Top England players face missing 11 of the first 14 2020/21 Premiership fixtures
Leading England international players look set to miss at least eleven of the first 14 games in next season’s Gallagher Premiership. Eight of the opening 14 Premiership rounds clash directly with Autumn Nations Cup and Guinness Six Nations Championship fixtures.
Although England head coach Eddie Jones is likely to release some players back to clubs during two Six Nations fallow weeks, the majority of his squad will remain unavailable for domestic action during that time. There is also a rest period after the Nations Cup – it will be taken at a time agreed with a player’s club – to be factored in.
The Nations Cup tournament runs from November 13 until December 5, with the Six Nations starting on February 6 and ending six weeks later. There are four rounds of European club action in December and January as well, so it could mean England stars being available for just three Premiership weekends between November and March.
The 2020/21 Premiership fixtures were announced on Tuesday, with the competition starting on November 20, just 27 days after the 2019/20 champions are decided. The current league campaign, halted between March and August because of the coronavirus pandemic, still has a full round of regular-season games left, plus play-offs and the final.
And next season will run until June 26, a day before the British and Irish Lions’ scheduled South Africa tour departure, including nine successive rounds between late January and late March. Such a schedule will be a huge test of Premiership clubs’ squad depth, although the planning for it is already underway.
Exeter rugby director Rob Baxter, who has made 15 changes for Wednesday’s Premiership game against London Irish, said: “You look at the side this week, and there are a number of people who will start these games who we know we will need to use when the new season starts again in a few weeks.
“There is a reality that they need to be ready, not just now, but also down the line, so there are lots for them to play for, both individually and collectively. We need as strong a squad overall as we can for what will be a very challenging season next season, based just on the number of clashes with international periods if nothing else.”
Bristol boss Pat Lam has players in his squad like Kyle Sinckler and Ben Earl, who are set to be part of Jones’ England squads this season, while uncapped players such as half-backs Callum Sheedy and Harry Randall could push hard for international recognition.
Lam said: “I want as many of our guys to play for England and to play international rugby. That’s what we are about. We want to be a Champions Cup team, consistently playing in the Champions Cup and being contenders to win that every year. That’s our ambition.
“Getting guys into international teams, as a club and myself as director of rugby, we would be absolutely ecstatic. We know these games are in place. If we lose a few players to England, fantastic. We will make sure the next group are coming through.”
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There is this thing going around against Siya Kolisi where they don't want him to be known as the best national captain ever, so they strike him down in ratings permanently whenever they can. They want McCaw and reckons he is the best captain ever. I disagree.
Just like they refuse to see SA as the best team and some have even said that should the Boks win a third WC in a row, they will still not be the best team ever. Even if they win every game between now and the WC. That is some serious hate coming SA's way.
Everyone forget how the McCaw AB's intimidated refs, was always on the wrong side, played on the ground etc. Things they would never have gotten away with today. They may have a better win ratio, but SA build depth, not caring about rank inbetween WC's until this year.
They weren't as bad inbetween as people claim, because non e of their losses was big ones and they almost never faced the strongest Bok team outside of the WC, allowing countries like France and Ireland to rise to the top unopposed.
Rassie is still at it, building more depth, getting more young stars into the fold. By the time he leaves (I hope never) he will leave a very strong Bok side for the next 15- 20 years. Not everyone will play for 20 years, but each year Rassie acknowledge the young stars and get them involved and ready for international rugby.
Not everyone will make it to the WC, but those 51/52 players will compete for those spots for the WC. They will deliver their best. The future of the Boks is in very safe hands. The only thing that bothers me is Rassie's health. If he can overcome it, rugby looks dark for the rest of the rugby world. He is already the greatest coach in WR history. By the time he retires, he will be the biggest legend any sport has ever seen
Go to commentsWas it? I just brought it up in some of my posts to rub it in that the AB last year nearly put 100 on a top 6N side lol
I agree to be honest. The biggest key to me that they might be jadded was none of them had mom performances, or even as good as their last three games.
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