The flying wing tops the Premiership try-scoring charts heading into tomorrow’s ultimate spherical of fixtures, sitting forward of Mateo Carreras with 14 tries to the Newcastle speedster’s 13.
Murley narrowly missed out on the highest try-scorer accolade final time period, and admitted the will to assert the glory this time round.
But the 23-year-old additionally views each outing for Quins as an unofficial England trial, revealing that Test boss Steve Borthwick desires to see his aptitude gamers grasp the prosaic in addition to the poetic.
Murley made it into England’s Six Nations squad and liked each minute in head coach Borthwick’s ranks, regardless of being unable to power his Test debut.
“I just got pipped to the top try-scorer award last season by Max Malins, so it’s definitely something I want to get hold of, but you can’t force it,” mentioned Murley. “You can’t go out of shape to look for opportunities, you’ve got to do your job. But I will definitely be sniffing in and around it this weekend.
“I really enjoyed every moment in the England camp in the Six Nations. It took me out of my comfort zone, challenged me in different ways, things like how we defend, how we kick. It was massively eye-opening. Every week is a chance, an audition to show what I can do, to Steve and the England coaches.”
While any worldwide coach desires their wings to boast a full arsenal of finishes, Murley revealed Borthwick additionally calls for whole assurance below the excessive ball and sturdy fringe defence.
The stocky and highly effective Murley enjoys his standing as Harlequins’ quickest man, however would possibly simply revenue as extremely from his childhood within the back-row. Murley’s Cornish father, John, captained the Army and performed openside at Quins for 2 years mixed along with his navy profession.
The Harlequins pace king revealed his hopes that a few of these hereditary loose-forward expertise can propel him to senior England motion on this summer time’s World Cup warm-up matches and past.
“Steve’s given me some things to work on, and it’s not always the flashy stuff, the metres made, the tries,” mentioned Murley. “So that’s a massive thing for me, especially competing against other players who are pushing for World Cup spots.
“I played back-row until I was 16, then my school coach suggested I move out to 12, and I’ve moved out steadily since.
“My dad was fully an openside, and he thought I would be too, but I didn’t grow as much as him and I gained a bit more speed than him!
“I hope I’ve got a few extra things about me than just being an out-and-out speedster.
“Steve wants more dominance in collisions at the edge in defence, and I’ve obviously worked really hard aerially ever since I moved out of the back-row.”
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