Sale Sharks flanker Ben Curry

Ben Curry happy to play waiting game at Test level

AS a talented young cricketer, Ben Curry used to score his runs slow and steady and that patience is serving him two-fold on the field.

The 22-year-old, a wicket-keeper/batsman for club Elworth CC in his teens, often plays a straight bat to questions about his chances as he looks to emulate twin brother, Tom, and make it into ‘ setup.

But given his form since the restarted, when he has taken on the added responsibility of captaining the , his director of rugby Steve Diamond feels it is “only a matter of time” before the two pack down alongside each other at Test level.

Curry, though, is prepared to play the waiting game – a quality that he is also displaying at the breakdown.

Discussing his England snub to date, Curry said: “As soon as you start feeling sorry for yourself if you’re not in (the England team), then that’s when you can start getting into a difficult situation.

“I am just trying to keep constantly improving and if it doesn’t happen, it doesn’t happen and if it does happen, it does happen.

“If you go into that mindset of ‘I can’t do anything else’, you are taking the power out of your own hands.”

Competing at the breakdown has been taken out of the hands of most of his Sharks team-mates.

After a penalty-strewn start to the restart, Diamond has said that only the two Currys, and hooker Akker van der Merwe, can compete for the opposition ball on the floor. If anyone else gets penalised there, it’s a £50 fine.

Between them, Ben and won six jackal turnovers against last Saturday.

“You see a lot of articles about who won ‘the battle of the breakdown’ so when there are three of you, with Akker and Tom, it kind of takes the pressure off and you can make better decisions,” said Curry, who revealed a yellow card is punishable by a £150 fine.

“There’s not that urgency to go in and try and win every single one.

“I don’t think we actually competed at that many at the weekend (in the win against Bristol) but the ones we did, we really slowed down their ball or got the ball back.”

Combative: Ben Curry breaks a tackle in action for England Under-20s against in 2017. Shaun Botterill/Getty Images

The former captain turned into something of a bookworm over lockdown, with a preference for anything involving Hercule Poirot.

But he is far better at solving the mysteries of the breakdown than an Agatha Christie murder case.

He said: “We got the referee’s interpretation right against Bristol, and we only gave six penalties away, and only two of those were for not rolling away.

“The big thing referees are talking about is making sure the tackler has rolled away before you go in and compete.

“As a jackaler, though, that’s not really your job. It happens so fast at the breakdown, you can’t be like ‘oh, I’ve got to wait for the tackler to get out of the way and then go in and compete’, you’ve just got to go in and hope the tackler has rolled away.

“A good decision at the breakdown is so subjective, it changes all the time, that’s why you have got to contribute on top of that.”

JON NEWCOMBE

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