{"id":300239,"date":"2023-12-16T23:24:10","date_gmt":"2023-12-16T23:24:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/?p=300239"},"modified":"2023-12-16T23:24:10","modified_gmt":"2023-12-16T23:24:10","slug":"fisilau-aims-to-emulate-vunipolas-brothers-by-representing-england","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/rugby-union\/fisilau-aims-to-emulate-vunipolas-brothers-by-representing-england\/","title":{"rendered":"Fisilau aims to emulate Vunipolas brothers by representing England"},"content":{"rendered":"
Mako and Billy Vunipola have already become players from Tongan lineage to make it to English rugby\u2019s highest level and now another young man with Pacific Island blood hopes to reach the top. Greg Fisilau, 20, is making waves with Exeter Chiefs after moving to Sandy Park following the demise of Wasps.<\/p>\n
Fisilau\u2019s father, former Plymouth Albion centre and Tongan international, Keni, grew up alongside Fe\u2019ao Vunipola, whose sons are Mako and Billy.<\/p>\n
Fisilau, a No8 like Billy, now hopes he can one day follow in his footsteps. The pair are not direct relatives but acquaintances who refer to each other as family.<\/p>\n
\u2018They\u2019re not really cousins but that\u2019s what we call them in Tongan culture, they\u2019re just people you grow up with,\u2019 says Fisilau, speaking to The Mail on Sunday for his first major newspaper interview. \u2018I grew up with Manu Vunipola and Carwyn Tuipulotu, too. We were all pretty close. I was pretty young when I was growing up around Billy and Mako.<\/p>\n
\u2018There was Taulupe Faletau as well. They were in the spot I\u2019m in now when I was growing up. It was pretty cool to have them to look up to. It\u2019s really good for me to have seen players like Billy, Mako and Taulupe doing as well as they have. It shows young Tongan players coming up through the ranks that it can be done.<\/p>\n
<\/p>\n
Greg Fisilau is taking inspiration from the Vunipola brothers as he eyes an England call-up<\/p>\n
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The 20-year-old has made an explosive start to his senior career since joining Exeter last year<\/p>\n
\u2018It makes you want to push yourself to the level they\u2019re at. To fill Billy\u2019s boots is a pretty big challenge for anyone.<\/p>\n
\u2018It would be pretty surreal if that was to happen to me. An England cap is always going to be something most young players are striving for.\u2019<\/p>\n
As England look to the future and start planning for the next four-year cycle, national head coach Steve Borthwick has a plethora of young talent from which to choose.<\/p>\n
Billy Vunipola, 31, is not done yet and Borthwick saw Ben Earl impress in the back row as England finished third against the odds at this year\u2019s World Cup.<\/p>\n
But Fisilau and Alfie Barbeary, who is standing out for Bath this season, are the next generation of No8\u2019s coming through the ranks.<\/p>\n
Fisilau was supreme as a young Exeter side recorded a famous Champions Cup victory in Toulon last Saturday and faces Munster today as Rob Baxter\u2019s men look for back-to-back wins.<\/p>\n
Fisilau\u2019s commute to today\u2019s game will not take long. The five-minute walk to Sandy Park from his accommodation at the hotel on the ground\u2019s site was an unintended consequence of his last-minute move from Wasps after they entered administration in 2022.<\/p>\n
\u2018It\u2019s the shortest commute ever!\u2019 Fisilau says. \u2018The hotel is a nice spot, we\u2019ve got ensuite rooms! It does get quite busy in the kitchen as we\u2019ve only got one stove.<\/p>\n
\u2018We\u2019ve got to plan when to cook but it was worse at Wasps. We were in a big mansion \u2014 a 14-bedroom house. We had two washing machines, one stove and one dryer between 14 lads. It was carnage!<\/p>\n
\u2018The kitchen didn\u2019t stay clean for longer than half an hour. You\u2019d come down to do your washing and there was always someone else using the machines.\u2019<\/p>\n
Fisilau is small compared to some of the giant No8\u2019s \u2014 such as Billy Vunipola \u2014 who roam the rugby pitches at the game\u2019s highest level in 2023. But boy does he pack a punch.<\/p>\n
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Fisilau grew up alongside Billy and Mako Vunipola and affectionately refers to the pair as ‘cousins’<\/p>\n
He is agile and adept at the breakdown and is a fearsome carrier for his size. Exeter\u2019s fans have already seen that in action this season.<\/p>\n
Born in Plymouth, Fisilau moved to Oxford as a young boy and his rugby development began properly at St Edward\u2019s School in the city and then with Wasps.<\/p>\n
His father allowed him to take up rugby only from the age of eight as he believed playing touch rugby while a small child would teach him bad habits. The Fisilau family has always liked the contact element of the sport and their latest product was developing well in the Wasps first team.<\/p>\n
Then, as for so many of his contemporaries in English rugby, it all came crashing down.<\/p>\n
Fisilau lost his job when Wasps followed Worcester into financial oblivion but he and then team-mates Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, Alfie Bell and Dan Frost were all soon snapped up by Exeter. The move happened quickly, hence the emergency hotel accommodation. Fisilau is still there.<\/p>\n
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The No 8 was one of several Wasps stars snapped up by the Chiefs when the club went into administration<\/p>\n
\u2018It was tough for a lot of the lads and tough for me as well as I\u2019d been at Wasps from Under-15s to 18 or 19,\u2019 says Fisilau. \u2018It was really heartbreaking to know the dreams I had of playing for Wasps were never going to happen again. My dad was a big influence on my career, probably the biggest. He\u2019s pushed me at times when I didn\u2019t want to be.<\/p>\n
\u2018I was always surrounded by rugby. It was all I really knew. I was doing a lot of training with my dad as soon as I could crawl.<\/p>\n
\u2018When it was time to get involved with a team, I was buzzing to get started as quickly as possible.\u2019<\/p>\n
Fisilau has never really looked back. His no-nonsense father still refers to him as \u2018Gregory\u2019. Fisilau brushed off a \u2018freak\u2019 foot injury suffered in the gym this year to return for the start of Exeter\u2019s European campaign and is part of a young Chiefs side.<\/p>\n
Already an England U20 international, a Six Nations call next month might come too soon for Fisilau but there can be no doubting his potential.<\/p>\n
\u2018I feel lucky to have joined Exeter at the time I have,\u2019 says Fisilau, whose uncle, Samisoni, played for Tonga at the 2015 World Cup. \u2018There are endless possibilities for what we can achieve.<\/p>\n
\u2018There is a really good buzz at training each day. Everyone is keen to learn. I feel really grateful to be a part of the journey we\u2019re on. We\u2019ve had a good start to the season.<\/p>\n
\u2018Rob has said it a lot. It\u2019s a group of young lads buying into everything we\u2019re told. We want to get something out of this season and we\u2019re putting everything into it. We\u2019re starting to see results.\u2019<\/p>\n