Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Wales given hands off message over rising star Kane James

Kane James of England celebrates after team-mate Louie Gulley scored a try during the U20 Six Nations 2025 match between England and Italy at The Recreation Ground on March 07, 2025 in Bath, England. (Photo by Dan Istitene/Getty Images)

Exeter Chiefs boss Rob Baxter has issued a hands-off warning to the WRU, insisting there is no immediate prospect of highly rated England Under-20 No. 8 Kane James returning across the Severn Bridge.

ADVERTISEMENT

Welsh officials are reportedly eyeing a move for James, who made his senior Chiefs debut with a 21-minute cameo in last weekend’s 52–38 defeat to Bristol Bears at Ashton Gate.

Pembrokeshire-born James, who was capped by Wales at Under-18 level, scored two tries in five games during this season’s U20 Six Nations and was part of the England squad that won the U20 World Championship in South Africa last year.

Video Spacer

Boks Office select a Southern Hemisphere XV | RPTV

Video Spacer

Boks Office select a Southern Hemisphere XV | RPTV

Boks Office is back as the guys select a Southern Hemisphere XV, amongst other things. Watch the full episode on RugbyPass TV now

He began playing at St Peter’s Rugby Club in Cardiff aged seven and is currently studying for a three-year business and finance degree at Exeter University. He has been likened to a young Sam Simmonds.

But Baxter has warned Welsh bosses that any pursuit will likely be in vain. James is on an open-ended deal, similar to those held by team-mates Daf Jenkins and Christ Tshiunza. The arrangement allows him to remain in England while playing international rugby elsewhere.

“Kane is on an open-ended contract for this very reason. I don’t fear losing him at the minute because he is on a decent-length contract. He is contracted for another decent period of time until a renegotiation period opens.

“So it doesn’t bother me. We’re very hopeful that he has a bright, long future at Exeter. He’s had a couple of man-of-the-match performances for England U20, and he’s feeling confident about the way he’s playing.

ADVERTISEMENT

“If he trains and plays like he deserves to play, that’s how a young Sam Simmonds and a young Dave Ewers got into the team. They trained and played like they deserved to be there. So that’s why we picked them,” said Baxter.

Related

Download the RugbyPass app now!

News, stats, live rugby and more! Download the new RugbyPass app on the App Store (iOS) and Google Play (Android) now!

ADVERTISEMENT

KOKO Show | July 8th | Bernard Foley stops by to talk the Wallabies winning and Lions being tested

England v South Africa | World Rugby U20 Championship | Extended Highlights

Georgia vs Ireland | Men’s International | Full Match Replay

Lions Share | Episode 2

Chile vs Romania | Men’s International | Full Match Replay

USA vs Belgium | Men’s International | Full Match Replay

Touchdown in Dublin, The Red Sea Returns & We Prepare to Face Argentina | Ep 2: The Ultimate Test

South Africa v British & Irish Lions | 2009 | Second Test | The Vaults

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

R
RedWarrior 39 minutes ago
Springboks' dominance of the world rankings comes under increased threat

Think you have got this wrong.

Ireland entered RWC 2023 a full 12 points clear of England. They were only 5 ahead at the end. So England gained a massive 7 points against Ireland which is not a reflection of how either teams played: far from it. England (and Wales) were in the first seeding group in the 2023 draw because the rankings for the draw were taken directly after the RWC. The swing between England and Scotland was 6 points towards England. Scotland didn’t do much wrong bar get a ridiculous draw with Ireland and South Africa. They were #5th at the time but were literally eliminated by the draw.

Wales benefitted by the draw in 2023. In 2019 they made a semi after a French player was sent off early in that quarter final. So they benefitted from the double points in the RWC. Inspite of that they are now ranked 14th. Now if they stay 14th and 13 teams do better than them in the RWC then their defecit will widen and doubly so because the loss would be doubled. They may get relatively lucky and lose only to teams that are 10+ ahead of them. But maybe their rivals will get that luck. All things being equal, they will be further behind if the RWC goes as ranked. The only plus is that the ranking for the draw is now taken closer to the relevant tournament. So Wales will have time to get back ground. (Unlike all improvers between 2019 and 2023 who made no ground).

7 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ ‘Joe Schmidt will feel increasingly optimistic there are Lions weaknesses he can probe’ ‘Joe Schmidt will feel increasingly optimistic there are Lions weaknesses he can probe’
Search