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Players defend Steve Borthwick as England future questioned

By PA
Ben Earl takes a moment - PA

Freddie Steward insists the players and not Steve Borthwick are at fault for the autumn washout that has piled pressure on England’s head coach.

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Steward believes Borthwick has been “let down” by his team after South Africa clinched a 29-20 victory on Saturday, completing a clean sweep of defeats by the southern hemisphere giants after New Zealand and Australia also stormed Allianz Stadium this month.

Borthwick has revealed there will changes for the climax to the series against Eddie Jones’ Japan on Sunday, among them the return of Tom Curry and Immanuel Feyi-Waboso from concussion.

Video Spacer

Steve Borthwick and Jamie George react to loss against Springboks

Video Spacer

Steve Borthwick and Jamie George react to loss against Springboks

Japan, ranked 14th in the world, are expected to end England’s five-Test losing run that has left Borthwick facing questions over his future. Steward believes it is the players who should be held responsible.

“We almost let Steve down. I don’t think the fault should go to him at all. The fault probably lies in our hands,” the Leicester full-back said.

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“As players we had a gameplan that put us in position to win that game. We’ve got to look at ourselves as to why we didn’t pull away at the end and go back ahead.

“Steve is an unbelievable coach. He has a great rugby brain, is an unbelievable motivator and man manager. As players we believe in everything he’s bringing to this team.”

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England led 20-19 until Handre Pollard landed a long range penalty in the 59th minute but their challenge fell away in the final quarter due to a high error count and indiscipline.

“Steve’s honestly been fantastic. I’ve rarely seen a coach who has as much devotion as him. We need to do better by him. We need to finish off these games,” lock Maro Itoje said.

“The staff have been brilliant throughout this campaign. We’ve got one more week to go. It’s on us as players and leaders to take responsibility and turn this thing around.

Steve Borthwick <a href=
Freddie Steward ” width=”1920″ height=”1323″ /> Freddie Steward takes a high ball – PA
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“I feel there are certain areas where we have improved. But ultimately we haven’t got the results. We are in a results business.”

England lost in the dying moments against New Zealand and Australia before fading against the Springboks. Borthwick believes his players were undercooked entering the campaign.

“We have played against a series of very good teams that have come off the back of the Rugby Championship, so they are Test match hardened,” Borthwick said.

“At the start of this series, you looked at the condition of the players and it wasn’t quite where it needed to be for teams stepping straight into Test match rugby.

“These young players can be a top Test rugby side. These young players have only played a handful of Test matches.

“They’ve gone against the double world champions when some had never played against South Africa before and they’ll take belief that they can compete against the best in the world.

“But what we have to do is make sure that belief turns into winning. That’s the biggest thing we have to do.”

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Comments

7 Comments
A
AA 30 days ago

Players defend Borthwick .


Well they would , considering he picks them .

They defended Eddie too..

We can all see that after 2 years ,while the play has speeded up ,the organisation is hopeless.

If you keep taking the captain off early , well what do you expect .

How many vice captains on the field ??

Too many.

England are almost there and will do well in the 6 nations ,but Borthwick has to decide his best team and keep it.

Not change it about and disrupt the momentum .

Smith has had to readjust to 2 number 9,,s and position on successive weekends . Madness.

Borthwick needs to change his thinking or go.


J
JK 30 days ago

For whatever reason England is not clicking. Either bin the coach or change out some of the players. More of the same will yield the same results - some good play, some crap but general inconsistency


England has the population, wealth and history to be a top 5 rugby nation but it's not currently. Start from reality

M
Matt Perry 30 days ago

I'd well believe that Borthwick has the rugby brain for the job.


Unfortunately he's given all the key coaching positions to his totally unqualified mates and clearly can't execute whatever vision he has.


He could be the world's biggest rugby genius but he's obviously not a very good head coach at this level.

M
Mike 29 days ago

This. He's not experienced, even as a club head coach never mind at international level, and he's hired insufficiently experienced assistants. I just don't see the friction or challenge within that group somehow to get to the right decisions. All looks way too cosy.


Assuming that the RFU don't wish to sack SB, which I don't think they will, then they need to put their hands in their pockets and hire an experienced "Director of Rugby" to mentor the entire coaching group until they can make robust enough decisions.

B
BH 30 days ago

Interesting take, especially as Borthwick has just come out and said his players are not fit enough for test rugby.


Borthwick claims players not fit enough for Test rugby after South Africa loss | England rugby union team | The Guardian

I
Icefarrow 30 days ago

Gotta love a coach who'll throw his players under the bus instead of taking the loss on his chin. No wonder his team lacks confidence with a bellend like him in charge.

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Mzilikazi 1 hour ago
Does the next Wallabies coach have to be an Australian?

Great read on a fascinating topic, Nick. Thanks as always.


My gut feel is that Joe Schmidt won't carry on through to the next RWC. He is at the stage, and age, in his life , that a further two years in a very high pressure coaching job would not be a good thing for either himself or his family. The fact that he remains based in Taupo seems a significant pointer, I would have thought. I believe he has a round trip of 12 hrs driving just to get on a plane to Australia.


Amongst the many good things Joe Schmidt has achieved to this point is that the WB's are now a more enticing prospect to coach going forward.


Tbh, the only Australian coach I would see stepping up and developing the WB's further would be Les Kiss. He has far more in his CV than any other Australian. He now has 23 years of coaching Union,starting with a defence role with the Boks, then back to Australia with the Waratahs. Overseas again for nine years in Ireland, which included 5 years as defence coach with the national team, during which he was interim head coach for two games, both wins. His last years in Ireland were with Ulster, even then a team beginning a decline. So that spell was his least successful. Finally the spell with London Irish, where I felt Kiss was doing very well, till the club collapsed financially.


Of the other Australian options, Dan McKellar has a lot to prove post the year with Leicester. Stephen Larkham has not, in my view, yet shown outstanding qualities as a coach. Nether man has anything close to Kiss's experience. Some may see this as being harsh on both men, ignoring good work they have done. But is how I see it.


Looking outside Australia, I would see Vern Cotter as a strong possibility, if interested. His time with Scotland was outstanding. Ronan O'Gara, I would think, might well be another possibility, though he has no international experience. Jake White ? Maybe .

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