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Lawes on the pain-killing jab that helped him get fit for Ireland defeat

England's Courtney Lawes

Courtney Lawes revealed a pain-killing jab to his ankle enabled him to spearhead England’s 24-12 Guinness Six Nations victory over Ireland at Twickenham.

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Lawes celebrated equalling Martin Johnson 84-appearance milestone as the country’s ninth most capped player by delivering a man-of-the-match performance full of thunderous carries and destructive hits that rattled the Irish.

It also came on the lock-cum-flanker’s 31st birthday, but was only made possible by the medical attention he received in Northampton last week when he was given permission to return home.

“I had a jab in my ankle last Tuesday. My ankle had been playing up for quite a while so it was really good to have that. It made a big difference,” Lawes said.

“I came back, trained really well this week and was able to use my footwork a lot more. It paid dividends against Ireland.”

Lawes was disappointed by his outing in Paris, according to head coach Eddie Jones, as France posted a comprehensive win on the opening weekend, and was demoted to the bench against Scotland a week later.

“I don’t think I went terribly against France. I was solid. I got my hands on the ball a lot, made a lot of tackles,” Lawes said.

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“I was obviously disappointed to get dropped, as you always are. Dropped or moved position. I was really happy to get on against Scotland, make some hits and then get the start again this week.”

Jones claimed his side were so dominant in their victory that they could have declared at half-time.

England surged up to second in the Guinness Six Nations table after George Ford, Elliot Daly and Luke Cowan-Dickie ran in tries in a one-sided demolition at Twickenham.

It was a display that had shades of the World Cup knockout wins against Australia and New Zealand last autumn and Jones warned Wales and Italy that his team have additional gears for the final two rounds.

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“We played with a lot of control. We read the conditions well, read the referee well and at half-time, if it was a cricket game, we could have declared,” Jones said.

“We’ve been building up. I got the preparation wrong for the France game and apologised for that.

“There’s a lot more to come. We played tough in the first 40 minutes, probably took our foot off a little bit in the second half, but Ireland were always going to get some ball.”

Watch: Ireland’s disappointment palpable in press conference after loss to England

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BH 23 minutes ago
TJ Perenara clarifies reference to the Treaty in All Blacks' Haka

Nope you're both wrong. Absolutely 100% wrong. You two obviously know nothing about NZ history, or the Treaty which already gives non-Māori "equal" rights. You are ignorant to what the Crown have already done to Māori. I've read it multiple times, attended the magnificent hikoi and witnessed a beautiful moment of Māori and non-Māori coming together in a show of unity against xenophobia and a tiny minority party trying to change a constitutional binding agreement between the Crown and Māori. The Crown have hundreds of years of experience of whitewashing our culture, trying to remove the language and and take away land and water rights that were ours but got stolen from. Māori already do not have equal rights in all of the stats - health, education, crime, etc. The Treaty is a binding constitutional document that upholds Māori rights and little Seymour doesn't like that. Apparently he's not even a Māori anyway as his tribes can't find his family tree connection LOL!!!


Seymour thinks he can change it because he's a tiny little worm with small man syndrome who represents the ugly side of NZ. The ugly side that wants all Māori to behave, don't be "radical" or "woke", and just put on a little dance for a show. But oh no they can't stand up for themselves against oppression with a bill that is a waste of time and money that wants to cause further division in their own indigenous country.


Wake up to yourselves. You can't pick and choose what parts of Māori culture you want and don't want when it suits you. If sport and politics don't mix then why did John Key do the 3 way handshake at the RWC 2011 final ceremony? Why is baldhead Luxon at ABs games promoting himself? The 1980s apartheid tour was a key example of sports and politics mixing together. This is the same kaupapa. You two sound like you support apartheid.

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