Ten years ago Nic Dolly would have laughed in disbelief if you told the Australian-ððĻðŦð§ hooker he would play professional rugby, let alone run out for England.
âI probably would have said, âYeah, no chanceâ,â Dolly, who played one Test for England under Eddie Jones in late 2021, told The Roar.
âI probably didnât even realise that it was a pathway or a job, or whatever. I think back then, Iâd made some teams and I was doing fairly well with the junior rugby, but at 16 and 17 going into year 12, I didnât make any of the school boys or the Gen Blue, so I probably would have told you, ânah, no chanceâ.â
Yet, fast-forward to 2025 and the 25-year-old Western Force recruit has the potential to make history by becoming the first player to run out in a Test for both the Wallabies and England.
While Blair Swannell and Tom Richards played for the Lions and Wallabies more than a century ago, Dolly will make history if he completes his ðĪðĐðŠððĨhood dream of playing for Australia.
Nic Dolly offers support for Marcus Smith during his debut for England at Twickenham on November 20, 2021 in London. (Photo by Visionhaus/Getty Images)
Given Dollyâs rapid rise in England, where he quickly flourished in the national pathways and went onto play alongside Tom Curry at Sale and, later, Leicester under Steve Borthwick before being thrown in the deep end by Jones against the Springboks at Twickenham, itâs no giant leap either to think he will challenge for a spot in the coming years.
âOne of the attractions in coming back was knowing that I did become eligible for the Wallabies in late November [2024],â Dolly told The Roar.
âBut Iâm obviously aware thereâs a lot of work to do between now and then. Iâm not just going to come back and waltz in and think just because Iâve played over in England that Iâm going to come back and theyâre going to give me a crack.
âI know how much hard work I need to put in and how much good rugby Iâll need to play because thereâs a lot of good players in my position.
âYou just have to look at our two guys (Brandon Paenga-Amosa and Tom Horton at the Force), weâve got one in the Wallabies and one in Australia A, so thereâs a lot of competition here to just get to the spot, let alone to try and get into the Wallabies. But Iâd be lying if I said that I didnât come back here without the endeavour to play for the Wallabies and push for higher honours.â
Dolly knows plenty about competing.
Indeed, few get far in the English Premiership without being able to do just that, especially someone who has played at Leicester Tigers â a club whose DNA is built on set-piece play.
Nic Dolly prepares to throw the ball in at Welford Road Stadium on September 24, 2023 in Leicester. (Photo by Patrick Khachfe/Getty Images)
For Dolly, who battled weekly with Tom Youngs and Argentine captain Julian Montoya during his time at the Tigers, itâs something heâs embracing since moving to the Force.
âIâd much rather be in an environment where thereâs competition,â he said.
âI think all the environments in the past Iâve been in, thereâs been competition, thereâs been great players that have started ahead of you, and youâve had to work to try and get ahead of them and you canât get comfortable.
âIt just pushes you as a three to get better, which is only going to push the club on, which is only going to set the club up for more success. And I think if we had depth in every position like this, bloody hell, weâd be a great squad, you know what I mean?
âWe want that competition in training, you want to go out every day thinking like Iâve got to perform, Iâve got to get better, otherwise you end up just flatlining. Itâs just as simple as that.
âI would rather see Tom and Brandon pushing themselves to the max because it means I canât take a day off otherwise Iâm not playing, or if you play poorly you might sit out next week, and thatâs not to put pressure on yourself and put pressure on yourself to perform, but thatâs just sort of expectations and thatâs just making sure that youâre building the week and your preparationâs right so that come Saturday, you can play freely because you know you havenât left a stone unturned.â
Dollyâs desire to rip in at every turn is part of the reason that first caught Jonesâ eye.
Having been looked over at junior level in Australia, it took Dolly to play some rugby up in England on a family holiday for someone to see something in the hooker.
As such, instead of staying eight weeks, it âsnowballed into eight yearsâ when a scout at Sale saw him play.
A move to Borthwickâs Tigers then put him firmly on Jonesâ radar and within a few games the Australian larrikin was in the Australianâs English squad.
âI got on really well with Eddie during my time there,â Dolly said. âI think he maybe saw a bit of me in him. He wasnât and Iâm certainly not the biggest hooker going around, but I just try and bring that aggressive nature, a bit of physicality as well.â
Nic Dolly helped Leicester win a premiership under Steve Borthwick. (Photo by Graham Chadwick/Getty Images)
A devastating knee injury against Newcastle in May, 2022, cruelly denied Dolly the chance of touring Australia with Jonesâ then-English side.
More frustration was around the corner, as a nerve injury slowed his progress under Dan McKellarâs Tigers in 2023. Not that it knocked Dolly off track.
âI think I was in line to go to Australia with England, which wouldâve been cool, but thatâs rugby, mate,â he said.
âUnfortunately you donât get a choice really with some of that stuff, which is unfortunate, but thatâs part of it and you canât dwell on it.
âI did my knee, that kept me out for about 12 months. It was just a jackal I got rolled, like a crocodile rolled and it just took me out for a good while and then I came back from that and then I had a nerve injury and was out for three to four months.
âBut then I got to play the second last game of the Premiership against Sale, which was quite a nice sort of finish for me knowing that I was leaving playing against the team that first gave me the opportunity versus my last team in England.â
Itâs why he looks back without a regret in the world.
âIn terms of that journey, itâs pretty surreal,â Dolly said.
Nic Dolly is looking forward to challenging himself against two quality hookers at the Force. Photo: Western Force
âBut at the same time, Iâm someone who always wants more. I feel like I havenât reached my full potential yet, and thatâs why Iâve come back here. I want to really test myself and being at the Force and in Australian rugby is a great opportunity for me.â
As for the mullet, itâs still around.
Whether Jonesâ nickname of the âHuman Mulletâ sticks in Australia remains to be seen.
âI just donât know how long itâs going to stay, Iâm really unsure at this point,â he said. âIâve got no idea when I want to cut it off but weâll wait and see.â