and I’m grateful.”
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he also recruited Jerry Flannery, so clearly Jerry Flannery must be better than Rassie.
Go to commentsWhat's the problem with that? When you realise that an American NFL game takes about four hours, with playing time 60 minutes, that is a totally rubbish argument, especially as the yank market is the big attraction, considering the fact that RWC2031 is going to be there! The big danger of course - like with the Aussies and their very simple (and one-dimensional) Aussie Rules and Rugby League - is that union will have to be dumbed-down so the yanks can understand it, considering their one-dimensional alternatives like NFL, baseball and basketball. But we'll be watching Robinson's every step for sure.
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