The RFU face pivotal moment over Eddie Jones' future
England equalled their worst Guinness Six Nations performance when their rout by Ireland registered a third defeat to condemn them to a fifth place finish.
Here, the PA news agency reflects on five things we learned from England’s 2021 Championship.
Full reverse
If confirmation were needed, the collapse in Dublin proves that England have gone backwards at an alarming rate since reaching the final of the 2019 World Cup. A glorious round four victory over France aside, they have fallen far short of the dizzying heights scaled against Australia and New Zealand just 18 months ago. Finishing fifth, with only perennial losers Italy sparing them the ultimate indignity of finishing bottom, is a dire outcome for a nation that boasts the game’s greatest playing and financial resources.
Worse than it looks
The headline figure of three defeats in five games fails to illustrate the true depth of their slump. In the Calcutta Cup debacle that opened their ill-fated title defence they were the victims of an 11-6 thrashing as Scotland failed to reflect their dominance on the scoreboard. Wales avoided that shortcoming by compiling a record score, prevailing 40-24 to end England’s title defence in round three after taking control of a decisive final quarter. But most emphatic of all was a 32-18 rout at the Aviva Stadium that completed the reverse Triple Crown for the first time in 45 years. Fifth place is fully deserved.
The Eddie conundrum
At the heart of England’s malaise is Eddie Jones, the ringmaster who has currently lost his touch. To listen to his senior players speak after Ireland had run amok, the head coach retains the loyalty of the dressing room, but on the evidence of this Six Nations his methods are no longer working.
Ammunition is accumulating for his critics who believe change is needed – an appalling average penalty count of 13.4 per game, his team’s bewildering inconsistency, a stubborn refusal to pick players who are tearing up the Premiership, bizarre “rat poison” rants at the media and a preference for archaic siege mentality psychology. There is no shortage of material. The Rugby Football Union face a pivotal moment, knowing it must either part ways with the international game’s highest paid coach now with a view to resetting for the 2023 World Cup, or persevere in the hope he can turn the ship around. Jones still believes he has what it take, but it is the view of his Twickenham boss Bill Sweeney that matters.
Fading Lions hopes
It was in the autumn that Jones outlined his ambition to supply a record contingent of 20 players to the Lions for their summer series against South Africa, but half that number is now a more likely total. Warren Gatland watched from the stands at the Aviva Stadium as several candidates fluffed their auditions, among them George Ford, Billy Vunipola and Elliot Daly, while Ireland were busy arguing persuasive late cases for their inclusion with Conor Murray and Johnny Sexton propelling themselves into contention as starting half-backs. Only Anthony Watson, Tom Curry, Kyle Sinckler and Maro Itoje can be confidence of joining them in the starting XV.
Hope for the future
A shard of light amid the gloom is England’s array of outstanding players who ae capable of the type of performance that saved their Six Nations from complete disaster – a rousing 23-20 win against France at Twickenham. Founded on resilience and ambition, it evoked memories of Japan 2019. Why it was followed up by an afternoon of such flat indifference in Dublin, Jones seems powerless to explain, but it showed than when England are firing they have the personnel to mix it with the best.
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Yes I was surprised at how close the pen count was - the spread between best and worst being just 2. The number of yellow cards though will surely be something the Boks will look to address
Go to commentsBriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiistol! Briiiiiiiiiiiiiiiistol! Briiiiiiiiiiiiiiiistol!
It's incredible to see the boys playing like this. Back to the form that saw them finish on top of the regular season and beat Toulon to win the challenge cup. Ibitoye and Ravouvou doing a cracking Piutau/Radradra impression.
It's abundantly clear that Borthwick and Wigglesworth need to transform the England attack and incorporate some of the Bears way. Unfortunately until the Bears are competing in Europe, the old criticisms will still be used.. we failed to fire any punches against La Rochelle and Leinster which goes to show there is still work to do but both those sides are packed full of elite players so it's not the fairest comparison to expect Bristol to compete with them. I feel Bristol are on the way up though and the best is yet to come. Tom Jordan next year is going to be obscene.
Test rugby is obviously a different beast and does Borthwick have enough time with the players to develop the level of skill the Bears plays have? Even if he wanted to? We should definitely be able to see some progress, Scotland have certainly managed it. England aren't going to start throwing the ball around like that but England's attack looks prehistoric by comparison, I hope they take some inspiration from the clarity and freedom of expression shown by the Bears (and Scotland - who keep beating us, by the way!). Bristol have the best attack in the premiership, it'd be mad for England to ignore it because it doesn't fit with the Borthwick and Wigglesworth idea of how test rugby should be played. You gotta use what is available to you. Sadly I think England will try reluctantly to incorporate some of these ideas and end up even more confused and lacking identity than ever. At the moment England have two teams, they have 14 players and Marcus Smith. Marcus sticks out as a sore thumb in a team coached to play in a manner ideologically opposed to the way he plays rugby, does the Bears factor confuse matters further? I just have no confidence in Borthers and Wiggles.
Crazy to see the Prem with more ball in play than SR!
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