'I've just been playing rubbish, I can't lie': Billy Vunipola agrees with recent criticism of his poor form
Billy Vunipola has admitted he has been “playing rubbish” and blames the collapse in form that has endangered his England place on being a “coward” due to fatigue. Vunipola has been a shadow of the bulldozing No8 famed for powering Eddie Jones' team onto the front foot, making only ten metres in three carries in the Guinness Six Nations opener against Scotland.
Against Italy a week later he produced eight carries for 31 metres – also a poor return by his standards - and in both games, he endured the indignity of being replaced before the final quarter.
Of all relegated Saracens' players to have suffered from the lack of club matches in the build-up to the Six Nations, Vunipola has felt the inactivity most, but the 28-year-old is determined to reverse his England slide against Wales next Saturday.
“I've just been playing rubbish, I can't lie. I need to turn up this weekend and that is what I'm planning on doing,” said England No8 Vunipola. “It's about helping me motivate myself to help the team. And to help the team I need to be the player that I know I can be.
“I know I haven't been that player and it's annoying me more than anyone else. I’m ready for Wales. I haven’t been myself and I need to go out there and show what I can do.
“There have been a lot of questions asked about my place within the team. That’s not always a bad thing because sometimes it can make or break a player and I want to show that I’m worth my place within the squad. I just haven’t played well at all and I could play a hundred more games at the level I am playing at now and I’d still be rubbish, so it’s not about playing yourself into form.
“At the moment, I guess because of my lack of game time, I am trying to put myself in positions where I don’t have to run as much so that I still get the ball and have the same effect. There’s a great NFL coach (Vince Lombardi) who said that fatigue makes a coward out of everyone and I guess I’ve been a bit of a coward in the last two weeks because I've been hiding from being fatigued.”
To illustrate the extent of his slump Vunipola has been sent encouraging texts by his parents, while at home the birth of his first child in November has created unexpected challenges. “You know you’re playing badly when your mum and dad are the only ones texting you, saying they love you and we are here to support you!” he said.
“Three weeks ago was the first time that I left my wife and kid. It was the first time that ever happened and I guess I never truly left that person behind - I just turned up to camp and I was still the person I was at home. It sounds weird, but you need to detach yourself from your wife a bit to focus wholeheartedly on what is going on here.”
Jones has been one of Vunipola's biggest supporters and Vunipola wants to repay England's head coach. “At the moment Eddie probably thinks someone has cloned me and the person he thought he had in his team is at home and the person that isn’t the person he thinks I am is here,” Vunipola said. “Eddie deserves a performance off us as a group of players and I am no different. That’s something I am 100 per cent sure of.”
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SCW really dislikes Eddie, doesn't he?
His words in 2019 before the RWC final that he now says should have resulted in Eddie's firing:
"Was Saturday’s sensational World Cup semi-final win over New Zealand England’s greatest ever performance? Yes, unquestionably, would be my answer."
So let's fire the coach one game later? Duh!
Go to commentsIreland have every right to back themselves for a win. But the key variable has little to do with recent record etc.
The reality is that Ireland are a settled team with tons of continuity, an established style, and a good depth chart, whereas NZ are fundamentally rebuilding. The questions are all about what Razor is doing and how far along he is in that program.
NZ are very close to really clicking. Against England all of the chatter is about how England could have closed out a win, but failed to do so. This has obscured the observation that NZ were by far the more creative and effective in attack, beyond the 3-1 try differential and disallowed tries. They gave away a lot of unnecessary penalties, and made many simple errors (including knock-ons and loose kicks). Those things are very fixable, and when they do so we are once again going to be staring at a formidable NZ team.
Last week we heard the England fans talking confidently about their chances against NZ, but England did not end up looking like the better team on the field or the scoreboard. The England defense was impressive enough, but still could not stop the tries.
Ireland certainly has a better chance, of course, but NZ is improving fast, and I would not be surprised at a convincing All Black win this week. It may turn on whether NZ can cut out the simple mistakes.
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