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England star sits out training as Borthwick handed selection headache

By PA
Press Association

Henry Slade was a spectator at England training on Monday having proved his fitness for the autumn opener against New Zealand at Allianz Stadium.

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Slade made his first appearance of the season in Exeter’s 36-19 defeat by Harlequins on Sunday, completing 55 minutes in his comeback from shoulder surgery.

Having been in action for the Chiefs less than 24 hours earlier, he watched as England stepped up preparations for the All Blacks’ visit on Saturday.

The 31-year-old is expected to continue at outside centre for the first of four Autumn Nations Series Tests due to his influence in the team’s ‘blitz’ defence.

Saracens’ in-form Alex Lozowski is his chief rival for the number 13 jersey in what would be his first appearance for England since 2018.

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Head coach Steve Borthwick is scheduled to announce his team on Thursday but that could be brought forward to Tuesday afternoon if there are no outstanding injury concerns.

Borthwick has been given a headache at blindside flanker after Ollie Chessum was ruled out of the New Zealand showdown because of a knee problem.

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Chessum was injured in the final session of last week’s training camp in Girona and is also likely to miss the remainder of the autumn against Australia, South Africa and Japan.

His absence creates the possibility of Sam Underhill being reunited with fellow ‘Kamikaze Kid’ Tom Curry in the back row in what would be their first appearance together since the 2023 World Cup.

Apart from how Borthwick chooses to configure his props between starters and finishers, he also faces a tough call at scrum-half where Ben Spencer, Harry Randall and Jack van Poortvliet are competing for the jersey.

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JW 15 minutes ago
How key Waratahs playmakers could reshape Joe Schmidt's Wallabies backline

Yeah like a classic comedy show, not too different to how he went at the same venue last year? Perhaps there’s something about that latitude that puts his equilibrium off?


The rush on Jo was fine though, you’d catch most players out with Dmacs execution of it. There were actually quite a few instances like that, not too dissimilar to that Bledisloe game actually, were things just didn’t work out for no luck of trying to skill. I laughed when Dmac took himself out of that try and basically gifted it to them by trying to bowl over Kellaway was perhaps the most comical.


Actually now you say that, yes, very reminiscent of Aus v England wasn’t it. The two changes at halves have been instrumental for me. Not that the first two weren’t playing well, but these two seem to pair up better, with everyone. Like you say with those sorts of counter attack plays, they are on instinct and that stuff needs to be shared with everyone. That’s another thing too I was thinking, in that respect guys returning can be a hinderance to a team playing well, but I might have just thought that because I wasn’t sure (hadn’t seen much) which of NSWs midfields were best suited where.


I’m very similar in my TMO preference as well. I had actually said to myself several times already this season (SR here) that they are pretty bullish basically telling the ref what theyve seen as fact. If I remember rightly it even happened a few times in November and some of the refs then said “no, I’m actually happy with that.” etc. But very tough on Maybe (I think) who probably has piss poor vision on the big screen to say anything otherwise, so yes, definitely just make it an offer to look and also communicate ‘why’ precisely to the ref, and (just like he does to the players) he can even say to the TMO “no I was happy how I saw it live, I don’t need a replay thanks” etc. He started like that I think, “I’d like to review a simultaneous grounding” but then yes, he took over after. Of course in the refs minds, it’s the right call, thoughts how it’s always been ref’d, even when theres a good few frames in the slowmo that actually show ball obviously hitting grass first (which they didn’t in this game), they’ve always ruled that (like in cricket) if the ball continues to then be ground on the line after (or in the same frame in this example) they always gone ‘dead ball’. The new SR committee apparently what to making the line the attacking teams so they award the try’s instead of taking them away, but just like I said with them not wanting to look closely at the first forward pass (like they did for the Chiefs try), I don’t want random JRLO level decisions, and giving the line to the attacking team is just going to make clear no trys, a try instead. It’s exactly the same result.

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tonirobinson362 1 hour ago
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