'It was bitterly disappointing from start to finish to be honest'
Japan brought the curtain crashing down on international career of Greig Laidlaw but the former Scotland skipper hopes to set the stage for a final swansong in the Far East. The 34-year-old scrum-half has agreed a two-year deal with Tokyo-based outfit NTT Shining Arcs after leaving Clermont Auvergne.
Laidlaw found himself the surprise poster boy for Gregor Townsend’s Dark Blues during last year’s World Cup, with “Mr Grieg” mobbed wherever he went by the Japanese pubic.
But their team were not so hospitable and a 28-21 defeat to the turbo-charged Brave Blossoms in the Scots’ final pool game ended hopes of the quarter-finals while also hastening the end of Laidlaw’s 76-cap international career.
But the ex-Edinburgh and Gloucester half-back hopes he will be have better memories to look back on once he makes the move in October.
He told the PA news agency: “It’s an exciting move for me and the family.
“I enjoyed my time in Japan during the World Cup despite how it ended. It was a tough tournament and pretty tough to take, especially for me as it was my last campaign in a Scotland jersey.
“It was bitterly disappointing the whole thing from start to finish to be honest.
“Hopefully this will be a different experience. I’m looking forward to testing myself in an environment that is going to be pretty strange to me.”
Laidlaw’s Scotland colleagues had plenty of fun teasing their team-mate as he found himself the centre of attention during last year’s tournament, even outshining star men like Stuart Hogg and Finn Russell.
But the Borderer is not joking when he says he believes he will have to be on top form to cut it in Japan’s top league.
Laidlaw – who will make the move along with his wife Rachel and their two sons – said: “It’s obviously nice that I’m well liked over in that part of the world but the real attraction was that it is a new challenge that I would like to experience for myself and my family.
“As a sportsman you only get so many chances to experience different things and so if I didn’t take this chance up I didn’t want to look back in 10 or 15 years regretting it.
“I got to taste a fair bit of the culture when I was over there for the length of time we were during the World Cup. But it’s one thing being there for eight weeks and another actually living there with the family.
“Certainly my wife Rach and the boys have taken everything in their stride so far during our time in France and England. It will be different again in Japan but we’re looking forward to it.
“It looks like Tokyo Bay will be our base. Our accommodation will be right next to where Shining Arcs train. There’s a couple of schools nearby which we’re looking at. Disneyland is round the corner too so I’m sure that will come in handy.
“It’s a brilliant time to be going to Japan because the national team were brilliant at the World Cup. Sadly for Scotland we saw that first hand.
“But it’s just getting bigger and bigger.
“Now is an excellent time to be going and NCT have got big aspirations to become one of their biggest clubs and that’s why I want to head out there, to play with top players and learn new things as well.
“I’m certainly not just going over there to retire and sit back. It’s going to be good rugby, it will be quick so I’ll need to be fit. They are really skilful over there so it will be a test.”
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I think England obviously need to train alot more to fix their defense. Time together working to ensure each defender takes the right man is paramount or we're going to see the same amount of tries and losses. Then what? Sack the coach? What a joke that would be. The other fix is being accurate with your basics. England were sloppy to excess, dropped balls in the midfield. Charged down boxkicks, failed restarts. They need to carry out their basic skills accurately. This is a domestic club training responsibility. England should not be teaching their players catching skills. If the clubs are not spending time with skills training then the players need to step up and do it on their own time. There is no excuse for sloppy play at Test match level. They won't win squat if they don't aspire to be the best. Lastly we have the scrum which should be a strength of England but its flakey as. Okay its year one of the world cup cycle and you'd rather have these issues now that 2026 / 27 but we have alot to fix and we also have a media who won't give Borthwick the time he needs to fix them. That paragon of rugby Ugo Monye is already screaming for Borthwick's head. 14 caps and two tries and apparently he's the rugby media mesiah... ...This is where you say he's not the mesiah, he's a very naughty boy.
Go to commentsBen Smith your a biased against the Springboks -making it so obvious as a journalist makes you totally inadequate and not worthy of being taken seriously.
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