WATCH: Six Nations - The new kids on the block
In the life of a professional rugby player, there's still a long way to go before the first weekend in February when the Six Nations commences.
With two rounds of Champions Cup action to go, there is still an opportunity for fringe players to push their cause and unfortunately, there will also be a number of injuries between now and then.
Sam Underhill
Sam Underhill is one player who will certainly look to be in the mix for England this year.
Underhill makes his return tonight for Bath in the Champions Cup having been out of action with concussion since Englands clash with Australia on the 18th of November.
Identified by Jones as a potential World Cup player, his performances in the Autumn will only have strengthened his case for inclusion.
Credit Premiership Rugby
Marcus Smith
Teenage sensation Marcus Smith has been a revelation for Quins after bursting onto the scene this season, prompting England head coach Eddie Jones to call him up as an ‘apprentice’.
While Harlequins director of rugby, John Kingston, wants Eddie Jones to resist the temptation to cap the 18-year-old, Jones may feel Rome's Stadio Olimpico is the ideal time to blood the young flyhalf from the bench.
Smith also just signed his first professional contract last night with Harlequins, giving him a pay rise of roughly 900 percent and making him the highest paid teenager in the world.
His new salary is estimated to be in the region of £230,000 a year.
Credit: Harlequins
Damian Penaud
In France, Damian Penaud will surely make the French squad that Jacques Brunel names to face Ireland on the opening weekend and with five caps already to his name the 21-year-old may even start.
The Clermont youngster, bagged himself five tries from as many games when representing France in the Six Nations at under-20s level in 2016, a repeat of this form is exactly what a stuttering French side currently need.
Credit: Top14
Steff Evans
Steff Evans of Wales also looks odds-on to make an impact on this seasons Championship with injuries to Hallam Amos and George North.
The Scarlets man will return just in time having received a four-week ban, after a mid-air collision on boxing day that seen him red carded against the Ospreys.
Credit Pro14
Torrential rain ?? but that hasn't stopped @steffevs09
He's opened the scoring for @scarlets_rugby this evening against @Ospreys Rugby. Catch the action live on @S4C and @SkySports .#GUINNESSPRO14 #SCAvOSP pic.twitter.com/aioFYItPgu
— PRO14 RUGBY (@PRO14Official) December 26, 2017
Jordan Larmour
In Ireland Jordan Larmour has been making a serious case for not only his inclusion in the wider Irish Six Nations squad but potentially getting game time throughout the championship.
Scoring two phenomenal individual tries in the Irish inter-pros this season, against Ulster and Munster.
Credit: Leinster Rugby TV
Latest Comments
SA has consistently been protected by WR/IRB officials for the past 3 decades. This same protection and bias was also clearly evident in SR when they competed there and SA were never the top SA rugby nation. They went 9 years without winning it before fleeing.
Go to commentsAbsolutely spot on Marc!
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