New England coach Borthwick likened to a computer by Bok bruiser
Jasper Wiese epitomises the impact new England coach Steve Borthwick can have on individual players, helping to turn the strong running No8 who kept on picking up yellow and red cards into a Springbok regular.
Wiese describes Borthwick as like a computer with the amount of work he puts in give his players every possible advantage and that included turning the No8 from someone who collected too many cards into one of the most effective forwards in Europe.
This was confirmed as Wiese made 22 carries in Saturday’s 23-16 win over Clermont Auvergne, the most by any player in the Heineken Champions Cup in what was Borthwick and defence coach Kevin Sinfield’s last game before they moved to their England roles. Wiese beat 10 defenders, the most by any forward in a single game in the competition since Opta have recorded this data - since 2009/10.
Wiese said: “Steve has been amazing and his commitment to the club has been phenomenal and he is a fantastic coach and I cannot say a bad word about him. He is programmed like a computer and went back three or four years to analyse teams and their trends. He watches every maul and every ruck to see what they are doing and what they are all about.
“When I first arrived here they told me not to worry too much about the detail and to play the game I play. The belief they had in me I hadn’t experienced in the past. Also the way they helped me with the discipline during a bad period when everyone was saying ‘get him off the pitch because he is a running red card’ to now when, hopefully, people can see I have got better. That is them (the coaches) pushing me to be better and all that has happened to me in recent years – I cannot take credit for it.
“Steve and Aled (Walters, Tigers’ Head of Performance) really hammered me for the mistakes I made and the cards I got and the Springbok coaches also told me it was something I had to work on to be in contention. I can’t be more thankful to all of the coaches because they gave me a wake up call.
“When I came to Leicester I didn’t think took much about the Boks but it has been a dream and I knew it is not in your favour to leave South Africa. I just tried to make the best impact at Tigers. Kevin (Sinfield) - his deeds speak for themselves and you just want to give everything for them.”
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To be fair it was nowhere bear the Leinster first team (for which, btw, Leinster copped nothing like the outrage that Jake White did for sending a rotated team to the UK). But it’s fun to watch the Stormers doing their thing. They are attracting big, diverse crowds of young fans, and deservedly so. Great to see.
Go to commentsIt might be legal but he’s sailing pretty close to the wind. Not a lot needs to go wrong for Finau to end up in the bin. Was it late? Not quite, but borderline. High? A couple of CM within the laws, no room for error with that one. Did he wrap the arms? There was a token effort to wrap one arm, the intent was clearly to hit with the shoulder. So yeah, it’s legal, just. But as we all know, a very slight change in the dynamics could easily have him seeing red. Hopefully not when it really matters.
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