'I don't like him as a bloke': Eddie Jones rekindles Clive Woodward feud

With Eddie Jones no longer coaching England, and not coaching an international team whatsoever after resigning in the wake of Australia's World Cup, his feud with Sir Clive Woodward has died down. But the Australian showed there is still life in the rivalry yet.
This is a multi-decade war between the pair that first ignited at the beginning of the millenium as Woodward coached England and Jones Australia, with the former getting the better over his adversary in the 2003 World Cup final. Things took a different turn in 2016 when the Australian took control of England, and as the second half of his tenure began to unravel between 2020 and 2022, Woodward, now a pundit, was one of his most vocal critics.
Coaches in most sports have never been afraid of quarrelling, but most disputes peter out quickly. This, however, Jones recently revealed was "personal".
As a guest on England rugby league great James Graham's The Bye Round Podcast recently, Jones opened up on this feud with Woodward, and explained why it goes far beyond the usual back-and-forth that is part of the game, which is why he ultimately doesn't like the Englishman.
"You've got to be forthright with what you think," the 63-year-old said. "He hasn't coached since 2005 and he's the 'world's best coach.' You're the world's best coach when you don't coach. What's the old thing, the man in the arena?
"He's consistently criticising. We had a bit of a thing when we were England and Australia coach, but his great gripe is that he wanted to be director of rugby at England. He wanted to oversee it and he never got that job. After the World Cup in 2019, he ran an internal campaign with the RFU to take that position and he did it behind my back and I thought it was quite sneaky and deceitful.
"So every time since, if he says something, I really don't value his thoughts at all and I don't like him as a bloke. Because he was so deceitful. Most blokes in our sport, they're generally face-to-face, and I don't mind that. If someone has a different opinion, say it and we'll have a debate about it. But when people start doing things behind your back, and particularly the power he had in the media, I thought it was a bit red hot.
"He made it personal by doing all that stuff behind the scenes. He'll deny it to the hilt. But I always find it a bit sad, and I hope that when I do finish coaching I don't become one of those blokes that knows everything. 'He should have done thing, he should have made the change here'- coaching and playing is all about foresight, being a pundit is all about hindsight and you're always right."
While this rivalry has simmered down now Jones is out of the limelight, it is clear to see that there is still bad blood.
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Well deserved for a young talented, bright and humble player.
Go to commentsCane shouldn’t have been one last year, based purely on performances. Lakai is as close to a like for like of swap of Savea you’re ever likely to find, based on his short career so far at least. He has many of the same qualities - very strong ball carrier, great at the breakdown, and an absolute work horse on defence. I feel like he and Sititi could lead the way in the loose at the next WC.
I think we have become obsessed with replacing Kaino with someone exactly like him. Kaino was a perfect foil for the other loose forwards we had at the time. Based on the talent we have around at the moment those players could be made up in the aggregate by three players who are all exception all rounders - Lakai, Sititi, and Savea. Missing some height for sure but Sititi’s defensive work in the line out last year was phenomenal. He gets off the ground so quickly and was able to steal a couple of balls off the top of the springbok line out.
If our young locks coming through can actually stay fit long enough to get selected, it seems inevitable that Va’ai could end up in a hybrid 6/lock role.
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