Where Maro Itoje believes England are going wrong
Maro Itoje admits England must urgently address their habit of starting new campaigns with a defeat as they once again face the task of rebuilding from a position of weakness.
Argentina claimed only their second win at Twickenham on Sunday after ending a 10-Test losing run in the fixture with a 30-29 victory in the Autumn Nations Series opener.
It was deja vu for England, meanwhile, as they emulated the Six Nations and July tour of Australia by falling at the first hurdle – a trend that head coach Eddie Jones blames on a lack of preparation time.
With their players scattered across the globe and some even in action on the previous weekend, the Pumas may raise an eyebrow at Jones’ claim, especially given the cohesion they displayed.
If the pattern continues into the World Cup next year England could be facing disaster and Itoje knows it cannot be allowed to continue.
“We have 11 clubs now and everyone is playing a different style of rugby, everyone has a different thought process,” Itoje said.
“We haven’t perhaps been so good at flicking the switch to England mode. And that’s something we need to get better at, because this is not something we want to embrace or continue any longer.
“One thing is being aware of it and we know that’s becoming a bit of a trend. We need to get back on England time, England mode and the England way of thinking a bit sooner, and create that teamship a bit sooner than we have sometimes.
“It can take a week or two to get going but we need to get going from the off. The group is tight and together off the field, but we need to translate that on to the field.
“No one’s going to be shouting at each other, or calling people out. It’s just being honest with each other about where we were good, where we were bad and where we need to improve. We all want to improve because we don’t want results like this.”
Japan are next up on Saturday before heavyweights New Zealand and South Africa swagger into the capital looking to claim statement wins ahead of the World Cup.
Jones’ England are back in the crosshairs of critics, most notably a disapproving Sir Clive Woodward, but the Australian head coach believes that will have a galvanising effect.
“We’re a team who responds really well to pressure, that’s the character of the team. It has been historically for England,” Jones said.
England have been lifted by the unexpected return to fitness of hooker Jamie George.
George was expected to miss the entire campaign after breaking two metatarsals on club duty for Saracens against Leicester on October 1, the initial prognosis a 10-to-12-week period of recovery.
But the Lions front row has been included in a 36-man training squad for Saturday’s visit of Japan to Twickenham with England confirming he is available for selection.
Back three reinforcements have also arrived with Tommy Freeman making a successful return from a foot injury for Northampton against Exeter on Friday, while Jonny May is available after recovering from an elbow problem.
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No just because the personal is much better than last year. I've shown no antagonism of Crusader players, you must be confusing me with someone else.
I have critized Razor for picking players he knows occasionally?
I said I'm not surprised because of his style, he's more a grinder player like Cane, not going to show up on peoples radar until you see how bad the other choices are. This year players like Clarke have been on fire and just show a bit more.
Are you one of those posters continually taking it easy on Razor because he doesn't have his Crusaders stars available? Do you think the rugby world is going to up to him suddenly once Mo'unga returns? lol
Go to commentsJohn you have been beating this drum for a couple of years, if you get proven right get back to us.
The last recent and decent Aussie coach was Ewen McKenzie, he was undermined and forced out by a couple of slimy Aussie players who were given a free pass when they should have been disciplined.
So our history since McQueen is very checkered and it seems to make little difference whether we have an Aussie coach or a Kiwi coach. The players have been entitled for a long time and we had to hit bottom to get them back into reality and to stop thinking it is all about them.
Cheika was an OK coach but his 'go our and destroy the opposition' tactic worked for a while and then didn't.
Please give me a list of great Aussie coaches that I have missed.
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