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Henry Arundell's Six Nations hopes in serious doubt

(Photo by Will Russell/The RFU Collection via Getty Images)

Henry Arundell, one of the most exciting talents in English rugby, has undergone surgery on a foot injury which puts his availability for England’s Six Nations campaign in serious doubt.

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Arundell, 20, was injured playing for London Irish against Gloucester at the end of October and it was hoped the problem could be treated without surgery but the wing had an operation on Monday and now faces six weeks in a boot before can think about trying to regain fitness.

Capped three times as replacement on England’s successful summer tour to Australia, Arundell, who scored a try on his debut, could have added much needed pace to Eddie Jones’s under fire squad. After a disappointing Autumn series in which England managed just one win against Japan, Jones will have been expected to bolster his Six Nations squad with more pace.

However, Declan Kidney, the London Irish director of rugby, revealed the latest injury set back for Arundell at today’s media briefing and said: “He has had surgery on Monday and will be out for a number of weeks. The foot injury he got prior to the November tests didn’t respond as we hoped and it was necessary to have surgery and he will be in a boot for six weeks and then we will have to see how he recovers.

“He has shown good healing powers in the past but it will be the New Year before he starts playing again.”

Kidney is backing in-form Irish winger Ollie Hassell-Collins to offer England both pace and physicality for the Six Nations but accepts there are number of other options including Adam Radwan who will be in the Newcastle side at Brentford on Saturday in the Premiership. Kidney added: “Ollie brings physicality to the teams he plays in and makes line breaks but I am not putting pressure saying he should be a shoe-in (for England) but he is putting his hand up. His attitude to improve is a strength.”

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NH 1 hour ago
Battle of the breakdown to determine Wallabies’ grand slam future

Nice one John. I agree that defence (along with backfield kick receipt/positioning) remains their biggest issue, but that I did see some small improvements in it despite the scoreline like the additional jackal attempts from guys like tupou and the better linespeed in tight. But, I still see two issues - 1) yes they are jackaling, but as you point out they aren't slowing the ball down. I think some dark arts around committing an extra tackler, choke tackles, or a slower roll away etc could help at times as at the moment its too easy for oppo teams to get quick ball (they miss L wright). Do you have average ruck speed? I feel like teams are pretty happy these days to cop a tackle behind the ad line if they still get quick ball... and 2) I still think the defence wide of the 3-4th forward man out looks leaky and disconnected and if sua'ali'i is going to stay at 13 I think we could see some real pressure through that channel from other teams. The wallabies discipline has improved and so they are giving away less 3 pt opportunities and kicks into their 22 via penalty. Now, they need to be able to force teams to turnover the ball and hold them out. They scramble quite well once a break is made, but they seem to need the break to happen first... Hunter, marika and daugunu were other handy players to put ruck pressure on. Under rennie, they used to counter ruck quite effectively to put pressure on at the b/down as well.

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