Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

England's Dan Robson undergoing medical checks after falling ill in camp

(Photo by Ashley Western/MB Media/Getty Images)

England’s replacement scrum-half Dan Robson is undergoing medical checks after being ruled out of Saturday’s Guinness Six Nations clash with Scotland through illness.

ADVERTISEMENT

Robson was poised to win his third cap as Ben Youngs’ understudy for the climax to the tournament at Twickenham but will now be replaced on the bench by Saracens’ Ben Spencer.

“Dan is not available and has left camp. He’s got some investigations and consultations going on. We’re trying to investigate exactly what’s wrong,” forwards coach Steve Borthwick said.

Spencer won both of his caps as a replacement on last year’s tour to South Africa and Borthwick views his former Saracens team-mate as a ready-made replacement for Robson.

“I was fortunate enough to play with Ben. He’s a good player. He’s fast, fit and has real good fundamentals of the game. He can pass well and kicks well,” Borthwick added.

“He’s had time with us last year and knows our principles of play. He’s played with and against a lot of the players here, so knows them well.”

PA

Video Spacer
ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

E
Ed the Duck 59 minutes ago
Was Dublin drubbing the end of an era or a bump in the road for Ireland?

You are correct about them having some level of potential talent pipeline, at least so far as u20 success and Leinster’s academy indicates but that’s the point, it’s potential talent. And that means there are two factors at play: 1. there’s no guarantee on where the ceiling is for them 2. it takes time to be fully realised. One thing that Prendergast is proving beyond doubt is that oven baked superstars just don’t exist, JAS for oz is ofc the exception to prove the rule. Also need to take into account the reliance of project players in key positions for Ireland and that channel is effectively closed to them now with the 5yr rule, which only increases the demands further still on the pipeline to step up its production. IF they succeed in the medium term, and it’s an incredibly large if, then fair play because it will require greater success across every level of the irfu structures than Ireland have ever been able to deliver at any other time.


With the volume of key players Ireland need to replace already PLUS those not far from departing, there is no way they are positioned to maintain top 2 world ranking levels through the coming years. Just compare and contrast with SA, where Rassie is totally in control of a coaching machine vs irelands disconnect now that Schmidt & Lancaster have gone, and the same goes for their match day squads. SA could name two separate teams and potentially meet each other in the final, not a cat in hell’s chance that applies to Ireland, now or at any time!

16 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ Was Dublin drubbing the end of an era or a bump in the road for Ireland? Was Dublin drubbing the end of an era or a bump in the road for Ireland?
Search