
‘I had no doubt that Christian Wade would make it as a rugby player'
When Jon Scourfield surprises Christian Wade at Kingsholm, Gloucester Rugby's ground, the former England wing almost jumps out of his skin before an enormous smile creases his face. Scourfield had been a rugby league player with the London Broncos and, after retiring, found his way to the Royal Grammar School, RGS High Wycombe which is where he came across the diminutive 11 year old Wade who even then was brimming with talent.
'I first saw him in year 7. He didn't want to play rugby. He thought of himself as a footballer,' Scourfield explains. 'I was doing some little 25m sprints at a games session and wow! He was beating everybody by five or 10m. If it hadn't been rugby it would have been athletics.
'Christian quickly bought into rugby despite his lack of size. I had no doubt that he had the potential to be a professional rugby player.
'He's brave in many ways, physically and in his willingness to step outside of comfort zones. To try to become an American footballer, to return to rugby and play for Racing in the top 14, switch to Gloucester and then make another switch to rugby league – well It says a lot about him.
'He always stood out. He can strike you as a bit laid-back but he has the capacity to work incredibly hard. I couldn't be any prouder of him – he is very humble.'
The feeling is clearly reciprocated.
'When I first went to RGS I still wanted to play football, but that soon changed,' Wade explains. 'Mr Scourfield played a huge part in my rugby development and also my development as a human being. He was always there to support us. He taught us discipline and was a great mentor, always pushing.'
Wade appreciates how his schooldays have helped to shape him in adult life.
'A lot of it was about instilling the discipline you need to succeed. I had that at school and at home – it was part of my Caribbean background. My mother's family had come over from St Vincent to better themselves, and that could only be achieved by hard work and discipline.
'They were strict and instilled a work ethic. The good habits from school and home, from an early age, become part of you. If you don't do the right things and work hard, if you take shortcuts in training, there is always going to be that voice in the back of your mind. It's important to always have that voice.'
As a passionate advocate of spreading the rugby gospel beyond its traditional public school heartlands, Wade fully supports the Gallagher Touchline Academy, a free and easy-to-follow rugby programme designed to provide teachers with the skills and confidence to teach rugby. The programme has been created in partnership with Gallagher Premiership Rugby Clubs and will be rolled out in schools across the UK over the next three years. The initiative will empower teachers, helping them to deliver rugby lessons in schools, inspiring the next generation of players and fans.
'I want to be part of that movement to get rugby back into state schools.
'That is going to be huge. I know the impact good coaching at school had on me. I was one of the lucky ones who didn't have to pay for my education via the 11+, but not everybody is lucky and gets the quality of training.
'Learn the basics at school, get that enthusiasm for the game and then join the local club – you create great networks, friendships and camaraderie.
'As a youngster, boredom is your enemy. There aren't the youth clubs we used to have when I was young. When you are idle this is when mischievous stuff happens and issues develop, and we need to give kids some stuff to do. We need to give kids more opportunities to play rugby and sport in general.'
Scourfield's teaching philosophy embraces all of that.
'You have to make it enjoyable. The physical aspect of rugby can be quite challenging for young year 7 pupils who have never experienced the game before. Enjoyment is the main thing though, if they have that they will continue into adulthood, whatever sport they choose.
'Rugby teaches so many life skills: respect for themselves, team-mates and opposition. I see students now that, without the discipline aspect of rugby, would find life a little bit harder.'
From his own personal experience, Scourfield appreciates the need for rugby to spread its wings if it is to thrive.
'I am aware of the challenges. My job before RGS was introducing rugby and cricket at a comprehensive secondary school. If we can't get more players coming from a more diverse background, then the sport that changed my life is going to change and possibly even wither a bit. All the players coming from independent school backgrounds is not sustainable long-term.
'The reason I got into rugby was that a teacher tapped me on the back at my comprehensive and said, 'Come and give this sport a go.' In the end, rugby has given me a life.
'My message [to teachers] is to get involved, you will almost certainly really enjoy it. Be the coach who brings through the next Christian Wade!'
Watch the moments that Ellis Genge, Christian Wade and Marcus Smith were surprised by their teachers and mentors.
Gallagher is Right Here for Rugby and Right Here for Business – go to ajg.com/uk to see what Gallagher can do for you.
