The Saracens reaction to curious England rejection of Nick Isiekwe
Saracens have confirmed that a knock wasn’t the reason why Nick Isiekwe was omitted from the squad of 25 training with England in London this week. The 23-year-old bridged his four-year gap back to his previous Test cap appearance when chosen to start in the Guinness Six Nations opener away to Scotland on February 5 and he followed that up with a second successive start in last Sunday's win away to Italy in Rome.
However, it emerged on Tuesday evening when England named their training week squad ahead of the round three game versus Wales on February 27 that Isiekwe had been released back to Saracens by Eddie Jones.
He was the only player who started twice in the opening two rounds of the championship not to be kept on in camp, England opting instead to bring the fit-again Joe Launchbury in as they start their planning for the Twickenham match versus the Welsh.
Launchbury had been at England training for two days last week before going back and playing for Wasps in their weekend win over Bath, his third club appearance since a terrible knee injury was suffered last April.
His last cap for England came in December 2020 as he was also unavailable through injury for last year’s Six Nations, but he now appears to have got the jump on Isiekwe despite the Saracens lock’s efforts these past two weekends at Murrayfield and the Stadio Olimpico.
Saracens aren’t sure yet whether they will involve Isiekwe in their league match this Saturday at London Irish but head coach Joe Shaw has given his view on how the second row fared being back on the England scene and how he will react now to the setback of not getting selected for this week’s fallow week camp.
“If you are not involved playing for your country I am sure you are going to be disappointed,” said Shaw when quizzed by RugbyPass at his weekly media briefing on Wednesday. “I don’t know what the conversion was with Eddie but Nick will come in like he does every week and his focus just turns to Saracens.
“He is in this environment and loves this environment loves being with his mates. He has been here for such a long time so when he gets the opportunity to represent us he puts his best foot forward and no doubt that is what he will do in the next couple of days.
“It [playing for England] will have done him the world of good because ultimately when you are playing at what is the highest level in a competition like the Six Nations, you are not only holding your own you are pushing, you’re leading, you’re doing some things that are taking the team forward. That is going to do his confidence and his maturity the world of good.
“Being in that England environment with the best players in England and learning from them, that is what Nick does, he learns. He is somebody who has got this appetite to get better and better. He can’t only get better from it.”
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I guess the other option would be to start ALB, he's looked good in the 12 so far when he starts and sets up those outside him. But that would mean putting the vice captain on the bench, which is unlikely. Another option would be to drop Reiko to the bench and play Proctor, though he's gone home so that's not going to happen either.
Both of those players just offer more of the soft distribution skills good centres learn from playing their careers there. Unfortunately that's what's lacking with the current combo.
Go to commentsWhatever let's see if this load of waffle is still valid in 2 years time. ABs will rise we have a lot of new talent coming through. The NPC was the highest standard for years. The game is changing to suit the fast pace we like to play. We get to play the Springboks more, including the franchises, which will make us better! Overall I am optimistic. I will add having watched the England game multiple times we made most of the play. England are an awesome physical team, but you can expect the All Blacks to get better and better at executing the chances. It could easily have been 5 tries to one instead of 3 to 1.
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