'Ready to go': England winger Jack Nowell set to end his six-month Exeter absence
Exeter and England wing Jack Nowell is on the verge of ending his six-month absence due to injury. Chiefs boss Rob Baxter has declared Nowell fit and ready to go ahead of Saturday’s Gallagher Premiership clash against Wasps at Sandy Park.
Nowell has not played since Exeter beat Wasps in the Premiership final last October, subsequently undergoing surgery on damaged toe ligaments. He then had a setback in his recovery early last month but is now poised for a return to action. “Jack has now had a couple of weeks’ full training and he is fit and ready to go,” Baxter said.
Exeter resume domestic business after seeing their Heineken Champions Cup defence ended by quarter-final opponents Leinster last weekend. The reigning Premiership champions are currently twelve points behind leaders Bristol with seven games of the regular league season remaining but are three points ahead of third-placed Sale.
Asked for his reflections on the Leinster loss, Baxter said: “I will be honest with you, we have kind of already moved on. That doesn’t mean we haven’t done what we would normally do post-game, but we wrapped that up on Monday and early Tuesday. Yes, there are lessons to be learnt, but we have just got to move on now.
"There are big games ahead, starting this week with Wasps, moving then to Bristol. My job is to move the team on into our next new challenge, which is trying to win the Premiership. It [the Leinster game] was what it was. We could have done more, but at the same time you have got to give credit to Leinster for producing a good performance across the 80 minutes and that is how we have looked at it.
"I will analyse the game over time quite closely, but at the same time, I am not going to over-analyse it to the extent where I distract the players. We genuinely have got to move on. We know when the rest periods are going to come now, we know the points we’ve got to collect.
"Everything is there for us, we’ve just got to decide we are going to get on with things, collect the points and focus on ourselves and get really zoned-in on winning games as they come along.”
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This is true.
But perhaps because rugby is Australia’s fourth (or worse) most popular sport, there is just no coaching talent good enough.
It’s interesting that no players from the Aussies golden era (say between 1987 - 2000) have emerged as international quality coaches. Or coaches at all.
Again, Australians are the problem methinks. Not as interested in the game. Not as interested to support the game. Not as interested to get into the game.
And like any other industry in the world - when you don’t have the capabilities or the skills, you import them.
Not difficult to understand really.
Go to commentsi think Argentina v France could be a good game too, depending on which Argentina turns up. The most difficult to call is Scotland Australia.
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