Abby Dow feared she was destined to grow to be the compulsory luckless casualty of England’s World Cup preparations as she lay on a stretcher at Gloucester affected by a damaged leg.
The wing suffered the horror harm in opposition to Wales at Kingsholm in April and when she was given an preliminary prognosis of 9 months of rehabilitation, the 24-year-old Wasps finisher braced herself for the worst.
But the timeframe was diminished to 6 months, putting the World Cup again within the image, and even that focus on is now beatable with a spot within the event opener in opposition to Fiji in Auckland on October 8 beckoning.
“I just remember being in that tunnel and my friends and family came down,” Dow stated.
“I thought I was that person who didn’t make it. You always hear the horror stories of that person who was on form and then all of a sudden they get injured and miss out.
“We’ve been building for this event for five years and the thought of ‘it’s me’ was going through my head.
“I remember crying in my hospital bed as people broke the news to me that it was extremely unlikely.
“The surgery itself was quite a big surgery and the surgeon can’t say ‘you’re going to make it.’ You can’t tell until after the surgery.
“For the first two or three or months the million dollar question was ‘am I still on track to make it?’
“Almost having people say it was a possibility from it being unlikely to very likely and then to being selected has made it a very fortunate transition, but it’s not been good for my stress levels!”
Red Roses head coach Simon Middleton stated it was a “bigger gamble not to take her” when together with Dow in his World Cup squad, believing the leading edge she gives the crew as important.
“There is a slight plan in pencil that I could be available for the first game, but I also need to perform because this is a performance environment,” Dow stated.
“I’m just really trying to transition out of that S&C part and actually growing as a rugby player, not just growing a leg!”
Source: www.unbiased.co.uk