Wilkinson celebrates his winning drop goal.
BIGGER THAN BECKHAM - FOR NOW
By Frank Malley, PA Sport, Sydney
He may not like it, but Jonny Wilkinson has catapulted himself into the sort
of superstar category enjoyed by his new friend and advertising colleague David
Beckham.
Always one to shun the limelight if he can, his performance in the World Cup
final - including that last-gasp drop goal - has suddenly made him England's
most famous sportsman for the time being.
Shy, self-conscious, self-effacing. A touch insecure perhaps when caught in
the glare of publicity, Wilkinson is not into celebrity.
But there was no-one more desperate to hold the World Cup aloft and share the
glory with a global audience of some 500million.
For Wilkinson it was another step on the way to his ultimate goal - proving
that he is the greatest fly-half the rugby world has ever seen.
He is well aware of the competition - the wonderful composure and goal-kicking
prowess of Michael Lynagh and Grant Fox, the play-making orchestration of New
Zealander Andrew Mehrtens, the phenomenal points-machine which was Neil Jenkins,
the sheer Welsh wizardry of Barry John and the pervading influence of his
Newcastle coach and mentor Rob Andrew.
But at 24 Wilkinson is already a contender for the fly-half hall of fame, even
if his trademark modesty means his ambitions have to be dragged kicking and
screaming from his lips.
"I can't tackle as hard as Lawrence Dallaglio," admitted Wilkinson. "I
can't hold my own physically like Danny Grewcock, I don't have the sheer natural
pace of Dan Luger and I know I will never be as good at eluding people as Jason
Robinson.
"But I can tackle, kick and pass and I can work hard on all the other things
and that way I can measure the improvement.
"I want people to put me up there with the best that there has been. It would
be a waste if when you hung up your boots it was finished, that was it, nobody
ever mentioned you again.
"With England I want to win every game, kick all my goals, direct the team
and overall be seen as the best I could possibly be and hopefully be the best at
what I do.
"What I can't deal with is people doing something unbelievable and then not
being noticed for the rest of the game and the next game not really doing
anything."
Since the age of four Wilkinson has been preparing for his role as England's
supreme finisher at this World Cup.
Back then he used to line up toilet rolls in the lounge of the family home and
kick them over imaginary posts to emulate the star kickers of the day.
He progressed to being the playmaker in teams way beyond his age-group and
still lists his most embarrassing moment as the time he fell flat on his face
after stubbing his foot in the ground while taking a kick at goal as a
10-year-old for the under-12s.
Even Christmas Day is never complete until Wilkinson has fulfilled his
obligatory two hours training.
The obsession grew to the point where he admits himself to almost having a
nervous breakdown while growing more and more angry when practising goal-kicks
for hours on end at Newcastle.
It is against that backdrop that we should judge Wilkinson's apparent
obsessive behaviour on this World Cup trip.
Yes, by his own admission he has spent too much time on his own in his bedroom
while team-mates have relaxed by the pool or down on the beach.
He has immersed himself in watching videos of past performances and has
re-read coaching manuals with kicking coach Dave Alred in an attempt to be at
the perfect pitch for the biggest challenge of his career.
He has looked anxious at times, as if the weight of expectation which comes
with being England's most lethal weapon is weighing ever heavier on his
shoulders.
England's domination of the northern hemisphere was complete with their Six
Nations Grand Slam last April.
Wilkinson is now odds-on favourite to land the BBC Sports Personality of the
Year award in December, for which he was nominated last year.
And now England are kings of the world, however, Wilkinson is prepared to
brave the limelight.
"If I'm honest I have always had an eye on the World Cup," he says. "It is
the pinnacle of rugby and desperately important. Since I was a boy I have
dreamed of lifting that trophy."
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