Two key reasons behind Asher Opoku-Fordjour’s England elevation
England U20 head coach Mark Mapletoft has praised Asher Opoku-Fordjour’s versatility and selflessness after the young prop was called into Steve Borthwick’s senior squad.
Opoku-Fordjour was added to the squad on Sunday night, along with Bath lock Charlie Ewels, as England regathered to prepare to face Australia at Allianz Stadium on Saturday.
The 20-year-old has been used primarily as a tighhead at club level – his five senior starts for Sale Sharks all coming in the No.3 jersey – but mainly lined up on the opposite side of the front row under Mapletoft.
It was in the No.1 jersey that he starred in England’s triumphant U20 Six Nations and World Rugby U20 Championship campaigns this year, and it is at loosehead that he could earn full international honours having come in for the retired Joe Marler.
“The thing that's impressed me the most about Asher is, you know, he's a quiet guy, he gets on with his business, but being able to play both sides at the level he's played [is impressive],” said Mapletoft, who will coach England A against Australia A later this month.
“He was bouncing from playing tighthead at club to coming in to play loosehead for us. Now, there was an element of selfishness for the team in that regard, because we had good tightheads as well.
“We had Billy Sela, we had Jimmy Halliwell, we had Afolabi [Fasogbon] coming back from injury. So, the fact that he was able to park his own personal interests to do what was right for the team was amazing.”
As a former fly-half, Mapletoft admits that front-row play is the area of the game he knows least about.
However, he describes Opoku-Fordjour’s ability to play loosehead and tighthead as a “great attribute” and believes he could have a long career at the highest level.
Since starting his senior career in the early-1990s, Mapletoft says he has watched props evolve from being “technicians who knew the time of day” into players who use their physicality.
“Life’s experiential so you pick up those opportunities, you learn little things along the way. The more you play, the better you get,” he added, when asked about Opoku-Fordjour’s potential.
“Some of these lads are huge men and therefore they're able to hold their own at a young age just physically without necessarily learning all the tricks of the trade.
“If you can combine the two over a period of time, then that's quite exciting, isn't it?
“The reality of rugby is you need a scrum. It won’t win you the game, but it makes it awfully difficult to win if you don't have one.”
England A are due to play their Australian counterparts at Twickenham Stoop on Sunday, November 17.
Mapletoft will name his squad for the match on Wednesday and is expected to select a mix of experience and youth, with several players who excelled under him at U20 level potentially getting a chance to impress.
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Looking very bleak for Wales going into this year's 6 N. It will be an upset really if they win a single game. Only hope is maybe the Scots are weakened enough by injury and have a bad day....or Italy.
So the Irish team is declared, with Prendergast at 10. He will come under a lot of pressure, and I hope I am wrong about his ability at this stage of his career to handle it. At least Crowley is on the bench. I happy it is a 5/3 split.
McCarthy injured and out is a blow though. Henderson off the bench won't add as much as either Ryan or Beirne. No switch of Porter over to THP. Ringrose and Aki starting is possibly an indication of looking at a more aggressive defence profile when England have the ball. Henshaw and Ringrose finished against hopefully a tiring England. Interesting call playing Baird at 6....lineout prowess in place of O'Mahony ? Baird also brings great pace on any break.
Go to commentsI realize what Richie Mo'unga did and for that matter Fergus Burke. But please offer a alternative rather than rubbishing James O'Connor all the time. By the way Beauden is past it any way.
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