George Ford reveals blueprint to get the best from Manu Tuilagi
George Ford believes deception is the key to unlocking the full potential of Manu Tuilagi when the former England and Leicester teammates link up at Sale together. Ford has yet to make his debut for the club he joined during the summer because of a ruptured achilles injury sustained while guiding the Tigers to victory in last season’s Gallagher Premiership final.
The 29-year-old fly-half could be back in action by the end of December and has already devised a blueprint for inducing the best from marauding centre Tuilagi. While Tuilagi was finally able to win his 50th cap in the recent autumn series following a host of injury problems, he was not at his most destructive in a misfiring England team.
“Manu needs deception around him. He needs to get the ball when he is not the only option to get the ball, he needs to have other people around him so you can create a one-on-one for him,” Ford said. “If you create a one-on-one for Manu, or half a shoulder for Manu, he is impossible to tackle pretty much.
"Also, it’s about how we can get Manu with time, with space, and with those opportunities in phase play, not just off a set-piece. You can design a play off a set-piece but you need to get Manu with the ball in his hands when it is a little bit more unstructured, when he can get the ball in a channel and he hgas got a one-on-one.
“Again, that is a lot of deception. That’s not just giving it to Manu and ‘there you go, take the whole team on’. It’s about your team mindset and philosophy.”
While frustrated at being unable to make his Sale debut, Ford has been using the first significant injury of his career to rebuild as well as help sharpen the Sharks attack as an auxiliary coach. “My mindset has been thinking I am not injured. I know that sounds a funny thing to say, but this has been an opportunity,” Ford said.
“Since making my debut at 16 or 17 - I am 29 now - I have had twelve years of rugby and I have been lucky enough not to have had a long-term injury and maybe this is the time I needed to refresh and come back a better player.
“When you have got an injury like this you are starting from ground zero and building your way back again in terms of foundations and when you are week to week and season to season, you never have time to do that.”
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So you have to be an international coach to have an opinion on rugby?
Go to commentsThere is a lot of this being said at the moment but Marcus Smith did miss a couple of drop goals of his own in the first half. Everything is in hindsight and you’d also need to be a brave coach to not make use of your bench replacements in a test.
NZ tried to resist making replacements in the second test against the Boks this year, and fatigued players just ended up making uncharacteristic errors at the end of the match.
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