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Blair on Big Duhan's return and Edinburgh's 'ruthless' edge

By PA
Duhan van der Merwe made a try scoring return for Edinburgh (Getty Images)

Mike Blair was pleased to see Edinburgh display their “ruthless” side as they scored eight tries in an emphatic 53-8 win over Benetton on Saturday.

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The bonus-point victory – which included a double from Duhan van der Merwe on his second debut for the club – stopped a three-game losing streak and took the men from the Scottish capital up to ninth in the United Rugby Championship.

“We had a quality side out and the expectation on us is to do well,” head coach Blair told Edinburgh’s website.

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“I want us to enjoy being out here, enjoy each other’s company and working hard for each other and winning games.

“Part of the enjoyment is going into the dressing room feeling we have been ruthless and not taken the foot off the throat. I was pleased with that.”

Blair was encouraged to see Scotland wing Van der Merwe make a positive impact as he marked his return to the club from Worcester with two tries.

“Duhan got a bit of ball and was shrugging guys off in the first half but not getting anywhere,” said the head coach.

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“He was boxed into a hole at times, but once he got a little bit of space he showed what he can do.”

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Edinburgh led 12-3 at the break after playing against the wind in the first half before turning the screw in the second period.

“We controlled territory in that first half as well as you can into the wind,” said Blair.

“Then when we got points after half-time it gave us some impetus and we were able to stay on top of Benetton after that.

“They made a few changes from last week, but they had quality players and an international front row, so they still had a strong team and still needed putting away, but our energy and intent was better (than in previous games).”

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Tom 1 hour ago
England player ratings vs South Africa | 2024 Autumn Nations Series

That 2019 performance was literally the peak in attacking rugby under Eddie. If you thought that was underwhelming, the rest of it was garbage.


I totally get what you're saying and England don't need or have any God given right to the best coaches in the world... But I actually think the coaches we do have are quite poor and for the richest union in the world, that's not good enough. 


England are competitive for sure but with the talent pool up here and the funds available, we should be in the top 3. At the very least we should be winning six nations titles on a semi-regular basis. If Ireland can, England definitely should.


England's attack coach (Richard Wigglesworth) is Borthwick's mate from his playing days at Saracens, who he brought to Leicester with him when he became coach. Wigglesworth was a 9 who had no running or passing game, but was the best box kicker in the business. He has no credentials to be an attack coach and I've seen nothing to prove otherwise. Aside from Marcus Smith’s individual brilliance, our collective attack has looked very uninspiring.

 

England's defence coach (Joe El-Abd) is Borthwick's housemate from uni, who has never been employed as a defence coach before. He's doing the job part time while he's still the head coach of a team in the second division of French rugby who have an awful defensive record. England's defence has gone from being brutally efficient under Felix Jones to as leaky as a colander almost overnight.


If Borthwick brings in a new attack and defence coach then I'll absolutely get behind him but his current coaches seem to be the product of nepotism. He's brought in people he's comfortable with because he lacks confidence as an international head coach and they aren't good enough for international rugby.


England are competitive because they do some things really well, mostly they front up physically, make a lot of big hits, have a solid kicking game, a good lineout, good maul, Marcus Smith and some solid forwards. A lot of what we do well I would ascribe to Borthwick personally. I don't think he's a bad coach, I think he lacks imagination and is overly risk averse. He needs coaches who will bring a point of difference.


I guess my point is, yes England are competitive, but we’re not aiming for competitive and I honestly don't believe this coaching setup has what it takes to make us any better than competitive.


On the plus side it looks like we have an amazing crop of young players coming through. Some of them who won the u20 world cup played for England A against Australia A on the weekend and looked incredible... Check out the highlights on youtube.

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