Kevin Sinfield explains his decision to stay on with England
Kevin Sinfield has admitted that he did not expect to be a part of England’s coaching team this autumn. Sinfield has promised to “over-deliver” after shelving plans to step down once the summer tour to Japan and New Zealand had been completed in favour of continuing as skills and kicking coach.
The 44-year-old rugby league great is present for Saturday’s Autumn Nations Series opener against the All Blacks but will miss the Tests against Australia and Japan having committed to a speaking tour in the belief he was leaving.
Following talks with Steve Borthwick, he has committed to England on an ongoing basis with his duties beyond this month’s fixtures scaled back to provide scope for his fundraising work. “Clearly I didn’t think I’d be here. The very first conversation about me staying on started after the Six Nations,” Sinfield said.
“It took some time to work through a solution because it is complicated when you are trying to do some charity bits that mean a lot to you. You can’t always plan the time of year that should be or how it looks. I have really enjoyed the role with England and I love working with the guys. The group, representing your country and being around high performance – these things mean a lot to me.
“My role will change but that probably won’t really come into force until the Six Nations and I have always been a guy who has tried to over deliver. I intend on doing that again.
"There are some things outside of rugby that I am really passionate about such as the charity stuff. And the the speaking stuff has been important to me as well. I’ve been trying to manage that. I will be in and out of camp this autumn and that will mean I will miss two of the games. But then I will be available for every game.”
Sinfield has raised over £8million for motor-neurone disease charities following the diagnosis of his friend and former Leeds teammate Rob Burrow in 2019. Burrow died from the illness in June.
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16 out of 151 wins against the odds is probably good mate, not pathetic. And most of those wins were against the odds.
Its a just a pity NZ couldn't agree to concede the order to Wales. Instead they forced Wales to put their cultural piece secondary to New Zealand's in a match played in Cardiff. Pretty sure that's not right.
Game is what's important, not bitter, just noting the arrogance.
Go to commentsSince rugby was invented, aura has always been something other nations talk about. The All Blacks in the meantime, just carry on. Playing rugby. Not talking about aura.
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