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5 Premiership Wonderkids Who Brought The Entertainment Factor This Weekend

Gallagher Premiership Round 10 was a reminder that the league’s future is already here. Across the weekend, a group of young players didn’t just impress, they influenced results , showed maturity beyond their years, and underlined why they’re viewed as elite prospects. These 5 stood above the rest.

5 Premiership Wonderkids Who Brought The Entertainment Factor This Weekend

Gallagher Premiership Round 10 was a reminder that the league’s future is already here. Across the weekend, a group of young players didn’t just impress, they influenced results, showed maturity beyond their years, and underlined why they’re viewed as elite prospects. These 5 stood above the rest.

Noah Caluori (Saracens)

Caluori once again showcased why he’s one of the most exciting young backs in the Premiership. His aerial dominance, sharp finishing and physical edge caused constant problems for defenders. He looks comfortable at senior level, combines confidence with composure, and continues to deliver the end product, a rare mix for a player still early in his career. Are you sure Steve? Can we not bring him in vs Wales at Home?

Why he stood out: Try-scoring instinct, strong aerial game, growing physicality in a dominant performance vs Newcastle Falcons. 4 Tries. 20 Points. Oh My Days.
Potential: A future international-level back with genuine X-factor

Henry Pollock (Northampton Saints)

Pollock produced a statement performance, combining explosive ball-carrying, defensive bite and try-scoring ability. His impact in the loose was relentless, constantly punching holes and arriving at breakdowns with intent. He didn’t just play well when he came on, he upped the tempo for Saints. 56 Metres made, 8 carries and a trademark chase away at Sale Sharks. Plain Sailing for Pollock.

Why he stood out: Power, pace, game intelligence, clean break in the 6 Nations.
Potential: A long-term international back-rower and possible future captain

Seb Atkinson (Gloucester)

Atkinson impressed with his direct running, strength through contact and attacking intent. Even in tight moments, he showed confidence to take responsibility in the midfield, repeatedly getting Gloucester over the gain line and unsettling defenders. Unfortunately, Bath were too strong, and Finn Russell was in top form, as the away side took the win.

Why he stood out: Physicality, decisiveness, versatility,
Potential: A future Premiership midfield leader with Test-level attributes ahead of the 6 Nations.

Emeka Ilione (Leicester Tigers)

Ilione delivered a powerful all-action display, thriving in the collision area and making a serious defensive impact. His work rate, tackle dominance and ball-carrying (12) were central to Leicester’s forward effort, showing he’s ready for consistent top-level minutes.

Why he stood out: Defensive authority, physical presence, 5 tackles made and 28 metres made from the back row.
Potential: A destructive back-row option with international upside

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Pedro Rubiolo (Bristol Bears)

Rubiolo showed why he’s regarded as one of the most promising young locks in the league. He was dominant in contact, strong at the set piece and relentless defensively, bringing control and aggression with 8 carries, to the Bristol Bears pack despite his age.

Why he stood out: Physicality, discipline, forward leadership, with 27 tackles in a tough fought win away to Exeter Chiefs,
Potential: A long-term Premiership enforcer with Test rugby written all over him.

Final Word

This weekend wasn’t just about results, it was about emergence. Caluori’s finishing, Pollock’s dominance, Todaro’s flair, Atkinson’s directness, Ilione’s power and Rubiolo’s authority all pointed to one thing: the Premiership’s next generation is already shaping the present. Time for an International Break.

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Hamzah Kholwadia

Hamzah Kholwadia

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