Harlequins' take on 'unique' Dombrandt now thriving with England
Harlequins have had their say on seeing Alex Dombrandt thriving as the first-choice England No8 for the 2023 Guinness Six Nations a year after he rotated the jersey with Sam Simmonds. The Harlequins back-rower started just twice in the 2022 tournament, coming off the bench in the other three matches for Simmonds.
However, he enjoyed three consecutive starts last month versus Scotland, Italy and Wales, exposure in stark contrast to how the rest of his 2022 played out. An injury cost him his Australian tour selection, paving the way for the then-out-of-favour Billy Vunipola to be recalled. The Saracens player went on to start six of the last seven matches England played before Eddie Jones was dismissed.
The naming of Steve Borthwick as England head coach, though, led to a selection rethink and Dombrandt has been a beneficiary, retaking the No8 jersey and so far making it his own despite some errors in the opening-round defeat to Scotland.
He carried the ball for a total of 190 metres off 36 carries across his three appearances, and his handling skills were especially to the fore last weekend in Wales when making nine passes - including the assist for the opening Anthony Watson try.
It’s an all-action impact that has pleased Tabai Matson. “It’s really what the coach [Borthwick] sees in you,” said the Harlequins coach about the England Test selection now falling in favour of Dombrandt.
“For us with our Quins lens on, he is unique I think. His skill set is phenomenal and so at the international level, having a loose forward that is super skilled is a point of difference in that loose forward trio because they are often big bangers up here. Week in and week out, he is offering try assists or scoring himself so he helps your scoreboard tick over.”
Some Welsh fans took issue with the score Dombrandt created at Principality Stadium for Anthony Watson, claiming that the try-assist pass was forward, but Test centurion referee Nigel Owens shot down those allegations.
Speaking on his Whistle Watch programme, Owens said: “Some people asking was there a forward pass in the first try for England in Cardiff. No, it wasn’t. The pass wasn’t forward no matter how proud a Welshman you are. If you are trying to think that pass was forward let me tell you now it wasn’t. The pass was at the worst flat. I even think the pass was backwards and the pass is fine, so no forward pass.”
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I think Italy were always targetting this match and intended to win. They needed to exorcise the 2023 RWC. I think they could have done with a bit more help from other 6Ns particularly from Ireland to knock more holes in NZ and their confidence.
Mentioned before the Italy Argentina match was a virus that ripped through the Italy camp early that week. In general play Italy were competitive albeit with a high error count and crucial missed tackles.
Ive said it before the era of NZ turning up unprepared for all comers and triumphing is definitively over. If a Tier1 team target NZ and NZ do not prepare accordingly they are in with a major chance of losing. It used to occur the odd time in RWCs against France, now it can occur v any Tier1. The competition has improved. NZ can still be at the top but their talents must be deployed sufficiently into dismantling teams as with their attack then allowed to exploit.
They dismantled Ireland pretty well in Dublin which went largely unnoticed. That allowed them scoreboard advantage and attacking opportunities of which one was enough.
That Italian team beat Wales and significantly Scotland last year. They used the loss to NZ in the most positive way possible. No doubt NZ prepared but I would assume it was similar to versus Argentina: 3/4 arsed at best. These test matches are rare and this was another chance to practice dismantling a determined and prepared opponent which was lost. If Italy had scored a 7 pointer at 17-6....an Italian win was on.
Go to commentsGB = England, Scotland, Wales. UK = England, Wales, Scotland, NI
Nothing to stew son.
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