Exiled Willis ‘Could Offer More Now’ to England: The Top 14 King England Can’t Call
In the sweltering heat of the Stade Vélodrome in Marseille this past June, Jack Willis delivered a performance that should have sent shivers down the spine of every England rugby fan. Scoring two tries in Toulouse’s 39-33 Top 14 final victory over Bordeaux-Begles, the 29-year-old back-rower was not just a participant; he was a destroyer. He was relentless at the breakdown, thunderous in the carry, and clinical in the finish. It was a masterclass. And yet, for all his brilliance, the man many now consider the best jackal in world rugby remains a ghost in the eyes of the Rugby Football Union (RFU).
Willis has admitted in recent interviews that he feels he “could offer more now” to England than ever before. His game has matured in the hyper-competitive cauldron of French rugby. He is a better, more complete player than the one who earned his 14th and most recent cap in a solitary appearance at the 2023 Rugby World Cup. But here is the brutal, unyielding reality: he is almost certainly never going to pull on the white jersey again.
This is the tragic paradox of modern English rugby. A player at the absolute peak of his powers, a man who would walk into Steve Borthwick’s starting XV, is exiled not by form, fitness, or a falling out with the coach, but by a rigid, self-imposed policy that prioritizes domestic club loyalty over national team strength.
The Curse of the RFU’s Overseas Selection Policy
To understand Willis’s predicament, you have to trace the timeline of his exile. When Wasps tragically folded in October 2022, Willis was left without a club. The RFU, in a moment of rare pragmatism, granted him special dispensation to sign for Toulouse on a short-term deal while remaining eligible for England. It was a lifeline, and Willis grabbed it with both hands. He played so well that he forced his way into the World Cup squad.
However, the trap door was always there. The RFU’s strict overseas selection policy dictates that any player based outside of England is ineligible for national selection, with very few exceptions. The initial dispensation was a temporary bandage. When Willis made the decision to extend his contract with Toulouse rather than return to an English Premiership club, the door slammed shut.
“I am reconciled to the fact that I may not play international rugby again,” Willis has stated. Those are not the words of a man who lacks ambition; they are the words of a professional who understands the arithmetic. He chose the lifestyle, the culture, and the relentless physicality of the Top 14. He chose to become a better player. And for that choice, the RFU has deemed him invisible.
The policy was designed to protect the English Premiership, to keep star players at home. But in the case of Willis, it has backfired spectacularly. It has created a situation where England’s most in-form back-row forward is forbidden from representing his country. Is that a good rule, or a self-defeating one?
The Evolution of a World-Class Breakdown Operator
Let’s look at the evidence. Willis’s game at Toulouse has evolved from a high-energy, high-risk turnover merchant into a complete, 80-minute force of nature. In the Top 14 final, he wasn’t just a poacher. He was a ball-carrier who consistently bent the line against a massive Bordeaux pack. He was a defender who made crucial tackles in the wide channels. And he was a finisher, dotting down twice from close range.
His breakdown work remains his superpower. In the chaotic, multi-phase nature of the Top 14, where ruck speed is everything, Willis is a cheat code. He reads the referee’s interpretation faster than anyone, gets his body position lower than anyone, and has hands so strong they seem to magnetically attract the ball. He is not just winning penalties; he is disrupting attacking flow, forcing turnovers that turn defence into instant attack.
Compare that to England’s current options. Tom Curry is a warrior, but his injury history is a growing concern. Ben Earl is dynamic and explosive, but he is a different type of player—more of a carrier and link man. Sam Underhill is a defensive wrecking ball, but his attacking game lacks the subtlety of Willis’s. Willis offers a unique blend: the jackal threat of a specialist openside, the ball-carrying power of a blindside, and the work rate of a No. 8.
He has also learned to manage the physical toll. The Top 14 is a brutal league, often described as the most physically demanding in the world. Playing 25+ games a season for Toulouse, including gruelling European Cup matches, has hardened him. He is no longer the player who broke down under the weight of expectation at Wasps. He is a seasoned, battle-hardened champion.