Hashtags

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


The Guardian
18 minutes ago
- The Guardian
Highgate cemetery families confront bosses in row over new building
Dozens of grave owners confronted Highgate cemetery's bosses and their architects this week in a growing row over a maintenance and toilet block in a part of the graveyard where almost 200 people were recently buried. The cemetery called Tuesday's private meeting in an attempt to placate objectors by setting out adjustments to a new building that is part of an £18m redevelopment of the graveyard. But the meeting descended into heckles, chants, a walkout, legal threats, demands for compensation and accusations that cemetery was putting the needs of tourists above mourners. A recording of the meeting, heard by the Guardian, revealed unanimous and often furious opposition to what grave owners have called 'the bunker'. The controversial block is due to be located on the mound, an area of the cemetery of about 170 recent graves including those of the sociologist Prof Stuart Hall, the artist Gustav Metzger, and the critic Tom Lubbock. Among those objecting were the actor Bertie Carvel, whose mother, Pat, was buried on the mound in 2019. He told the meeting it was 'crazy' to locate the 'brutalist' building in part of the cemetery 'most frequented by active mourners'. Pleading with the cemetery's managers, he said: 'I'm sure it is not deliberately insensitive but given the strength of feeling please, please, please will you stop. Go away and rethink.' His fellow actor Pam Miles demanded that the cemetery pay for the cost of exhuming the remains of her actor husband, Tim Pigott-Smith, if the scheme goes ahead. 'It leaves us no option but to exhume. In the circumstances it would be fair to expect you to repay us for these expensive graves.' Staff from Hopkins Architects, who designed the scheme, were repeatedly heckled and shouted down as they argued the building could not be placed in any other part of the 14.5-hectare (36-acre) graveyard. A lawyer, who afterwards asked not to be named, said he and others were planning to sue the cemetery for breach of contract. The man, who owns a double plot where his partner his buried, told the meeting: 'What we bought was a site with open views and you are changing that. You need to think about whether there are potential legal ramifications from people like me if you carry on with this.' Separately, a letter to the cemetery's trustees signed by more than 30 grave owners, claimed the charity had breached consumer rights of those who had recently bought plots by failing to inform them of the plan to redevelop the cemetery. It also threatened to report the trust to the Charity Commission over consultation failures and reputational damage to the cemetery. And it warned they were prepared to allege mismanagement to the National Heritage Lottery Fund, at a time when the cemetery is seeking £18m of funding for the redevelopment. At the meeting architects defended the building. One denied it was brutalist, saying: 'That's just not correct. There's more poetry to it than that.' One of the objectors shouted: 'Bollocks.' Undeterred, the architects outlined proposed changes to the block including removing an accessible toilet and reducing the height and width of the building. At this point Natalie Chambers, whose parents are both buried on the mound, left the meeting in protest. As she left she said: 'I'm appalled. You don't listen to us one bit. My father was in the Warsaw ghetto. And you are so disgusting I don't even want to come to the cemetery any more.' There followed a chant from the room of: 'We don't want the building.' A screenwriter, Anna Seifert-Speck, whose husband was buried on the mound in 2019, said: 'We are asking you to reconsider bulldozing over our complaints. Lowering the thing a little bit isn't going to work, it's not want we want.' Another grave owner said: 'It's a graveyard for us. It's not a tourist site.' A barrister said the mound area was the 'worst possible' location for the building. 'There is a concentration of nothing but contemporary graves there. That's why you have so many people in this room. My young daughter lies there. 'You must see that the notion of having toilets right next to the graves of loved ones causes pain and anguish. The solution is simple: don't build on the mound.' Speaking after the meeting, Carvel said: 'Mourning in a cemetery ranks higher than visiting a place of historic interest. The force of those arguments must have rung loud to anyone with an ounce of humanity. But we are also dealing with a corporate decision-making process and I remain somewhere between anxious and cynical about the extent to which that organisation will look itself in the mirror and admit it was wrong.' The architects and trustees agreed to reflect on the feedback and report back to the grave owners in the coming weeks. Elizabeth Fuller, the chair of the Friends of Highgate Cemetery Trust, acknowledged failures in the way recent grave owners had been consulted about the plans and pledged 'better communication in the future'. At the start of the meeting she said: 'As required by the planning process, and by [the] reality [of the site], we have had to balance the benefits and harms of all constituent elements. We will commit to amending our plans wherever possible.'


