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Andy Goode's Rassie Erasmus to England Tweet breaks the rugby internet

South Africa's director of rugby Rassie Erasmus checks out the conditions ahead of the Autumn International friendly rugby union match between Wales and South Africa (Photo by Geoff Caddick / AFP) (Photo by GEOFF CADDICK/AFP via Getty Images)

Former England flyhalf Andy Goode has dropped a speculative Tweet around the timing of Rassie Erasmus theoretically taking over team England, if such a move were to take place.

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France secured their long-awaited Grand Slam after beating Eddie Jones’ England 25 – 13 in the Stade de France.

England enjoyed a dominant third quarter of the game, asking serious questions of France, but Les Bleus delivered a powerful blow 18 minutes from time.

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And it was their captain and world player of the year Antoine Dupont who came to the party, surging clear after taking number eight Gregory Alldritt’s pass and brushing off an attempted Jamie George tackle for his team’s third try.

Jaminet converted, leaving England 25-13 adrift and France edging ever closer to a Grand Slam.

England refused to go quietly, and replacement back-row forward Alex Dombrandt was held up over the French line following impressive work by his fellow forwards.

It was a reminder to France that they could not switch off, but they entered the final minutes with a 12-point advantage.

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England continued to press and ask questions in arguably their best performance of the championship.

But France had done enough, winning 25-13 to end a 12-year wait for Six Nations title and Grand Slam glory, with their double triumph arriving just 18 months before hosting the World Cup.

It will inevitably lead to questions around Jones’ future with England, after another poor final placing in the annual tournament.

Some believe that Erasmus would make a good replacement for the Australian, and the dates appear to actually make a lot of sense.

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Goode tweeted: “Rassie Erasmus took over as Head Coach of South Africa on the 1st March 2018 and they won the World Cup 18 months later. Today is the 19th March and the World Cup is in 18 months, just saying’

Is it written in the stars?

SA Rugby don’t think so. They have said they don’t think Erasmus will leave his current role, which he is contracted to until after the 2023 Rugby World Cup.

SA Rugby president Mark Alexander told the Rapport newspaper earlier this month that there was no question of the controversial Erasmus leaving before helping the Springboks defend the title won in Japan in 2019 despite his name is being put forward to replace Jones.

“Rassie Erasmus and I have a good relationship, he will tell me something just the way it is. He has a contract with us until after the 2023 World Cup (in France). He is an honourable man and will respect that.”

additional reporting PA

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1 Comment
M
Moby 976 days ago

The RFU have confirmed that they remain confident in EJ. That's it then.
Now post WC 23, the new head coach will have to be a native of England. England cant risk another 4 years with a foreign coach and potentially fail when there are numerous home bred individuals with perfect pedigree to win it in 2027. Erasmus will head off for sure but I think Ireland or Wales will be his next job after the WC.

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Hellhound 15 minutes ago
The Springboks have something you don't have

Rassie has done very well with the Boks. The well will certainly not dry up soon. The amount of young talent coming through, that don't even stand a chance of making it in before 2027, is just absolutely amazing.


However, Rassie has proven to be a rugby genius. He will never rest on his laurels. It's why he keeps evolving tactics, keeping everyone on their toes. He doesn't underestimate any team. He is very aware of just how close the top teams is.


There will be no complacency not will he relax with his main stars. He is very astute, knowing that his team is getting older and thus giving the younger players much more playtime than what any other coach would do.


By the time the 2027 WC comes around, he will be prepared to defend his title and he knows one bad day will end a triple WC crown. Competition is that close. The Boks are in transition, even though it doesn't look like it.


After the 2027 WC, most of the double (possible triple) WC champs players will become unavailable due to retirement from international rugby. Rassie is already preparing the replacements, getting caps under their belts.


The top teams is just too close to underestimate and no Bok will be allowed to get complacent. Although they are by far the current most successful team and clearly the best by miles, they are not undefeatable.


Very tough to beat yes, but they can lose on the day. I am not worried. The youngsters by 2027 WC will be experienced with lots of years ahead and that should be a warning to the rest of the pack biting at their heels. Love them or hate them, but you have to admire the Boks. They truely deserve to be top dogs currently.

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