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Recently departed England coach names 4 players Borthwick needs back

England's Joe Launchbury takes part in a training session of England's rugby team at the Latymer Sports Ground, in west London, on February 16, 2022 ahead of the Six Nations rugby union international match against Wales. (Photo by Adrian DENNIS / AFP) (Photo by ADRIAN DENNIS/AFP via Getty Images)

Former England forwards coach Matt Proudfoot has spoken out about the players he believes Steve Borthwick’s side need back if they are to turn around the fortunes of their floundering team.

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His comments come on the back of England’s soul-destroying 53-10 loss to France, which has left the side in crisis heading to Dublin for a Six Nations Super Saturday decider with Grand Slam hopefuls Ireland.

“Where do you start processing that loss? Because so much of their game fell to pieces. The pack was poor. The kicking was poor,” said Proudfoot. “Where do they go to? They go to a side who are ruthless in attack, who wants the ball and can play through long phases.

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“Eddie [Jones] wanted to go [with] a real power game. To compete with the southern hemisphere teams, you need a power game. He tried to go superpower, that’s why Owen [Farrell] went into flyhalf.

“So you can see the selection model now, do they go a high continuity side with Smith at ten, or do they stick with Farrell at ten and go a more traditional kicking game with a power game, so I think this whole flux of where they are, depends on selection at ten.”

Proudfoot, who left the role shortly after the departure of Eddie Jones as head coach at the end of 2022, was known for his emphasis on physicality and set-piece play during his time with England, believes a lack of hard-men up front is hurting Borthwick’s side.

Speaking from his current role as a university head coach in South Africa, Proudfoot named Luke Cowan-Dickie, Tom Curry, Courtney Lawes and forgotten Test lock Joe Launchbury as players whose absence has been felt in an England pack who are struggling to exert physicality.

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“Their big guns up front, they’re missing Cowan-Dickie at hooker, who adds a lot upfront. They’re missing Tom Curry and they’re missing Courtney Lawes. It’s half their pack.

“They’re probably missing a Launchbury in the second row. So they’re missing a big chunk of what their pack could be.”

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Exeter hooker Cowan-Dickie is injured and headed to Montpellier at the end of the season, while Sale Sharks loose forward Curry is recovering from a hamstring injury. Lawes, who featured against Wales earlier in the tournament, is fighting his way back to full fitness from within the squad.

Launchbury on the other hand, is currently playing in Japan; the former Wasps’ star having been considered surplus to requirements under the Eddie Jones regime.

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“You could see which side they are going to go. The English press are pushing them to Smith and a more continuity-based side – where Ireland are.

“Probably the traditionalists are wanting them to play a big maul, a big scrum, a big kicking game. You can see half the camp, the Saracens boys on this side, and the Harlequins are sitting in that camp, wanting to play a more unstructured game.”

It remains to be seen whether Borthwick’s side will be able to turn their form around against Ireland, but the return of key players could eventually provide a much-needed boost.

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SK 1 hour ago
The Reds' 'whimpering' exit shows Super Rugby scrums still matter

The Scrum remains a key platform in the game. There may be fewer set in SR Pacific and fewer penalties given but you cannot escape its importance and that is how it should be. The scrum cannot become an irrelevant thing in Rugby. It deserves its own space in the game however too much time is spent setting a scrum and thats where the refs need to be more strict. They need to demand effort from players and award 10metres or penalties if the scrums are not set fast enough by one team or the other. The sixty seconds to set will only help if its enforced strictly. The Refs in the Top 14, URC, Champs Cup and Prem have been too slack in adequately policing the times setting scrums. Too many teams simply dawdle at scrum time because they are on the back foot. Theres nothing more frustrating than watching a clock count down and players having a chat with the ref at scrum time or stand up because they packed in badly. Refs need to get serious on it. In 1995 scrums were set in seconds. The laws came in to make them safer but now its way too time consuming. I feel like too often refereeing is done according to feeling and not mandate. There needs to be consistent standards across the game. While SR referees will penalise a 9 for not using it in the 5 seconds it rarely happens in Europe. Andrew Brace did it this weekend to Embrose Papier but that was after like 10 seconds. The Refs need to get more assertive about time wasting and following the time limit guidelines and this needs to happen across all leagues at once. Only then will we have a game for all refereed at the same standard.

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