Worsley was born in London and educated at
Hitchin Boys' School and
Brunel University. He joined
London Wasps at the age of 16 from
Welwyn RFC. He went on to help Wasps win the
Anglo-Welsh Cup in 1999 and 2000. He became the youngest player to represent England U21s, after being a member of the England Schools 18 Group Grand Slam team in 1994–95. Amongst his trophies at Wasps were four
Premiership titles in 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2008. Worsley played in all four finals, scoring a try in 2003. He also played in the victorious 2004 and 2007 Heineken Cup finals. Worsley is noted for his defensive capabilities against opposing ball-carriers. His ability to play any of the three back row positions earned him a place in the
England World Cup Squad in 1999 as a bench replacement. He won his first cap against
Tonga at the World Cup, then came on as a replacement against both
Scotland and
Italy during
England's
Six Nations Championship matches in 2000. He won two more caps as a replacement in that summer's Tests against
South Africa in Pretoria and Bloemfontein. He enjoyed a successful tour to North America in the summer of 2001, filling
Lawrence Dallaglio's
number 8 position and scoring against both
Canada and the
United States. He continued in the back row for England's 2001 Investec Challenge matches, when he turned in two outstanding performances against
Australia and
South Africa. He also replaced
Richard Hill in both of England's 2003 tour matches against
New Zealand and
Australia. His 2002–03 season started well, and Worsley won the Man of The Match award against
Saracens in September. However, a
hamstring injury, forced him out of the England Autumn Internationals and six weeks of the
Zurich Premiership. He scored England's second try in their win over
Wales at Cardiff in 2003, just eight days after scoring against France A for England A at
Northampton, and being voted man of the match. Worsley was a member of England's victorious
Rugby World Cup squad in 2003, coming on during the pool match against
South Africa and starting against both
Samoa and
Uruguay. In 2004 he played against
Italy,
Ireland and
France in the
Six Nations Championship, as well as coming off the bench against
Wales to score a match winning try. Worsley played powerfully against both
South Africa and
Australia in November 2004. He started in the back row, now an automatic choice after former England captain
Lawrence Dallaglio retired from England duty two months earlier. He was a member of the
London Wasps side that won both the
Zurich Premiership final and the
Heineken European Cup Final in 2004 and he played well on the summer tour to New Zealand and Australia. He missed out on England's entire 2005 Autumn test series due to a knee injury but regained full fitness in time for the 2006 Six nations championship. Worsley participated in the
2007 Rugby World Cup. He made a "try-saving tap-tackle" which prevented Vincent Clerc of France from scoring a probable match-winning try late in the semi-final (13 October). Worsley toured New Zealand in June 2008, coming on as a substitute in both Tests, and was named as a replacement for Tom Rees in the shadow of the 2009 Six Nations, and began as a replacement against Italy. He then restarted his international career, starting in front of Steffon Armitage against Wales, and proving his worth, earning man of the match. He played on the Lions 2009 tour of South Africa in front of any other English flankers other than Tom Croft. On 1 August 2011 it was announced that Worsley had been cut from England's training squad due to injury and would probably miss the
2011 Rugby World Cup. On 14 November 2011 it was announced that Worsley would be forced to retire due to a neck injury. Worsley was defence coach of French top 14 team Castres Olympique. Worsley moved to
CA Brive again as defence coach Joe Worsley, alongside Eggchasers Podcast and channel host Tim Cocker, created a YouTube account FR- UK to promote French domestic club rugby in the UK and Ireland. In June 2025, the channel purchased the rights for the remaining fixtures for the
2024–25 Rugby Pro D2 season as well as the rights for the 2025-2026 season. ==Charitable work==