Fishing for Big Vern: The tactics of Eddie Jones' post-match interview
Another game, another show-stealing post-match performance from England's master tactician, writes Scotty Stevenson.
No one should be surprised at all by England coach Eddie Jones’ farcical comments following his side’s 36-15 defeat of Italy at Twickenham on Sunday, but in the rush to understand those comments, and Italy’s expert use of rugby’s idiosyncratic ruck laws, you could be forgiven for having missed Jones using his platform to do what he does best: take a crack at his next opponent.
It was buried somewhere in the stinking pile of gracelessness that constituted his post-match interview, but it was most certainly there – a now-typical Eddie Jones dagger thrust, this time aimed at the chest (give him that at least) of Scotland and their coach Vern Cotter.
By now we all know that Jones didn’t consider the Italian match a game of rugby, going so far as to suggest the team may have to go back onto the pitch for a training run so the spectators could be entertained. “It’s hard when you don’t play rugby,” Jones offered as a response to why his team had taken so long to react and then to nullify the Italian tactics.
Surely it is sheer lunacy to claim an international team of England’s calibre didn’t understand the laws of the game. However, when you consider referee Romain Poite gave the same ‘tackle only’ message to England’s defence at least three times in the first 15 minutes of the match and yet they did not once leave their line to take advantage of the regulation, it may not be as crazy as it sounds.
Never fear. Having left a burley trail of throw-downs on the Italians, World Rugby, and the referee, Jones was quick to cast his line into the churning, unpredictable waters of the upcoming fortnight and wait for someone to take the bait. Of course, the prize fish was Vern Cotter, whose Scottish side, according to Jones, would never dare be so bold as to make it hard for England’s attack line to spark itself into action. “I’m sure they are going to play proper rugby,” said the England coach, quoting from the endlessly entertaining Gospel of Eddie.
There was more to it, though, as there always is behind the perma-smile and the bespoke cloak of self-assuredness that have elevated Jones from international rugby coach to international rugby iconoclast.
“We’ve got Scotland in two weeks which is going to be fantastic because they’re already talking it up,” he told the BBC, without feeling the need to clarify who ‘they’ actually are, presumably because that hardly matters these days. It was as calculated a line as Jones has yet delivered, but done so with the trademark brio that, depending on your disposition, is either exceedingly endearing or as infuriating as a joke without a punchline.
He continued: “You know they’ve got belief, they’ve got confidence. Confidence leads to better performances, better performances lead to high expectation, and now they have to carry around the burden of Scotland’s expectations for the next two weeks.” Holy shit! Did Jones just troll Scotland with a corporate monologue from a discarded The Office scene? Yes he damn well did. Did he also just use the words ‘burden ‘, ‘expectations’ and ‘Scotland' in the same sentence?
No one in Scotland will be taking Jones’ comments seriously, least of all Vern Cotter who, according to Jones “won’t have the same tactics that were here. He’s a New Zealand guy. They like the breakdown. They like the contact.”
Well, yes, Jones would love Scotland to roll into Twickenham and engage in the rugby equivalent of a pint-throwing pub fight. The England side has shown in this tournament that its close-in defence is the best in the competition with Maro Itoje and Courtney Lawes leading the way, and the rotating opensiders offering staunch assistance. Scotland should not be conned into close quarter battle.
Instead, if the Scots are serious about taking the Calcutta Cup back to Murrayfield, they would be better advised to play the craziest brand of rugby they can conjure – with flair, blatant disregard for the opposition, and cold-blooded ruthlessness. Sort of like an Eddie Jones post-match interview, but minus the sanctimony.
Not that they need any advice from this columnist. They’ll already be getting enough of that over the next couple of weeks. And no prizes for guessing from whom it will be coming.
Latest Comments
Warren, if you think you should stay on coaching Wales, you are beyond deluded. If you love Wales & Welsh rugby as much as you say you do (& I'm sure you probably do) you should resign immediately so this once proud & passionate rugby nation can rebuild without you. How many of your players will make the British & Irish Lions squad.?
It's time to walk the plank.!
Go to commentsYeah nar I pretty much agree with that sentiment, wasn't just about the lineout though.
Yeah, I think it's the future of SR, even TRC. Graham above just now posting about how good a night it was with a dbl header of ENGvSA and NZvFrance, and now I don't want to kick SA or Argentina out of TRC but it would be great if in this next of the woods 2 more top teams could come in to create more of these sort of nights (for rugby's appeal). Often Arg and SA and both travel here and you get those games but more often doesn't work out right.
Obviously a long way off but USA and Japan are the obvious two. First thing we need to do is get Eddie Jones kicked out of Japan so they can start improving again and then get a couple of US teams in SRP (even if one its just a US based and augmented Jaguares).
It will start off the whole conferences are crap debate again (which I will continue to argue vehemently against), but imagine a 6 team Pacific conference, Tokyo Sunwolves (drafted from Tokyo JRLO teams), Tokyo All Stars (made up of best remaining foreign players and overseas drafts), ALL Nihon (best of local non Tokyo based talent, inc China/Korea etc, with mainland Japan), a could of West Coast american franchises and perhaps a second self PI driven Hawai'i based team, or Jagaures. So I see a short NFL like 3 or 4 month comp as fitting best, maybe not even a full round, NZvAUSvPAC, all games taking place within a 6hr window. Model for NZ will definitely still require a competitive and funded NPC!
On the Crusaders, I liked last years ending with Grace on the bench (ovbiously form dependent but thats how it ended) and Lio-Willie at 8. I could have Blackadder trying to be a 7 but think balance will be used with him at 6 and Kellow as 7. Scott Barrett is an international 6 sized player. It is just NZ style/model that pushes him into the tight, I reckon he'd be a great loose player, and saders have Strange and Cahill as bigger players (plus that change could draw someone like Darry back). Same with Haig now, hes not grown yet but Barrett hight and been playing 6, now that the Highlanders have only chosen two locks he'll be playing lock, and that is going to change his growth trajectory massively, rather than seeing him grow like an International 6.
Go to comments