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Meet the back row gunning for World Cup selection despite not playing a match in 14 months

One of seven back rows in the Wales training squad, Aaron Shingler is hoping to gain World Cup selection (Photo by Mark Thompson/Getty Images)

Aaron Shingler hasn’t played a rugby match in 14 months but he is in thick of things in the Swiss Alps trying to push himself into Wales’ World Cup selection reckoning. 

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It was the Guinness PRO14 final in May 2018 when the back row suffered the injury that has kept him off the pitch. However, he is now fighting fit and hoping some caps in Wales’ warm-up matches can prove decisive in getting him on the plane to Japan in September.

“For eight months, I was questioning whether the leg would be good enough,” he told the Welsh Rugby Union website. “Luckily enough it is, so I’m very happy to just be able to train. 

“A couple of more weeks training with Wales and I’ll hopefully get an opportunity. If that opportunity comes, then I feel like I’ll be ready. I want to play for Wales and the Scarlets, so I just keep pushing.

“It was massively difficult. Up until the eight-month mark, I was thinking that I wasn’t going to come back. I just couldn’t function daily. I’d have one good session and then the next day I wouldn’t be able to train.

“When I came into camp, I was a little bit concerned with how I was going to cope but I’m feeling really fit and strong at the moment.”

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Shingler is part of the 42-strong Wales squad currently training in the Swiss alpine town of Fiesch where the science is for players to sleep at high altitude and come down the mountain to train.  

“I remember the first night I was up there, trying to get to sleep, and my heart was beating a lot harder than normal, which is unusual,” continued Shingler.

“You get up for the toilet in the night, and you have to climb a little bit of stairs, and my heart is beating again. It feels like you’re working even when you’re sleeping. So that’s what it’s like up the top.”

One of seven back rowers in Warren Gatland’s squad, Shingler wants to make the most of any opportunity he gets. “Unfortunately, it [competition for places] is very fierce and I might only get one opportunity. In training, I have to impress every day, work hard every day and keep my fingers crossed that I get to go.”

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WATCH: The behind the scenes RugbyPass documentary on the 2018 Guinness PRO14 final between Leinster and Aaron Shingler’s Scarlets in Dublin 

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Tommy B. 1 hour ago
Rassie Erasmus wades into heated debate over Jaden Hendrikse antics

🤣😂🤣😂🤣😂

I’ll go with one more because it’s so funny but then I must stop. There’s only so long you can talk to the nutter on the bus.

There is no legal impediment in the GFA to ANY form of border. It’s mentioned very briefly and ambiguously but even then there’s a caveat ‘if the security situation permits’ which is decided by the British government as the border is an internationally, UN recognised formal border between sovereign states. Now, you can argue that this is because it was assumed it would always be in the EU context - but we all know the issue with ‘assumption’. As to your hilarious drivel about what you think is in the GFA, you clearly haven’t read it or at best not understood it. There are still 1,580 British Army troops in NI. The legal status of NI as part of the UK is unchanged.

So, there was a problem for those that wanted to use the border to complicate any future British government changing regulations and trade arrangements through domestic legislation. Hence ‘hard border’ became ANYTHING that wasn’t a totally open border.

This allowed the EU and their fanatical Remainer British counterparts to imply that any form of administration AT the border was a ‘hard border.’ Soldiers with machine guns? Hard border. Old bloke with clipboard checking the load of every 200th lorry? Hard border. Anything in between? Hard Border. They could then use Gerry’s implicit threats to any ‘border officials’ to ensure that there would be an unique arrangement so that if any future parliament tried to change trade or administrative regulations for any part of the UK (which the EU was very worried about) some fanatical Remainer MP could stand up and say - ‘this complicates the situation in NI.’

You’ve just had a free lesson in the complex politics that went WAY over your head at the time. You’re welcome.

Now, I must slowly back out of the room, and bid you good day, as you’re clearly a nutter.

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