The Heath Robinson passing test that put Harry Randall on course for England cap
Harry Randall has put himself in line for a first England cap thanks to a speed camera from America, a stool, hula hoop and a cricket net at Llandovery College which helped give the scrum-half the confidence to bounce back from a verdict that he was too small and his pass was too slow.
Bristol scrum-half Randall and his family were left fuming by the verdict delivered by the Scarlets who helped push the Llandovery schoolboy away from a possible Welsh cap and into the English system.
Randall, now 5ft 8ins and 72kgs, was able to prove Scarlets were wrong to brand his pass as “slow” thanks to a Heath Robinson invention devised by former Harlequins coach Iestyn Thomas who was head of rugby at Llandovery for 18 years and fought to allow the youngster to play two years “up” against bigger opponents.
Thomas, who also coached London Welsh, never doubted Randall’s ability and believes Welsh coach Wayne Pivac has made a major error by not bringing the Bristol scrum-half into his squad before Eddie Jones handed him a place in England’s Six Nations squad today.
Thomas told RugbyPass: “His passing in my view was always good and on the back off what Scarlets said I ordered a speed camera from America because I was so annoyed they said his pass was slow. At the College we used a cricket net with the speed camera behind – it’s real Heath Robinson stuff – with a hula hoop as a target and he passed from 10m away we did a scrum-half pass test to show he was fast. Not only did we find out he was accurate we confirmed his pass was quick.
“We put the camera on a stool but when he was accurate the netting smashed it backwards and so we had to put mats down!
“We had his pass accuracy percentage and his slowest and fastest pass. I couldn’t get his scrum-half opponents at Scarlets to come and be tested but I told the Scarlets just how good he was off both hands. What is unique about him is that he is able to create situation others don’t see. At Llandovery, you would see him head down what appeared to be a dark alley in a match and bound to get a thumping and then two side steps later he emerged unscathed and from having my hands on my head it was a case of “how did he do that?”
“Llandovery play in the Welsh Colleges league and they won’t let anyone play who isn’t ready and they do make exceptions and they granted one for Harry and he was leaving people for dead.
“Harry came to us at 15 because his sister was already at Llandovery and he was with us until the fall out with the Scarlets. There was competition around the No9 position and Scarlets decided he was too small and his pass was too slow. His two elder brothers had been at Scarlets and so they moved him to Hartpury College after two and half years with us.
“He was in the fifth year playing against players in the Upper Sixth and that was highly unusual at Llandovery and not only did he cement a place you could see he had something special. I never had any concerns about his size. He has big heart and really brave with a really good tackle technique that you can see to this day when he bring down Premiership players much who are much bigger. It doesn’t matter who is coming at him he stops them.”
Llandovery has a proud rugby past having produced a host of Welsh internationals including captains Alun Wyn Jones, Gwyn Jones and Cliff Jones along with Lions George North, Geoff Evans, Vivian Jenkins and Andy Powell. Now. Randall is on course to win a first cap for England and Thomas believes a small scrum-half like Faf de Klerk who won the World Cup with South Africa proved size isn’t everything. Thomas added: “If you see Harry play for a few minutes you realise that size isn’t a factor and he can handle anything.
“If Harry had stayed in Wales I believe he would be now playing for Wales.”
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It doesn’t say anything, particularly. No10 isn’t the only position in a team and not the sole determiner of who wins or loses.
Go to commentsThe manner of all these comments is that it doesn’t matter who plays No10 for the All Blacks, apparently they are all rubbish!
Seriously, people need to get a grip and stop obsessing over every tiny error made from an overscrutinised position. DMac was good this year for the most part, as was Beauden Barrett. Mo’unga was good last year and would be an asset in the group if he did come back. I don’t see it as an area of concern.
The main concern in 2025 is finding another world class lock and loose forward, followed by some scrutiny over the midfield combination in my view.
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