Jack Nowell explains England axe message received from Borthwick
Seasoned international Jack Nowell has revealed the reason why Steve Borthwick axed him from his England plans for the 2023 Guinness Six Nations. The soon-to-be 30-year-old was a selection favourite during the Eddie Jones era and appeared in 10 of the 12 matches the English played in 2022, nine of those appearances coming as a starter.
However, he learned during the Exeter trip to South Africa in January for a Heineken Champions Cup assignment at the Bulls that he wasn’t getting selected by Borthwick in the England Six Nations squad and he has just spent February watching the Test action unfold on the TV.
Appearing on the latest Rugby Pod podcast in a joint interview with Henry Slade, his Exeter teammate who did feature for England against Wales last Saturday, Nowell explained that his communication with new Test head coach Borthwick has been limited - with no update issued since the January call that informed him he was being excluded for the championship.
“He spoke to me when the team was coming out,” said Nowell. “I think we were in South Africa, we [Slade and Nowell] had a call at the same time and he [Borthwick] said that he wants his wingers carrying and getting their hands on the ball and I was like cool, and then I had the phone call when I was out in South Africa and he said the other boys are getting their hands on the ball a bit more than I am at the moment which is fine.
“At the end of the day, it is a coach’s decision. You can’t be everyone’s cup of tea. For me it’s not as if he is telling me every week that I need to go and work on something, that I need to go and work on my kick chase, I need to work on my tackling. No communication is pretty good for me because I get to focus on just doing what Exeter need and what I can do for Exeter.”
With Nowell surplus to Test requirement, Borthwick named Max Malins as the right-wing starter in all three February England games with Anthony Watson a left-wing starter versus Wales after Ollie Hassell-Collins, the No11 versus Scotland and Italy, reported with a knee injury. Asked what it has been like having to watch England on TV, Nowell continued: “Do you know what, in times before I would say it was tough.
"There have been times when I was injured and not able to go into camp and stuff, they are the toughest times to watch. But where I am kind of at at the moment is I didn’t really feel that. I thought it was actually quite nice to watch, to see the boys do well, to see them win. Especially as I have got three kids running around in the house now.
"My mind was on a lot of other things but the fact is that I’m happy that I am in Exeter, I get to stay here with the club. We had a really big drive this year to try and go and win stuff, we are in all three competitions still and Henry would agree, once you go away for Six Nations and stuff and you come back, you do feel very much out of the loop with your club.
"A lot has changed in that seven, eight weeks you have been away during the Six Nations tournament. So for me the fact that I get my head down, I get to stay with the lads, I get to really drive the team going forward in the Premiership and the Heineken Cup is something that I am sticking to. I am enjoying doing it.”
That latest club enjoyment was Nowell featuring in last Sunday’s Exeter win over Sale in the Gallagher Premiership, a victory that moved them into fifth place on the table and just a point shy of the playoff places.
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You are right. My comment was not meant to be a complaint. It's more of a warning to other teams that once this Bok team gets everything together, they will be close to unstoppable.
Go to commentsDifference is SA lost by a solitary point in both losses, and in the case of Argentina, away after making 11 changes to the team.
AB losses were by larger margins and lost at home, playing arguably their best sides.
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