
Van Poortvliet relishing Tigers and Norfolk connection with Steward
England take on the USA in Washington DC on Saturday night fresh off the back of a 2-0 series victory in Argentina.
Norfolk-born star Van Poortvliet, 24, was the matchwinner in the second of those Tests as a dramatic last-gasp try extended England's current winning streak to six matches.
Van Poortvliet and Steward, also 24 and from Norfolk, grew up playing rugby against each other and are both avid Norwich City fans away from the rugby field.
The bubbly duo have recruited several Tigers teammates to attend East Midlands away days with them and Van Poortvliet, who will start at scrum-half in the American capital this weekend, has revelled in the last few weeks alongside Steward and the rest of the squad.
'I've loved it – it's my first time in America, so we've done lots of historical bits and museums, which were great and very cool,' said Steward, who met many members of the Norwich squad when they went to watch Tigers train two years ago.
'Argentina was great – I've never toured there before so it was amazing to explore different parts of it.
'It's always nice touring but to top it off with two really good wins was amazing.
'To have a new experience of exploring a new county, touring and winning away has made this one of my favourite rugby experiences of my life.
'Me and Fred used to play each other before then both going to Leicester aged 13.
'Norfolk is my home and always will be – I grew up on a family farm there, so as soon as I finish my rugby career I'm going to be going back to Norfolk and carrying on with the farming there.
'And I'm still a massive Norwich fan – I don't get back as much as I'd like so it's quite good living in Leicester because there's a lot of Championship football teams around there!'
Borthwick's squad for the transatlantic trip has been diversely-assembled with many leading players away on The British & Irish Lions' tour to Australia.
That has thrust Van Poortvliet, who has earned 20 England caps, into a newfound leadership role as many younger faces get their first taste of life on tour.
He has relished that responsibility and reckons camaraderie away from the pitch – including daily viewing sessions of Love Island – has helped the group connect.
'I'm there if people need to ask questions, and I can share my experiences,' he added.
'If they want anything from me I can give that – rugby wise my role hasn't changed much but off the pitch, I've had a few more questions and probably been more of more help.
'The group have been amazing and such good fun – we've competed amazingly but enjoyed ourselves off the field as well.
'We started watching Love Island back in England – this season has been quite tasty so every night there's about 10 of us crammed into one room!
'I was one of the early pioneers for it – we watch in Fred's room as he's got a VPN.
'It's been great fun and very enjoyable.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
Everton running out of time to sign players
Everton manager David Moyes says the club are "running out" of time to make the impact they were hoping for in the summer transfer said his club have money to spend but the deals they were hoping to complete have not sources have distanced themselves from a potential move for Manchester City's unwanted England midfielder Jack Grealish, while an attempt to lure Kenny Tete north from Fulham floundered when the Dutchman opted to sign a new deal at Craven continue to be linked with numerous players and have signed young left-back Adam Aznou from Bayern Moyes said he could offer no guarantees Aznou, 19, would be propelled immediately into the senior starting line-up and said bringing experienced players to Everton this summer was proving troublesome."The truth is we're not getting a lot of the deals over the line at the moment, that's a fact," he said to reporters in Chicago before his side's Premier League Summer Series encounter with former club West Ham."We're desperate to get things moving on because we know time's running out." By this weekend, it will be nine weeks since Everton ended their season by beating Newcastle at St James' Park to seal a 13th-placed Premier League finish, their best performance since ambitious new owners and a summer move to their magnificent new stadium, it felt as though a reboot of a once mighty club was on the has not turned out the way Moyes new players, including Aznou and reserve keeper Mark Travers, does not cover for the loss of five experienced regular starters including Dominic Calvert-Lewin and Abdoulaye drew with League Two Accrington and lost at Championship side Blackburn before heading to the United States for the Premier League Summer Saturday's 3-0 defeat by Bournemouth, Moyes, 62, said he needed six more players."The one thing I'll do is I'll tell the fans straight, and I'm telling it straight at the moment, we're having a bit of a struggle getting ones in quickly," said Moyes."My first thought is yes, I'm surprised, because I think Everton's such a big club, with great traditions and the new stadium's an exciting move for us."But when you think again about it, we've been in or around the relegation positions for the last five years, not far off the bottom, so maybe there's been reasons for it."


BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
The World Cup winner who quit football to help next generation
It's not every day that a World Cup winner walks into a coffee shop in central there is no crowd, no signing autographs or selfies with fans. Things have turned out differently for Curtis Anderson. Anderson, a former Manchester City goalkeeper who helped England win the Under-17s Fifa World Cup in 2017, is able to sip his flat white in relative peace as he explains why he gave up his dream and became a financial adviser the 21 players who triumphed in India eight years ago, Anderson is the only one who is no longer playing football at any most in his current field, Anderson is using his experiences in the game to help young professional footballers whose shoes he once stood in. Anderson works for an independent financial adviser, where he heads the sports of his time is spent exclusively with athletes - mainly footballers - helping them make informed financial decisions to maximise their earnings from a short career."You can literally change people's lives by taking money stresses away," Anderson tells BBC Sport."People don't understand simple things around finance so making things clearer for people and helping them keeps me motivated."I want to help as many people as possible. I'm so passionate about helping young football players."Not too long ago, the 24-year-old was in the same position as those he now helps. So how did he end up here? 'The spark had gone' On 28 October 2017, Anderson became a world months on from spending England's European Under-17 Championship campaign on the bench, Anderson didn't miss a minute as Steve Cooper's side reached the final of the U17 World Cup in had a squad including future Premier League regulars Phil Foden - who was named player of the tournament - Morgan Gibbs-White, Conor Gallagher, Callum Hudson-Odoi and Marc Guehi, and produced a remarkable comeback to beat Spain 5-2 after trailing 2-0."We were so relaxed and confident, nobody panicked," Anderson recalls."We pulled a goal back then went into half-time thinking 'we've got this'. There was no one getting stressed or going crazy in the dressing room."Anderson was on top of the world but, by his own admission, he became impatient. Anderson sought a move away in search of more minutes, but was still at City when the transfer window closed after a loan move to a Championship club fell few options on the table, Anderson decided to join American side Charlotte Independence of the United Soccer League on a permanent basis in March 2019. It was a decision he came to regret - three months later, the manager who signed Anderson was sacked, and he found himself out of favour."I look back and think, at 18, what was I in a rush for?" says Anderson."I was in such a desperate rush to do everything. I came off the back of the World Cup and expected everything now. I was looking at other young players, what they were doing, and not really valuing the path that I was on."Playing for City and England, my trajectory would have been straight up."After a year on the books at Wycombe Wanderers, Anderson dropped down into non-league before retiring in 2023."The spark of football just wasn't really there," he says."I didn't have the same drive and love for it that I had five years earlier, I was happy to do my day job. The decision to fully stop playing came quite easily." 'Football gave me everything' Like most footballers, Anderson started first taste of football came in his home town of Barrow-in-Furness, where he played both outfield and in goal for the under-six team coached by his long he was scouted by Blackpool, where he played until the two Manchester giants came United and City both wanted the 11-year-old, but he and his family were swayed by the latter's plans for the state-of-the-art City Football from a small town in Cumbria to a new city and an elite club was a daunting experience, but one Anderson feels helped him develop as a person and switch careers years later."Being in a high performance environment every single day, where you try to achieve the highest level, working as hard as you can and being called out if you're not at the level - not many kids are exposed to that," he says."It shapes you as a person. When I look back at my football career, people ask me if I regret it but absolutely not. "Football gave me absolutely everything, in terms of exposure and the opportunity to mature really young." 'I have no regrets' When the coronavirus lockdown left Anderson unable to find a new club, he started wondering how the money he had earned at City had dwindled away."I remember being 17 and not knowing what to do with the money, it was a daunting thing," he passed accountancy and finance exams after contacting the Professional Footballers' Association for decided that path wasn't for him, which led to him shadowing a financial adviser near his parents' house. He's worked in financial planning and advice ever since, turning down several offers to return to the Football League as his heart wasn't in new pursuit provided a level of control and security - as well as purpose - that playing lower-league football could not."At Wycombe, I'd get questions from older players," he says. "I realised there is a lack of education and support about finance in football. "There's not enough education, guidance and support for young people with high earnings."If you're a lower-league player, your immediate priority should be to plan for life after football. If you've got that sorted, you can set yourself and your family up for years."I look at what I know now and feel like I need to help as many people in football as I can."But when he sees his former England team-mates succeeding at the top of the game, does he have any regrets?"I'm proud to see them doing so well, I don't sit there and think I wish I was doing that, or what could have been," he says."I've got no regrets and I'm not envious. I just stopped enjoying it. If you offered to put me in their situations now, playing week-in week-out in the Premier League, I wouldn't trade that for what I'm doing now."When I look at my football career, it gave me the opportunity to do what I do now. There aren't many financial advisers under 25 - or not many good ones anyway!"


Daily Mirror
26 minutes ago
- Daily Mirror
Ollie Watkins' comments on Bryan Mbeumo speaks volumes ahead of potential Man Utd reunion
Manchester United have made Ollie Watkins their top target in attack which could reunite him with Bryan Mbeumo after their success together in their Brentford days Ollie Watkins owes a huge part of his emergence to the partnership he forged with Bryan Mbeumo at Brentford with the pair now potentially reuniting at Manchester United as the club continue their summer recruitment. Watkins remains at Aston Villa whilst Mbeumo recently made the switch to the Red Devils, but both men formed part of a fearsome trio back during their Brentford days when the Bees were aiming to become a Premier League outfit. Said Benrahma was also part the attack but it was only Mbeumo who stayed with Brentford for the long haul. Watkins' goals saw Villa come calling whilst Benrahma headed to West Ham and is now in Saudi Arabia. The season they spent together in the Championship the trio scored 59 times between them as Brentford made it to the play-off final. This year just passed Mbeumo had a career-best year at Brentford and Watkins, who endured a frustrating season at Villa Park, came up with 17 goals. United are now eyeing a move for Watkins to further bolster their attack and the Englishman previously admitted he would love to have continued playing with Mbeumo. He said back in the Brentford days: "I feel like coming from the bottom makes you hungry and you are always striving for more, so I am not surprised these two (Mbeumo and Benrahma) have been in the lower leagues and worked their way to the top and hopefully we can keep going up together." United are stepping up their bid to sign a striker before the start of the new season – with Watkins now their first-choice target as reported by Mirror Football. The United bosses believe that a compromise figure of between £40million-£45m can be agreed with Villa, who have valued the England international at £60m. As well as Watkins, United are keeping track on RB Leipzig's Benjamin Sesko situation but the Bundesliga club want around £70m for him and Newcastle are the most likely destination the 22-year-old Slovenian as they weigh up replacements for Alexander Isak. The Red Devils want a proven goalscorer and throughout the summer United have adopted a policy of signing players who are used to the Premier League with Mbeumo's signing coming after they had also landed Matheus Cunha from Wolves. Join our new WhatsApp community and receive your daily dose of Mirror Football content. We also treat our community members to special offers, promotions, and adverts from us and our partners. If you don't like our community, you can check out any time you like. If you're curious, you can read our Privacy Notice.