England preparing for October tour of Japan if historic July matches are cancelled
England's historic tour of Japan may be pushed back three months to October if their two tests in July are cancelled due to coronavirus.
Speaking to BBC Radio 4 on Friday, England's Rugby Football Union chief executive Bill Sweeney said the schedule switch remained one of many options as the COVID-19 outbreak continue to wreak havoc within rugby circles.
“We’re looking at a range of different contingencies,” he said.
“We might go there (Japan) in October. It’s all discussion and nothing’s fully nailed down. But one option is we would go down there, because obviously they’d rather host, they make more money when they host, and we’d come back and play our autumn internationals.
“If we weren’t able to travel to each other ... we’d want to do something to fill our gap.”
Sweeney revealed another contingency plan being discussed was the possibility of “a Six Nations in the autumn but link it into the Six Nations the next year, and you have a home and away series” should their current end-of-year test schedule be called off.
The implementation of severe travel restrictions worldwide means England's current November tests against New Zealand, Argentina, Tonga and Australia could be cancelled, opening an avenue for second Six Nations to be played this year.
However, three matches from the most recent edition of Europe's premier international tournament are still to be played after being postponed due to the coronavirus pandemic.
It's likely these fixtures would have to be completed first before any new form of Six Nations competition is undertaken later in the year.
Hosting test matches would provide the RFU with some much needed financial security, with the organisation set to lose up to £50 million over the next 18 months because of the outbreak.
Sweeney and England head coach Eddie Jones are among many high-profile executives within the RFU who have taken pay cuts of more than 25 percent.
A reduction in international match fees for players may soon follow suit, with Sweeney confirming that those conversations are already underway.
“We started that before the crisis hit because that contract is up in the middle of this year," he said. "We haven’t reached any conclusions yet. But that would obviously be a discussion we’d need to have.”
Although Wales' top players have agreed to a 25 percent pay cut for the next three months, Sweeney declined to open up about what approach England's players will take.
“They’re a very reasonable bunch of people,” he said. “We will sit down with them and we’d lay out the situation, we’d look at the financial position, and we’d have a discussion around what we feel is a reasonable figure.”
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It is if he thinks he’s got hold of the ball and there is at least one other player between him and the ball carrier, which is why he has to reach around and over their heads. Not a deliberate action for me.
Go to commentsI understand, but England 30 years ago were a set piece focused kick heavy team not big on using backs.
Same as now.
South African sides from any period will have a big bunch of forwards smashing it up and a first five booting everything in their own half.
NZ until recently rarely if ever scrummed for penalties; the scrum is to attack from, broken play, not structured is what we’re after.
Same as now.
These are ways of playing very ingrained into the culture.
If you were in an English club team and were off to Fiji for a game against a club team you’d never heard of and had no footage of, how would you prepare?
For a forward dominated grind or would you assume they will throw the ball about because they are Fijian?
A Fiji way. An English way.
An Australian way depends on who you’ve scraped together that hasn’t been picked off by AFL or NRL, and that changes from generation to generation a lot of the time.
Actually, maybe that is their style. In fact, yes they have a style.
Nevermind. Fuggit I’ve typed it all out now.
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