Stuart Hogg offered to fly back south for his surprise Exeter start
Scotland fullback and captain Stuart Hogg is a surprise starter for Exter Chiefs after offering to fly back to Exeter for the Six Nations rest weekend.
Exeter play Gloucester and the non-compulsory return of Hogg gives the Devon side a welcome boost.
Hogg has had an up and down couple of weekends in the Six Nations. A fumble against Ireland cost the Scots dearly and another incident involving the fullback at the weekend that saw England score the winning try in Murrayfield has also come in for criticism.
He's been welcomed back at the Premiership club who are happy to give the experienced operator the opportunity to get back in the saddle.
"We don't know how Stuart deals with the country to club, country to club at the moment," Exeter DoR Rob Baxter told BT Sport's Craig Doyle. "That was why we felt it was important to put him in and fair to play to him: I actually spoke to him before the England game and he said he was more than happy to fly straight back and crack on with things.
"That kind of shows you the kind of guys you want to have around in the club. He wants to get back involved and get on with things."
Baxter was asked does he feel he has to help Hogg get back on the proverbial rugby horse wiht an Exeter run out.
"I don't think coaching is the way to it necessarily. I think that's why you get him back involved with the lads.
"I actually think this weekend, a bit much has been made of him dotting the ball down over the line. I've watched it half a dozen times and I'm not really sure what he could have done. The ball rolls another six inches he puts it down and it would be fine. If you look at how you commit to that piece of play, I'm not sure what else he could have done.
"I think the week before with the dropping of the ball, he got over that with a fair bit of ribbing from the Scottish lads and probably a few texts from our boys. I had a chat with him, so he's got a bit of stick all week.
"That's what gets you over it. It will be good for him to get back into things."
Refreshed and revived after their mid-season break, the Devonians will kick-off a crucial month ahead in the top flight determined not only to enhance their position at the summit of the division, but at the same time lay the foundations for what Baxter hopes will be a long and successful second half to the season.
“Both in the Premiership and in Europe, we have things in our own hands,” said the Chiefs’ Director of Rugby. “We’ve got a home quarter-final in Europe and if we out-perform Northampton on the day, that situation doesn’t change. And we have to look at it very much in the same terms when it comes to the Premiership.
“It’s in our hands to put together a series of quality games and quality performances that mean we collect the points that enable us to stay there. Right here and now, we don’t need another team to win or for someone to beat someone else. We can control our destiny by winning games of rugby.
“For me, that’s a fantastic situation to be in. However, it’s only fantastic if you are prepared to roll your sleeves up and make the most of it. We have done that in the past and it’s what we have to be prepared to do now.
“There is no magic ingredient to this. I have said to the lads I can’t sit here and give you some magic way to win the next four games, because there isn’t an easy way. You have to commit to them fully. If you do the hard work, the rest kind of falls into place.
“It’s when you think you don’t have to work hard and want to take shortcuts, that’s where you tend to come unstuck and find yourself in a dogfight and trying to chase the scoreboard. Sometimes locking down and getting guys to look at each other and commit to each other about what they want to put into a game is what will control everything.”
Certainly, Baxter has been drilling that message into his team this week, particularly given their disappointing first-half display in their last league outing at home to Sale Sharks.
“I kind of think we let ourselves and our supporters down with that first-half performance. It wasn’t good but, at the same time, I can’t give the guys enough credit for their second-half display.
“Had we produced two halves like that, then we would have won the game. That said, Sale are a good side and if you don’t go out and pour everything into a game, you’re going to lose. It will be the same again on Friday and it will the same moving forward. We have got to expect to give everything against Gloucester if we want to win the game.”
Standing in the way of Baxter and his Chiefs will be a Gloucester team, who themselves will be looking for a return to winning ways having lost 34-16 to local rivals Bristol Bears.
Over the years, tussles between the Chiefs and the Cherry & Whites have proved fiercely competitive with the last six league meetings just favouring Baxter’s side 3-2 in victories with one draw.
“We are expecting a full-on game,” warned Baxter. “The good thing about being in and around the top of the Premiership is you know what to expect – and that’s a full-on challenge every time you play. Because you are top, people want to knock you off.
“Like ourselves, Gloucester have ambitions of being in the top four and wanting to win the Premiership. For them, we are one of the teams they are competing against, so there is every reason to say this is going to be a very tough game. That said, we’ve played in a lot of tough games, collected points from those games, and that’s the challenge we have got to want to face again.
“As I said, you lose games of rugby – and that’s fine, I have no issue with that. What disappointed me against Sale was that I don’t think we showed any of the top qualities we have as a team, particularly in the first half where we let them get some real momentum and we conceded what were a couple of very soft tries. Ultimately, that left us with too much to do in the second half, when we actually did roll our sleeves up and got on with things.”
As well as Hogg, Aussie scrum-half Nic White also starts for Exeter. Up front, England international Harry Williams was not needed by Eddie Jones for his latest training camp, so he starts at tight-head.
15 Stuart Hogg
14 Tom O’Flaherty
13 Ian Whitten
12 Sam Hill
11 Olly Woodburn
10 Gareth Steenson (capt)
9 Nic White
1 Ben Moon
2 Elvis Taione
3 Harry Williams
4 Jannes Kirsten
5 Jonny Hill
6 Dave Ewers
7 Jacques Vermeulen
8 Sam Simmonds
16 Jordon Poole
17 Billy Keast
18 Enrique Pieretto
19 Dave Dennis
20 Sam Skinner
21 Jack Maunder
22 Harvey Skinner
23 Phil Dollman
RugbyPass, additional reporting Exeter Chiefs
Latest Comments
No he's just limited in what he can do. Like Scott Robertson.
Go to commentsDont complain too much or start jumping to conclusions.
Here in NZ commentators have been blabbing that our bottom pathway competition the NPC (provincial teams only like Taranaki, Wellington etc)is not fit for purpose ie supplying players to Super rugby level then they started blabbing that our Super Rugby comp (combined provincial unions making up, Crusaders, Hurricanes, etc) wasn't good enough without the South African teams and for the style SA and the northern powers play at test level.
Here is what I reckon, Our comps are good enough for how WE want to play rugby not how Ireland, SA, England etc play. Our comps are high tempo, more rucks, mauls, running plays, kicks in play, returns, in a game than most YES alot of repetition but that builds attacking skillsets and mindsets. I don't want to see world teams all play the same they all have their own identity and style as do England (we were scared with all this kind of talk when they came here) World powerhouse for a reason, losses this year have been by the tiniest of margins and could have gone either way in alot of games. Built around forward power and blitz defence they have got a great attack Wingers are chosen for their Xfactor now not can they chase up and unders all day. Stick to your guns its not far off
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