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Nick Evans reflects on his 18 years with Harlequins, expressing difficulty in leaving the club. He has contributed significantly as both a player and coach, despite a challenging season.
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After 18 years it is almost time to say farewell to Harlequinsâ resident Kiwi. Not every overseas recruit becomes part of the fabric of a team thousands of miles from home but that has long been the case with Nick Evans, a Prem winner with Quins as a player and a coach in 2012 and 2021 respectively. As the former All Black fly-half conceded this week: âItâs going to be really hard to let go of this club.â
And vice versa. During his playing days the skilful, popular Evans personified everything good about the way Quins approached the game. As a coach he has been similarly positive, endlessly seeking fresh ways to crack opposition defences. Quins may have endured a disappointing season but that should not tarnish the sizeable contribution that Evans, now 45, has made during his residency at the Stoop.
So, before this weekendâs clash with Exeter at Allianz Stadium, what has he learned about us? Not the press corps necessarily â among other things he has been an extremely astute columnist for the Guardian â but English rugby more generally. He has some fascinating and forthright views, not least regarding the national teamâs prospects at next yearâs World Cup. âIâd definitely put them up there as a team who can go and cause some trouble,â stresses Evans. âThere are five teams at the top of the world at the moment who, on their day, can all beat each other and go on and win the World Cup. Iâd definitely have England in that group. Youâve got so many quality players. Most of the games in the Prem are fantastic and thereâs some unbelievable young English talent coming through.â

Nick Evans attempts to go past Waspsâ Jeremy Staunton during his first season at Harlequins. Photograph: Nigel French/Empics/PA/Alamy
Encouraging news, but how should they try to play? Evans has spent years mentoring Marcus Smith who, for various reasons, is still vainly attempting to nail down the England starting 10 jersey. Evans knows how that feels, having spent much of his Test career playing second fiddle to the great Dan Carter, but is unsure whether Smithâs skillset is ever destined to fit Englandâs traditional template. âIn terms of Marcus â and youâd probably say the same about Danny Cipriani and players in that mould â Jonny Wilkinson set the stall out as to what an English 10 should be.
Nick Evans won the Premiership with Harlequins as both a player and a coach in 2012 and 2021.
Nick Evans believes England is among the top teams that can compete for the World Cup, citing their quality players and potential.
Evans feels a deep connection to Harlequins, having become an integral part of the club's identity over 18 years.
Evans is optimistic about English rugby, highlighting the quality of players and the exciting young talent emerging in the Premiership.

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âThatâs kind of the identity ⊠unbelievable at game management, that George Ford/Owen Farrell type of player. When you put a maverick, for want of a better word, into that system and itâs not going quite right itâll default back to that English identity. I think heâs always going to be fighting that. Marcus was understandably frustrated [not to start] ⊠he is desperate to play international footy and heâs working on those aspects of the game that he wants to improve. But heâs always going to have an instinctive way of playing. If that doesnât align to the identity of the team you want to play with thereâs always going to be a few issues around that.â
Unless â and Evans speaks as someone who coached Englandâs backs during the 2023 Six Nations â some kind of middle ground can be located. âYou could probably learn from South Africa a little bit. They have a really clear DNA in terms of how they want to play the game. A physical set piece, a kicking style ⊠but what theyâve done is adapted and evolved.â Could England do likewise? âThere is an English DNA and Iâve no problem with that. But how do we evolve and fit in a player like Marcus or Henry Arundell who has the ability to play what they see? Everyone has their opinions â ultimately it comes down to the guys in charge.â

Nick Evans in his role as England attack coach keeps an eye on Marcus Smith during a January 2023 training session at Pennyhill Park. Photograph: Matt Impey/Shutterstock
Evansâ time up north has also taught him something else: that New Zealand are no longer the global gameâs undisputed tactical gurus. âWe always used to think that innovation came from New Zealand. Mate, I think thatâs gone. I think innovation now is coming from the French, the Irish ⊠up here people are trying to find different ways of playing the game. I think itâs almost a case of New Zealand having to catch up. Losing South Africa from Super Rugby was big for them ⊠playing teams with different styles and gameplans. Up here itâs a different challenge every week. It keeps you on your toes.â
Which is why wherever he goes next â several high-profile sides are courting him â he will do so with genuine sweet sorrow. âBeing the competitive person I am you always think: âAw, we could have done more.â Particularly with that golden generation we had between 2011 and 2015. But when I look back Iâm really proud to be the last of that generation who truly lived and breathed what Quinsâ identity was.â
Somewhere along the way, sadly, the time-honoured TRUE mantra that once defined Quins â âTempo, Ruthless, Unpredictable, Enjoymentâ â has been mislaid. âIf weâre being honest we have been consistently inconsistent around our identity. Tempo is not always allegro ⊠Colin Osborne [the former Quins coach] used to say that. You also need control. Weâve had some fantastic and unbelievable times but weâve had times when weâve had people who maybe havenât understood what that was about.â
For the most part, nevertheless, he will walk away a thankful man, endlessly grateful for the kindness and support shown to himself, his wife, Sally, and their three children. Their youngest boy, Billy, has special educational needs and Evans is adamant that Sally deserves significantly more praise than he does. âFor 18 years, to be brutally honest, itâs been all about me as a player and a coach. My wife is superhuman.â

Harlequinsâ Nick Evans wheels away in celebration after scoring a drop goal against Stade Français in December 2008. Photograph: David Field/Action Images/Reuters
He will also endlessly cherish the wet Friday night in 2008 when, after 29 phases, he dropped a famously low-flying goal to beat Stade Français at the Stoop. âThat will be my for ever memory of Quins. I can picture it now. After Nigel Owens and the TMO [television match official] finally confirmed the ball had gone over, the energy and noise released in that stadium for the next 30 seconds was unlike anything Iâve ever heard. It was just unreal.
âWhen I sit back and Iâm 70 years old thatâs what Iâll be thinking about. For me itâs not about the rugby or the trophies. Itâs the people, the connection and the belonging that you get. I didnât think being part of a different team as a coach would be as rewarding as being a player but it is. As a foreigner Iâve been unbelievably loved and welcomed into this club. I just want to thank everyone for that.â