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England explain their recall of fit-again Tom Curry to face Japan

By PA
Tom Curry is back in the England team to face Japan on Sunday (Photo by Andrew Kearns/CameraSport via Getty Images)

England have defended their decision to recall Tom Curry for Sunday’s Autumn Nations Series clash with Japan even though he was knocked out against Australia a fortnight ago. Curry will reprise his destructive ‘Kamikaze kids’ partnership with Sam Underhill for the first time since the 2023 Rugby World Cup after being chosen at blindside flanker at the expense of Chandler Cunningham-South.

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The selection has been made despite the Sale back row sustaining his second concussion of the season and fifth in two years when his head struck the knee of Australia’s Rob Valentini while making a tackle on November 9, forcing him to miss last Saturday’s defeat by South Africa.

Immanuel Feyi-Waboso also sustained a head injury against the Wallabies but his recovery has not progressed as smoothly so the Exeter wing has been stood down for the Springboks and Japan games. Head coach Steve Borthwick said that Curry has passed his graduated return to play protocols and is “desperate to be involved” in the Allianz Stadium showdown.

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“The welfare health of players is paramount. Tom’s gone through all the protocols, a number of different consultations, and independent specialist consultations. The process has been very thorough,” Borthwick explained.

“Every player is always treated on an individual basis. Manny was unavailable for selection because he wasn’t ready. I had a conversation with Tom, a player I have so much respect for, about what he wants to do. He is a player who is desperate to play this weekend. He feels great and is raring to go.”

Team Form

Last 5 Games

0
Wins
2
5
Streak
1
12
Tries Scored
19
-24
Points Difference
-71
2/5
First Try
3/5
3/5
First Points
3/5
2/5
Race To 10 Points
2/5

Curry’s return is one of two changes to the side toppled 29-20 by South Africa with George Furbank’s promotion at full-back coming at the expense of Freddie Steward, who was recalled against the Springboks on the strength of his aerial game but has now been dropped from the 23 altogether.

Japan’s high-tempo playing style is designed to stress defences with the ball in hand and through short kicks, placing less of a premium on Steward’s dominance in the air. Borthwick will be hoping to see more from Furbank, who will act as a second playmaker to Marcus Smith, following his quiet performances against New Zealand and the Wallabies earlier this month.

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“Japan want to play fast, we want to play fast. We want to do some different things in the way we attack, hence the selection at full-back,” Borthwick said. Asher Opoku-Fordjour is poised to make his Test debut off the bench despite only being called into the training squad when Joe Marler announced his Test retirement in the build up to the opener against New Zealand.

Opoku-Fordjour, a member part of the England U20 team that won the World Rugby Championship during the summer, will provide cover at tighthead prop but has the rare ability of being an option on both sides of the scrum.

“In the first training session three weeks ago, Asher side-stepped two players and made a line break. You start seeing straight away that this a player with incredible athleticism,” Borthwick said. “Joe Marler and Dan Cole gave me a recommendation for him. They said, ‘This guy’s a really good scrummager’. Then you start going, ‘Right, there is something in him’.”

Test centurion Cole has been dropped from the 23 to make room for Opoku-Fordjour on the bench, but Borthwick insists this is not the end of the road for the 37-year-old. “I want to make sure that Dan Cole can continue being an England player for a long time. I sense no hesitation in him. He enjoys being part of the programme,” he said.

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Borthwick will on Sunday lock horns with his predecessor as England boss and former coaching mentor Eddie Jones, who is now in charge of Japan. “We know what a great coach he is, what a mind he has, what a great tactician he is. He is incredibly competitive,” Borthwick said.

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Comments

1 Comment
F
FC 4 hours ago

Bongi is gone, so he can relax now.

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J
JW 1 hour ago
Let's be real about these All Blacks

I didn't really get the should tone from it, but maybe because I was just reading it as my own thoughts.


What I read it as was examples of how they played well enough in every game to be able to win it.


Yeah I dunno if Ben wouldn't see it that way (someone else would for sure need to point it out to him though), I'm more in the Ben not appreciating that those close losses werent one off scenarios camp. Sure you can look at dubious decisions causing them to have to play with 14 or 13 men at the death as viable reasons but even in the games they won without such difficulties they made a real struggle of it (compared to how good some of their first half play was). This kind of article where you trying to point out the 3 losses really would most likely have been wins only really makes sense/works when your other performances make those 3 games (or endings) stand out.


There might have been a sentence here and there to ensure some good comment numbers but when he's signing off the article by saying things like ..

Whilst these All Blacks aren’t blowing teams off the park like during the 2010s, they are nuggety and resourceful and don’t wilt. They are prepared to win the hard way, accumulating points by any means necessary.

and..

The other top sides in the world struggled to put them away. France and South Africa both could have well been defeated on home soil.

I don't really see it. Always making sure people are upto date with the SH standing/perspective! NZ went through some tough times with so many different perspectives and reasons why, but then it was.. amusing how.. behind everyone was once they turned a corner. More of these 'unfortunate' results returned against SA and France at the start of the RWC which made it extra tasty to catch other teams out when they did bring it. So that created some 'conscious' perspective that I just kept going and sharing re thoughts on similar predicaments of other teams, I had been really confident that Wallabies displays vs NZ were real, that the Argentines can backup their thing against Aus and SA (and so obviously the rest), and current one is that England are actually consistent and improving with their attack (which everyone should get onboard with), and I'm expecting a more dominant display against Japan (even though they should have more of their experienced internationals for this one) that highlights further growth from July. 👍

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