Will Stuart hopes Bath form can make him key man for England

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Will Stuart hopes involvement in Bathā€™s resurgence this season can help in his quest to become Englandā€™s first-choice tighthead prop.

The 27-year-old was delighted to go to a first World Cup earlier this year but frustrated at starting just one match at the showpiece in France ā€“ the Bronze Medal victory over Argentina ā€“ and being left out of the 23-man pool entirely for the knockout clashes against Fiji and South Africa.

As he enters what he hopes will be his peak years, Stuart is determined to stake a strong claim to get ahead of 36-year-old Dan Cole and Kyle Sinckler in the pecking order and become Englandā€™s established number three in time for the next World Cup in Australia in 2027.

The former Wasps forward ā€“ who has won 33 caps since his debut against France in the 2020 Six Nations ā€“ threw himself straight back into club rugby after the World Cup and has helped Bath make a strong start in both the Gallagher Premiership and the Investec Champions Cup.

ā€œEvery player wants to play in a World Cup and the next one in Australia is a massive goal for me,ā€ Stuart told the PA news agency.

ā€œIf my career ended now, Iā€™d say ā€˜I achieved a little bit, I won a few caps for England and played at a World Cupā€™ but realistically I havenā€™t won silverware, I havenā€™t played in multiple World Cups and I havenā€™t really solidified myself as a starting tighthead for England, so thereā€™s a lot I aspire to do.

ā€œI played in three of the group games (as a substitute) and then missed out on the quarters and semis, which was a frustration.

ā€œBut itā€™s been pretty clear from chatting with the coaches what my work-ons are and what I need to do to be a first-choice tighthead for England.

ā€œIf Iā€™m playing well for Bath and can contribute to a winning team, that falls into giving myself a good opportunity to push on with England as well.ā€

In addition to his own form, Stuartā€™s bid to establish himself for England will be influenced by how long veteran Leicester tighthead Cole can soldier on.

ā€œThe way Coley plays, I reckon he could play until heā€™s 54,ā€ joked the Bath forward. ā€œHeā€™s great, he was great for me during the World Cup and itā€™s impressive that heā€™s still playing at that level at 36.

ā€œHeā€™s on 107 caps for England and played 300-plus games for Leicester and heā€™s been starting and playing 70-odd minutes for the majority of that so heā€™s a good person to look up to.ā€

With the Six Nations looming in the new year, Stuart feels England have huge potential for further growth under Steve Borthwick after defying pre-tournament scepticism to reach the World Cup semi-finals.

ā€œI think we were written off a lot during the World Cup,ā€ said Stuart.

ā€œDraw-wise we probably had an easier route to the quarters but we ended up taking South Africa to one point in the semi-final and until the last 20 minutes we were all over them, so I think that is something to massively build on.

ā€œIncluding the Six Nations and the lead-up to the World Cup, the coaching group probably only had about a six-month period to really work with the team and, with that in mind, we had a way of playing where we knew we could basically get to knockout rugby.

ā€œWhen we got to that stage, it was always going to be fine margins and we were one point away from the final.

ā€œI think the coaches have been very clear on the areas where we can push on and make massive strides to get back to where England have been in the past.ā€

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