What England is Missing: A Tactical Void
The absence of Jack Willis creates a specific tactical void for Steve Borthwick’s England. Borthwick’s game plan is built on territory, set-piece dominance, and defensive pressure. But the one area where England has consistently struggled is in generating quick, turnover ball against top-tier opposition.
Without Willis, England often relies on brute force at the breakdown—hitting rucks hard to slow the ball down. But they lack the surgical precision of a dedicated jackal who can win the ball legally and cleanly. In tight Test matches against Ireland, France, or New Zealand, a single turnover penalty or a stolen ball inside the opposition’s 22 can be the difference between a win and a loss. Willis provides that margin.
Furthermore, his leadership has grown. At Toulouse, he is surrounded by legends like Antoine Dupont and Romain Ntamack. He has learned to communicate in a different language, to adapt to a different tactical system, and to perform under the immense pressure of a club that expects to win every trophy. That kind of high-performance environment experience is invaluable.
It is not hyperbolic to say that a fully fit Jack Willis, playing in this form, would be the first name on the England team sheet for the 2025 Six Nations and the upcoming tour to Australia. He offers something that no other English back-row can: a guaranteed source of front-foot ball from the breakdown.
The Great Debate: Club vs. Country in the Professional Era
Willis’s situation has reignited a fundamental debate in English rugby. Is the RFU’s policy too rigid? Should there be a “one-off” exception for players who were forced abroad by the collapse of their club?
The argument for the policy is simple: if you let players go to France, the Premiership loses its star power, its commercial value declines, and the national team loses control over player conditioning and game time. The RFU pays the English clubs a significant sum to access players; they want to protect that investment.
But the counter-argument, embodied by Willis, is equally strong. The modern game is global. Players are more mobile than ever. By refusing to select overseas-based players, England is actively choosing to field a weaker team. It is a self-inflicted wound. Other nations, like France and New Zealand, have more flexible policies. France regularly picks players from its own Top 14, and New Zealand has made exceptions for stars like Beauden Barrett.
For Willis, the decision was deeply personal. He fell in love with the lifestyle in Toulouse. He is playing in a team that challenges for the Champions Cup and Top 14 every year. The money is excellent, and the standard of rugby is arguably higher than the Premiership. He made a rational choice for his career and his family. The RFU’s policy, however, punished that choice.
Prediction: The Red Rose is a Fading Memory
Realistically, the odds of Jack Willis playing for England again are very long. The RFU has shown no appetite for softening its stance. Unless the policy is fundamentally reviewed—which seems unlikely under the current governance structure—Willis will remain in exile.
My expert prediction is this: Willis will not play for England again until the 2027 Rugby World Cup at the earliest, and only if a major policy shift occurs. He will continue to be a superstar for Toulouse, likely winning more Top 14 titles and maybe a Champions Cup. He will be mentioned in every England squad announcement as the “one who got away.” He will become a symbol of the RFU’s inflexibility.
For England fans, it is a source of immense frustration. To see a player of this calibre tearing it up in France, knowing he could solve a persistent problem in the national team’s game, is a bitter pill to swallow. Willis has done everything right. He has improved, he has won silverware, and he has offered his services.
Conclusion: The Price of Principle
Jack Willis is a better player now than he was when he last wore the England shirt. He is more experienced, more powerful, and more tactically astute. He has proven, on the biggest stage in French club rugby, that he can deliver under the highest pressure. He has stated clearly that he “could offer more now” to his country.
But the door remains locked. The RFU has drawn a line in the sand, and Willis, by choosing the French sunshine over the English rain, is on the wrong side of it. It is a loss for England, a gain for Toulouse, and a cautionary tale for any young English player considering a move abroad.
For now, the man who could be England’s breakdown king will remain a king in exile. And every time he scores a try in a Top 14 final, it will serve as a painful reminder of what might have been. The RFU may have the rules, but Jack Willis has the trophies—and the undeniable proof that he is good enough.
Source: Based on news from BBC Sport.
