The 35 stone midfield Sale Sharks will unleash when Tuilagi signs
England centre Manu Tuilagi will become part of one of the heaviest midfield partnerships in the Gallagher Premiership when he signs for Steve Diamond's Sale Sharks.
Sale are set to confirm his capture later today, a week after Director of Rugby Diamond denied the club had spoken to the star centre, who has left Leicester Tigers after failing to agree a new cut price contract. It was widely reported that Tuilagi was attempting to come to an agreement with Tigers, but the club effectively shut the door on his return when they officially confirmed he would not be playing for Tigers. Tuilagi, who had commanded a £480,000 pay packet at Welford Road, was unwilling to drop to the circa £360,000 a year figure the club wanted to cut him to.
Tuilagi's signing now throws up a mouthwatering pairing with Rohan Janse Van Rensburg, a player many has been likened to a physical doppelganger to the blockbusting centre.
The average Premiership centre is a shade over six feet in height (184cm) and weighs an average of 100kg (15 stone 10Ibs). Tuilagi and RJVR both stand six foot tall and tip the scales at 110kg and 109kg respectively, a full 9kg plus (a stone and half) more than the average centre. Both play a similar brand of hard-running, physical rugby.
Together the pair will weigh in at at least 219kg, or 34.4 stone. Tuilagi is listed on Leicester's website as 109.8kg, but he has been as high as 112kg in the past. The prospect of not one but two massive, gain line-busting centres lining out is one Sharks fans will look forward to - opposing defences not so much.
“I have always been the more bulkier guy in the team and there hasn’t been any weight training or power training – it is just the way I am built,” Van Rensburg told RugbyPass earlier this year. “I have to thank my parents for that."
Van Rensburg regularly leads the metre making statistics at Sharks, a trait he brought over from the Lions in South Africa when he signed in 2018. By the end of round 7 of the current Gallagher Premiership season, Rensburg had beaten a league-leading 34 defenders.
Meanwhile Tuilagi's return to physical form has seen his running metres spike. The England centre made 93 metres against Tonga at the Rugby World Cup in Japan. Indeed, England head coach Eddie Jones nicknamed Tuilagi ‘pinball machine’ after his performance in England’s RWC 2019 warmup win over Wales.
Manu won't be the first Tuilagi to grace the midfield for Sale Sharks of course, with older brother Anitelea earning 29 caps for the Sharks between 2008 and 2011.
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No he's just limited in what he can do. Like Scott Robertson. And Eddie Jones.
Sometimes it doesn't work out so you have to go looking for another national coach who supports his country and believes in what he is doing. Like NZ replacing Ian Foster. And South Africa bringing Erasmus back in to over see Neinbar.
This is the real world. Not the fantasy oh you don't need passion for your country for international rugby. Ask a kiwi, or a south african or a frenchman.
Go to commentsDont complain too much or start jumping to conclusions.
Here in NZ commentators have been blabbing that our bottom pathway competition the NPC (provincial teams only like Taranaki, Wellington etc)is not fit for purpose ie supplying players to Super rugby level then they started blabbing that our Super Rugby comp (combined provincial unions making up, Crusaders, Hurricanes, etc) wasn't good enough without the South African teams and for the style SA and the northern powers play at test level.
Here is what I reckon, Our comps are good enough for how WE want to play rugby not how Ireland, SA, England etc play. Our comps are high tempo, more rucks, mauls, running plays, kicks in play, returns, in a game than most YES alot of repetition but that builds attacking skillsets and mindsets. I don't want to see world teams all play the same they all have their own identity and style as do England (we were scared with all this kind of talk when they came here) World powerhouse for a reason, losses this year have been by the tiniest of margins and could have gone either way in alot of games. Built around forward power and blitz defence they have got a great attack Wingers are chosen for their Xfactor now not can they chase up and unders all day. Stick to your guns its not far off
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