Eddie Jones explains 10/12 rejig that sees George Ford benched this weekend
England boss Eddie Jones has explained why he has opted to bench George Ford, switch skipper Owen Farrell to out-half and revive the twice-used November starting midfield partnership of Henry Slade and Ollie Lawrence but with one crucial difference - Lawrence on this occasion will wear the No12 shirt for the first time with Slade operating in the wider channel.
Ford had been a regular first-choice England pick in recent times, starting at out-half in 14 of England's last 19 matches, a run stretching back to the August 2019 Twickenham World Cup warm-up versus Wales.
He was benched for the World Cup quarter-final against Australia and missed some recent games with injury but he was otherwise the regular wearer of the 10 shirt with Farrell outside him at 12. That combination will now be held back this Saturday, however, the benching of Ford being one of four changes made by Jones to the XV from the Nations Cup final win over France in December.
"We feel that is the best 23 for the game," said Jones after unveiling a team where Lawrence for Ford, Will Stuart for the suspended Kyle Sinckler, Jonny Hill for the injured Joe Launchbury and Mark Wilson for the unavailable Sam Underhill were the changes from their last outing.
"We look at the game as a 23 as opposed to what you guys [the media] do and we feel that is the best order of our players for this game," said Jones when asked about the benching of Ford. "We feel that is the right balance. It's a good combination of Owen's tactical acumen, Sladey's running skills plus his left foot kicking and then Ollie's power. We feel that is right against Scotland.
"He [Lawrence] is a good young player, he is really developing well. We blooded him in the Autumn Nations Cup and he gets another opportunity to start on Saturday. He runs good lines, he is a good defensive player and he will add a bit of punch to the backline."
England will start with five players from relegated Saracens who, unlike their England teammates, have not had Premiership games to play over the winter. This lack of action for Elliot Daly, Farrell, Jamie George, Maro Itoje and Billy Vunipola doesn't worry Jones, though.
"For those players who have played a lot of high-quality rugby over the last four or five years, it [the break] has been a godsend for them. They have come in, they are refreshed, they have got a spring in their step and yesterday's training [Wednesday] in particular, all those guys were pretty outstanding."
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Yeah well you guys couldn't do it at home could you, never mind in Italia. Theyve been good for a few years now, 23' when France and Ireland were at their best were arguably better Italian performances than this years 6N results.
My point was of course they don't want to get ahead of themselves and then lose against teams that they should be beating. That's the difficulty with getting better and better.
Go to commentsThey’re being dressed as midfielders. Neither of them is a natural midfielder, they’re both converts.
You can call a rose by any other name, yada yada, as Billy Shakespeare says. Semantics.
New Zealand went all the way from having a surplus of midfielders in about 2015 to having to convert wingers and two different utility backs (Havili, Jordie). How did that happen?
All the while actual specialist 12s and 13s are not even getting a proper shot. Laumape lost patience with that nonsense. Big Leicester as well (now that’s a winger convert that would actually make sense at 13). It’s literally stupid not to try players out.
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