Billy Vunipola eyeing World Cup recall after ‘selfishness’ cost him England


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Saracens star Billy Vunipola is has not played for England since Steve Borthwick took charge, but he is now targeting an international recall ahead of the World Cup

Resurgent Billy Vunipola thinks being “selfish” cost him his England place(MICAH CROOK/PPAUK/REX/Shutterstock)

Billy Vunipola believes being “selfish” cost him his England place and hopes putting the interests of others first will bring about a World Cup recall.

The Saracens star has not played for his country since Steve Borthwick took charge. The pair had a “very honest” meeting and the number eight was dropped. Three months on, England are no nearer turning their fortunes around and Vunipola is producing the power game they chose to ignore.



In front of 55,000 fans on Saturday the 30-year old eclipsed Alex Dombrandt, the man who took his England shirt, as Saracens beat Harlequins 36-24. On the day Lions great Sam Warburton insisted England need “his carrying power and ability to dominate the gainline” he exhibited both in a man of the match display.

“I got it wrong, I felt I became very selfish in wanting to force myself back into the team,” he said, as Saracens booked a home Premiership semi-final with six weeks of the regular season still to go.

“I’ve seen a better way to do it is to help others around me, who in turn help me. It’s not tennis, I can’t go out there and solely affect the game by myself. I’ve got to do my work within the team structures.”

Losing his England shirt hurt, but the 68-cap forward impressed Mark McCall at his club with what the Saracens boss termed an “unbelievable” response. It can be frustrating for an international, and Billy was disappointed of course not to be in the squad,” said McCall. “But he threw himself in and helped the younger players.”

Vunipola was man-of-the-match as he starred in the Saracens victory over Harlequins

Vunipola also refused to take the corporate shilling and stayed away from England games, watching on TV alone at home instead.

“It’s tough being at games, knowing you’ve not been picked,” he said. “Doing that [corporate] would feel like almost accepting my fate and saying I’m fine with this. It’s not my job to commentate. I’m still playing, and I want to play.”



Read More: Billy Vunipola eyeing World Cup recall after ‘selfishness’ cost him England 2023-03-26 19:00:00

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