'The last two games haven't helped our preparations' - Jones bracing England for Ireland 'challenge'
Eddie Jones fears that successive clashes against Italy and Georgia have left England inadequately prepared for the first meaningful fixture of their Autumn Nations Cup.
A week after dispatching Italy 34-5 in Rome to clinch the Six Nations title, Owen Farrell’s team produced a 40-0 rout of Los Lelos that was equally comprehensive while also exposing areas to improve on, mainly the attack.
Ireland arrive at Twickenham on Saturday fresh from a conclusive win against Wales and having played France the week before, Jones believes they will be more battle-hardened.
“It’s a massive step up. You’ve just got to look at the world rankings,” Jones said.
“Georgia are ranked 12, Italy are 14th. Ireland are in the top four or five (fifth). It’s like going from playing Kei Nishikori to Novak Djokovic in tennis.
“The last two games haven’t helped our preparations. Our difficulty is that we’ve played two tier-two countries and we’re going to play against a team who have had a great preparation against Wales and France.
“We’re going to have to prepare really well this week because Ireland are a tough, physical team.
“They’ve been at the top of world rugby for the last four or five years, in the top four or five teams.
“Obviously had some great European success and had a change of coach after the World Cup. They present a massive physical challenge and a good tactical challenge.”
Jones believes Ireland will pose different challenges, forcing “a rethink in how we select the team”, but he was able to reflect on a satisfying demolition of Georgia’s respected pack.
Los Lelos’ strength was ground into submission in a game that produced a staggering 17 scrums, 31 line-outs and 11 mauls.
Among the engineers of England’s dominance up front was Ellis Genge, the fiery Leicester prop.
“It was good but we can’t get ahead of ourselves. We put so much prep into that game knowing they are a good scrummaging side and we have to bring that every week,” Genge said.
“We spoke about their scrum. It’s similar with Argentina. They love scrummaging, so if you can match them there, usually that puts you in good stead around the field.
“We tried to match them up front and we did a good job of it. We did a good job on them as a forward pack.
“They are not a bad pack. They are good players. We did come out with ascendancy, but they are still a good outfit.”
Genge was at the heart of a fight that erupted when England and Georgia trained together in Oxford in February 2019 as a live scrummaging session turned nasty, forcing coaching and backroom staff to separate the warring players.
“To a degree we had a point to prove, but to be honest I got the frustration out there and then in Oxford,” Genge said.
“We all know that we can’t throw any haymakers or anything like that in a game, so there’s no point thinking about it too much. There’s no bad blood there.
“I’ve got a lot of respect for those boys and I’ll always shake their hands after, irrespective of whether they’ve splatted my nose or not!”
- Duncan Bech
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John, McKenzie was 10 years ago and he only lasted 15 months until the disgustingly unfair affair that brought him down. I thought that if he didn't get another gig over Eddie V2 then he was done. I read that he had been approached but declined to put his name in the ring.
There are no potential Wallaby coaches outside of McKellar unless you have some inside info?
Go to commentsThe way they are defending is sometime pathetic to be honest. Itoje is usually on the inside of the rush and he is paired with a slower tight forward. Unable to keep up with the rush we have seen the line become disconnected on the inside where the big boys are. How many times have we seen Earl rush past the first receiver almost into no mans land covering no attacker. It looks like a system without any guidance. Tome Wright, Ikitau and a number of Wallabies went back to this soft centre as did Williams, Jordan and several others. Also when the line is broken the multiple lines of defence seems to be missing. The rush is predicated on a cover and recovery system with multiple lines of defence but with England you dont see it any more. Fitness and conditioning seems to be off as well as players are struggling to keep up with the intensity of the rush. Felix Jones has left a huge hole. The whole situation was and is a mess. Why they insist on not letting him go and having him work remotely is beyond me. Its leading to massive negative press and is a hot button issue thats distracting from the squad. Also the communication around Jones and his role has been absolute rubbish and is totally disjointed. While some say he is working remotely and playing a role others are saying theres been no contact. His role has not been defined and so people keep asking and keep getting different answers. England need a clean break from him and need to start over. Whatever reason for his leaving its time to cut the rope before the saga drags the whole Borthwick regime down. As for Joe El Abd well good luck to him. He is being made to look like an amateur by the whole saga and he is being asked to coach a system thats not his and which has been perfected and honed since 2017 by Nienaber, Jones, Erasmus and Co and which was first started by White in 2004. He is literally trying to figure out a system pioneered by double world cup winning coaches at the highest level and coach it at the same time. Talk about being on a hiding to nothing.
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