Toulon's owner reveals his thoughts on Chris Ashton's future with the club
Toulon president Mourad Boudjellal has revealed that Chris Ashton backflipped on his release request, requesting to return to the French club. He explained the two sides are working through discussions and he is 'hopeful' that he will stay.
"Ashton asked to leave the club, then he asked to return," he said during a Facebook Live chat.
"We hope that Chris Ashton will stay in Toulon. We are currently in discussion with him. We are in the midst of personal problems. There is no ultimatum about it.
"There are different issues - there is the family problem and there is the issue of selection. We want him to stay. The ball is in his court now."
Boudjellal indicated that Ashton's primary motive for returning to the Premiership is family related but also raised his national ineligibility. The 31-year-old's move to Toulon from Saracens on a three-year deal ended any hope of playing for England again. With the showpiece Rugby World Cup around the corner, the lure of international play seems to be pulling the prolific try scorer back to compete for a World Cup spot.
His first season in France showed what kind of lethal finisher he can be, breaking the Top 14 try-scoring record with 24 in 23 matches. The flyer also demonstrated his ability for the Barbarians against England at Twickenham earlier this year, scoring a hattrick.
In the build-up to the Barbarians fixture, Ashton spoke of his displeasure at only having 39 caps and expressed his desire to play for England again one day.
"I went to France with an open mind and I still have an open mind. I'm enjoying it there, but I still feel good and would love to play for England again one day," Ashton said last month.
"I did feel as though the door had been shut [by Jones] and it affected my confidence. I thought, 'Why didn't he need me in there, why wouldn't he want me in there?'
"I had to go elsewhere to prove to myself and others that I can still do it, that I can do it in a different environment, a different league and do it well.
"The number of caps I have - 39 - annoys me. It's a terrible number."
It seems at least one Premiership club is interested in welcoming Ashton back, with newly promoted Bristol Bears happy to give him a shot. Bristol head coach Pat Lam, who coached Ashton at the Barbarians, explained there will 'always be a place with me'.
"If this guy wants to come home, there will always be a place with me. I will be waiting," Lam said.
Latest Comments
33, unlikely?
It’s actually an interesting question, how does his RL career impact you perception of his ‘rugby age’?
I’d imagine he’s fresher than a 26 yo rugby player, he’s fitting and done more k’s, but had less impacts (unsure of his injuries).
Anyway, your conclusion doesn’t really hit the mark. What you’ve not asked yourself is would he be better at 33, with 6 years under his belt, than 28/9, and only 2 years experience. If he really is considering it a major goal of course, he may just want an Olympic medal and leave etc.
Still, in relation to your topic, what I suspected would be his thinking is the ever increasing value in playing in Japan. Perhaps he’d try and give this first WC a go, trying to make it in the All Blacks, obviously playing Super Rugby, then he’d take a much bigger contract in Japan? Learn how to run around people with better accuracy and consistency (rofl), and then return to NZ as an improved player to Australia 2027, with the hope to fine tune further and make the most of his marketability in the bonanza that America 2031 is going to leave behind. 33 is still prime earning age and who knows what the MLR market is going to be like them, if teams have started to have major backers etc.
It’s all about the money afterall (yes, I wasn’t referring to his ability re USA31’)!
Go to commentsNo, just an overly zealous fan who doesn’t know what he’s talking about.
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