If Henry Pollock fits the mould of modern-day British and Irish Lions âbolterâ, his counterpart for the 1997 tour to South Africa was one Will Greenwood.
As the former England centre and 2003 Rugby World Cup winner points out, though, Pollock is virtually âa veteran compared to me,â having made his Test debut off the bench against Wales in March, scoring twice in his solitary cap to date.
Indeed, ahead of the Lionsâ crunch tour to face the world champion Springboks in 1997, head coach Ian McGeechan selected Greenwood despite the then 24-year-old having yet to play for England. He remains the last uncapped Lions player and itâs doubtful there will ever be another one.
Greenwood is uniquely positioned, therefore, to provide insight into what 20-year-old Pollock â the rugby player on most peopleâs lips at the moment â may be feeling and going through currently.
Thinking back, Greenwood reveals he had two moments of disbelief at receiving a Lions call at all: firstly due to the antics of housemate and fellow would-be Lion Austin Healy, and secondly due to the date.
âBack in 1997 I was given a letter, unlike in all the tours since when itâs announced live on Sky Sports News. Thereâd been some rumours I had half a chance, but they were hard to believe.
âA bit like Henry Pollock and his marvellous performance to beat Leinster in that Champions Cup semi-final in Dublin, in 1997 at Leicester Tigers weâd actually put 37 points on Toulouse in a European semi-final and that was probably the day I got picked. It was a real launchpad for me, but I didnât find out.
âThe letter was firstly hidden by Austin Healy â who I was living with â for three hours, and then I thought it was an April Fools. It landed in my letterbox on April 1 1997, but after a while I was like: âOh my God, this is happening.â
âI turned up at the Oaklands Park Hotel in Weybridge to meet the squad, and I was going in scared. There were five Leicester players in the squad, so I knew some, but the rest of the ladsâŠScott Gibbs, Keith Wood, these guys were like flipping superheroes. I was terrified.
âI was rooming with a giant of a man who has become one of my great friends, Scott Quinnell, and Iâd never met him before in my life. I turned up so concerned but he came over and gave me the biggest cuddle. It was like being cuddled by Hagrid.
âThen Allan Bateman came over and said: âHello mate, I think weâll probably be playing in the midweek team together because Gibbs-Guscott might be the first Test partnership,â so we had a little laugh and a joke straight away.
âBefore you know it, youâre out on the field. Literally thereâll just be a moment where youâre passing the ball around and then youâll do something like make a little half-burst, and theyâll go: âOh okay, heâs all right.â
âItâs such an open environment because everyone is so desperate to win, and they totally trusted the coach.
âFor me, it was Ian McGeechan and Jim Telfer, who are total legends, and for this Lions tour itâs Andy Farrell, who is just such a warrior, awesome athlete, competitive coach.
âAll the other players will go: âIf Farrell thinks Pollock is good enough, then heâs good enough.'â
Despite his total lack of Test rugby experience, Greenwood flourished in 1997 as he started and scored in the Lionsâ first tour match against Eastern Province in Port Elizabeth as part of a 39-11 victory.
He started four of the next seven tour matches leading up to the first Test, where he missed out on selection, before his tour then ended in scary fashion as a result of a horrific injury in the final midweek game between the first and second Tests against the Free State Cheetahs.
Greenwood was knocked unconscious off the hard turf and swallowed his tongue, proving unresponsive on the pitch and in the medical room for several minutes in an event legendary Scotland and Lions doctor James Robson â a six-times tourist â describes as âhorrendous,â admitting since he was moments away from slicing open Greenwoodâs throat to further protect his airways.
On the famous Living with Lions documentary from 1997, the anguished screams of Greenwoodâs mother can be heard as he is stretchered from the pitch: âWilliam, William, what have you done.â
Robson âsaved my lifeâ Greenwood says, and itâs recorded footage on the documentary he says he hopes never to revisit.
His advice for Pollock as the young pup on tour? Do your utmost to display exemplary hallmarks of professionalism, and take the opportunity to smash the Lions you are competing against for a starting place, because they wonât hold back against you.
âWell I donât think he needs shoulders back and be confident, because thatâs sort of his USP,â Greenwood says.
âThe reality is he just needs to be strapped up, ready to train. Be first on the training field, first in the team meeting room. Itâs not about sucking up, itâs about doing things right.
âLook after the (soft toy mascot) Lion BIL, donât leave the Lion.
âWhen you get on the pitch, just tear it up. If thereâs a gap or you get a chance in a contact drill to smash Jac Morgan or Tom Curry, then smash him. Because they will smash you.
âThatâs one of the key things. Fight for your place, because everyone wants it.â
Lions is Willy Wonka stuff â itâs a proper golden ticket
Greenwood is part of a select group of players to have toured with the Lions to all three of the southern hemisphereâs heavyweights, following up his 1997 experience in South Africa with trips to Australia in 2001 and New Zealand in 2005.
An ankle injury in 2001 ruled him out of potential Test selection against the Wallabies, while the 2005 series saw the All Blacks comprehensively beat the Lions 3-0.
Yet, when Greenwood reflects on his Lions experience as a whole, he counts each tour as special despite their differences.
âThey were all unbelievable. Clearly the winning series is the one you talk about more often, but actually, for the people who have been, itâs more than that.
âSo often in life, a sportsman or woman is publicly defined by W or L: major winner or runner-up, because thatâs the binary way a supporter would look at it.
âWhen youâre playing and youâre involved, of course thatâs in the back of your mind, but itâs actually the people you get to sit on the bus with.
âItâs who you drive around New Zealand with when you get battered by McCaw and Carter, Umaga and Sivivatu. When youâre chasing shadows.
âWhen youâre in Australia and thereâs huge frustration at getting beaten by Australia A in a s****y game where the ref pinged us off the park and we know we should have won. You have to get back on the bus and itâs how you pick each other up. How after a tough training session, you throw each other back together.
âYou crack on and you try and just explore as much of the country as possible without in any way impacting your elite sporting performance by being on your feet all day. Itâs a fine balance.
âThe people I met on the tour in 2005 were just as nice and just as good friends as the people I went on tour with in 1997, itâs just people prefer to talk about 97 because we won.â
In terms of where becoming a Lion ranks as a sporting achievement, Greenwoodâs answer illuminates the sort of fantasy-like feelings experienced by players bestowed with the honour.
âThe reality is you want to be part of everything in life.
âThe Lions is just one of those truly special things that Iâm supremely grateful three different coaches took a chance on me and gave me the opportunity to tour the toughest places in the world to play rugby in, with some of the best players that have ever played rugby in the northern hemisphere.
âItâs Willy Wonka stuff, really. Itâs a proper golden ticket.â
British & Irish Lions tour of Australia on Sky Sports
Sky Sports will exclusively show the 2025 British and Irish Lions tour of Australia, with all three Tests against the Wallabies and six warm-up matches to be shown exclusively live.
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