The Sun
24 minutes ago
- The Sun
Sheffield Wednesday placed under transfer embargo by EFL as owner is accused of holding club ‘hostage'
SHEFFIELD WEDNESDAY have been placed under a registration embargo for failure to pay wages on time. The Owls will be prevented from adding players to their squad for the 2025/26 Championship season due to multiple breaches of EFL regulations on payment obligations. 3 3 The club were charged this week after failing to pay both players and staff members their wages for May. The sanction has heaped yet more pressure on Owls owner Dejphon Chansiri, who has apologised profusely for the delayed wages, to sell the club. An American consortium is looking to buy the Yorkshire outfit but has had TWO PROPOSALS rejected by Thai tycoon Chansiri. Labour MP for Sheffield South East, Clive Betts, is leading the calls for Chansiri to sell, saying: "He must accept that he needs to sell Wednesday to prevent the complete collapse of the club. "We as fans deserve better. "It breaks my heart to see the club I have followed all my life being held hostage by an owner who clearly has no interest or care for us. "It is clear that Chansiri does not have the ability or resources to fund and invest in Sheffield Wednesday." Wednesday have vowed to pay players and staff as soon as possible. JOIN SUN VEGAS: GET £50 BONUS 3 A club statement read: "The club continue to seek a resolution regarding outstanding salaries due for the month of May at the earliest possible opportunity. "Mr Chansiri sincerely apologises to all players, coaches and staff affected and everyone connected with the club." Former Premier League star, 39, sent off after 55 seconds for headbutting rival's BACK in EFL clash Chansiri's ten-year ownership of Wednesday has been filled with financial issues. The Yorkshire club were deducted six points in the 2021/21 season, in which they were relegated to League One, for breaching spending rules. And they were placed under registration embargoes in both the 2023/24 and 24/25 campaigns. Wednesday ended the 2024/25 Championship season in 12th place.


The Sun
24 minutes ago
- The Sun
Four ways you can use your kitchen scraps to help your plants grow
DON'T bin you kitchen scraps – use them to get your garden blooming. From tea leaves to egg shells, your waste items can give your plants a boost. Here's how . . . BANANA PEEL: Skin from bananas can be give plants a natural potassium boost which helps when flowers are forming, according to David Denyer, from He said: 'Bake your banana peels at a low temperature for a few hours, then either blend or grind them into a fine powder. 'Mix the powder into your soil to provide a slow, steady release of nutrients that can really make a difference to plants such as dahlias, calendula or cosmos.' EGGSHELLS: You can support repeat bloomers such as petunias and geraniums with old eggshells. Grind them into a fine powder and soak in vinegar for 24 hours, says David. Once the solution has cooled, you can pour it around the base of your flowering plants. RINSE WATER: When washing dried pulses such as lentils and chickpeas, save the water rather than pouring it down the drain. Then use it to tip on plants to give soil a gentle drink. David says: 'It contains natural starches and minerals from the legumes, which feed the helpful microbes in your soil. "These help unlock nutrients like phosphorus and potassium that plants need to stay healthy and flower well.' TEA LEAVES: Acid-loving plants such as roses, hydrangeas and azaleas will appreciate used tea leaves for a health boost. They contain small amounts of nitrogen, phosphorus, and potassium, which lightly lower the soil pH. This makes it easier for certain plants to absorb nutrients that help deepen petal colour. David adds: 'Sprinkle the damp tea leaves directly on to the soil around your plants and gently water them in. "Just make sure there's no milk or sugar, as that can attract pests or lead to mould in your soil.' 7 Aldi is selling a cheap $2.19 item in the 'finds aisle' that will transform your garden into a colorful summer paradise All prices on page correct at time of going to press. Deals and offers subject to availability Deal of the day KEEP it cool when temp-eratures rise with the 29in Neo tower fan, down from £89.99 to £23.43 at Debenhams. Cheap treat GIVE your pout some shine with this lip gloss duo, £4.99, from H&M. Top swap COMFORT is all in the sole with these Birkenstock clogs, £130, from Office. Or trot to Primark and pick up a similar style for £10. Shop & save 7 KICK back with help from this mushroom footstool, down from £49.99 to £29.99 at Wilko. Hot right now BAG three for two on Co-Op's newly launched picnic range which includes pork pies, salads and more. PLAY NOW TO WIN £200 7 JOIN thousands of readers taking part in The Sun Raffle. Every month we're giving away £100 to 250 lucky readers - whether you're saving up or just in need of some extra cash, The Sun could have you covered. Every Sun Savers code entered equals one Raffle ticket.