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Stuart Pearce says rugby league is 'toughest profession to play'

New Betfred Super League season begins next Thursday with St Helens vs Wigan Warriors, live on Sky Sports Arena

LONDON, ENGLAND - JANUARY 21: Stuart Pearce manager of Nottingham Forest looks on prior to the Sky Bet Championship match between Fulham and Nottingham Forest at Craven Cottage on January 21, 2015 in London, England.
Image: Stuart Pearce described rugby league as 'one of the biggest secrets in this country'

The man known as 'Psycho' throughout his football career has described rugby league as the toughest sport in the world.

Former England captain Stuart Pearce, who acquired the nickname because of his physical approach to the game, joined world boxing champion Josh Warrington at the launch of the 2019 Betfred Super League season at Old Trafford on Thursday.

Former Nottingham Forest defender Pearce had no hesitation in describing rugby league as the most demanding, and honest, discipline of them all.

"If someone said to me 'what is the toughest profession to play?', I would say it's probably this one," Pearce said.

"You get smashed every week. Technically you've got to be very good at it as well. Right across the board, you're recovering from car crashes.

Picture by Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com - 30/08/2018 - Rugby League - Betfred Super League - Warrington Wolves v Hull FC - Halliwell Jones Stadium, Warrington, England - Warrington's Josh Charnley scores a try.
Image: Pearce's team Warrington Wolves were runners-up in Super League XXIII in 2018

"This gentleman (Warrington) plays a sport that is tough, and rugby league is right up there with that - and probably jump jockeys, they're the three sports that make me think 'wow... I'm glad I was a footballer'.

"I'll be at Chelsea tonight (who play Tottenham in the Carabao Cup) and within five minutes, players will be diving on the floor... I see honesty in rugby league. Little things like that appeal. It's a genuine product."

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Pearce, a fan of the Warrington Wolves who was introduced to the sport by ex-England coach Tony Smith, added: "Rugby league is one of the biggest secrets of this country.

"The players are physical specimens from a physicality point of view, but they're also expected to use their feet as well as their hands and they're expected to think about the game.

"It's so multi-faceted really, what they're expected to do."

IBF world featherweight champion Warrington, a Leeds Rhinos fan who is a close friend of former England captain Jamie Peacock, said: "There's a lot of honesty, a lot of humility. It's physical and brutal.

"I'm not normally scared of any man but if some of these boys ran towards me, I'd step aside. Rugby league is physical and brutal. It's exciting to watch - nothing beats watching a game live.

Josh Warrington
Image: Josh Warrington says 'nothing beats' watching live rugby league

"How the boys go for 80 minutes, it's humbling, and they just carry on going week in, week out.

"There are probably a lot of people who haven't given it a chance, but there's nothing to beat it."

Former Great Britain captain and coach Ellery Hanley was also a guest at the launch to announce a new format for the prestigious Steve Prescott Man of Steel Award.

Hanley, a three-time winner of the award, will chair a panel of 21 former players who will pick a one-two-three from each game throughout the season, which will determine the winner in October.

The new season gets underway on January 31 when champions Wigan visit last year's league leaders St Helens.

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