The 'example' that left Sinfield in no doubt about caring Borthwick
Kevin Sinfield believes his elevation to the England coaching team has only been made possible by the inspiration provided by his close friend Rob Burrow. Sinfield will act as Steve Borthwick’s number two - with responsibility for the defence - in a continuation of the partnership that delivered the Gallagher Premiership title for Leicester last season.
While the chance to work with Borthwick since 2021 was always a big draw, rugby league great Sinfield sees the chain of events started by Burrow’s diagnosis with motor neurone disease as the most influential factor behind his successful switch of rugby codes which has now culminated in his England appointment.
As part of his fundraising for research into MND, he has undertaken a series of running challenges, the most recent of which took place in November when he completed 300 miles in seven days with his former Leeds Rhinos teammate present at the finishing line to greet him.
“As soon as I finished the challenge after Rob had been diagnosed, I knew I had to do something different with my life,” Sinfield said ahead of an England role that begins with the February 4 match versus Scotland. “A lot of that is based around Rob. Rob is faced with this horrific disease and I realised I needed to take some risks and I needed to find more challenges in my life.
“As a player, you get so much fulfilment from playing and I did - I took so much satisfaction. When I stopped playing, I was not lost but I was trying to fill a void I could never fill again. The opportunity at Leicester presented itself, which I jumped at.
"I didn’t have any idea at that stage that I would find myself here in 15/16 months' time. If you would have told me, I’d have to pinch myself. A couple of things I have got from Rob are about fight. Rob has inspired me in so many different ways and it’s probably a large reason why I’m here today because without that horrible news, I’m not quite sure I would have come down this path.”
Once Eddie Jones was sacked after an autumn that continued the England collapse in results in a dire 2022, Borthwick was the natural successor. Jones’ primary assistant coach from 2016 to 2020 insisted on taking Sinfield with him to Twickenham, yet early on in his transition to coaching in rugby union the former Great Britain international questioned whether he was out of his depth.
“I have to admit, after the first couple of days, I thought to myself, what have I done? Can I survive?” Sinfield said. “And then very quickly, with support and care from Steve, the coaching team and players, I very quickly started to get fulfilment from it and really enjoyed it.
“Steve has had a huge influence on me in the last 15 months. Steve is a fighter, you know how hard he works, you know he is obsessed with winning, you know how diligent he is. The bit you probably don’t see is how much he cares and to be able to work alongside somebody who cares as much as he does - and I’ll give you an example of that.
“During my last challenge, which was seven ultras, I got a text from five people every single night. My wife, my two boys, Rob Burrow and Steve. Steve was right behind everything we were trying to do and people don’t hear that or see that, but he cares as much as anybody I have been around.”
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Yes no point in continually penalizing say, a prop for having inadequate technique. A penalty is not the sanction for that in any other aspect of the game!
If you keep the defending 9 behind the hindmost foot and monitor binds strictly on the defending forwards, ample attacking opportunities should be presented. Only penalize dangerous play like deliberate collapses.
Go to comments9 years and no win? Damn. That’s some mighty poor biasing right there.
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