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England's Owen Farrell has hearing date confirmed

By PA
Owen Farrell of England reacts during the Summer International match between England and Wales at Twickenham Stadium on August 12, 2023 in London, England. (Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Owen Farrell will learn on Tuesday if he is to miss England’s critical World Cup opener against Argentina after he was sent off for a dangerous tackle against Wales.

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Farrell’s shoulder-led challenge to the head of Taine Basham in Saturday’s 19-17 victory at Twickenham was upgraded from a yellow card to red by the ‘Bunker’ review system.

England’s captain must now appear before a video disciplinary hearing that begins on Tuesday morning to find out the length of his suspension.

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The mid-range sanction for a dangerous tackle is six games and given he received a three-match ban for the same offence in January, on top of five matches in 2020 and two in 2016, it is doubtful he will be treated leniently by the disciplinary process.

Fixtures against Ireland and Fiji complete England’s warm-up schedule for the World Cup before their group campaign is launched with a pivotal group clash with Argentina in Marseille on September 9.

Steve Borthwick now faces the likely prospect of being without his skipper and talisman for the toughest opponents in Pool D, while his participation against Japan, Chile and Samoa are also in question.

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Henry Arundell, Freddie Steward and Ellis Genge were shown yellow cards too and at one point England were reduced to 12 men, although that merely inspired an audacious comeback expertly directed by Farrell’s replacement George Ford.

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Courtney Lawes, the frontrunner to become captain if Farrell is unavailable, admits that despite an escape act that showed remarkable resilience, the disciplinary implosion must be addressed.

“There aren’t many teams who would win that game, so we can take a lot of positives from it,” Lawes said.

“At the same time it’s not good enough going down to 12 men. If we keep putting ourselves in situations like that, we’re not likely to do as well as we did.

“We’ve got a lot to learn but it’s great to show everyone our strength in character so early and it gives us confidence to push on and get things right so that the next time we’re out there we get one step better.

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“Sometimes you’ve got to find a way to win and we certainly did that against Wales. We will do our very best to take it forward and keep on improving.”

Farrell’s looming absence justifies Borthwick’s decision to pick three fly-halves in his World Cup squad and it was Ford who took centre stage in an unlikely comeback, his match-winning penalty only one element of a masterclass in game management.

“This win is going to be big for us. You can’t put a value on stuff like that,” Ford said.

“However you train and whatever scenarios you train, it’s not like it is in the heat of the moment when you have three men in the sin-bin, are points down and under the sticks.

“You can never replicate that and this gives us unbelievable belief, a real solid platform to know what we can do.

“Traditional English rugby is set-piece orientated, so getting on top there to be able to play the game we want to play and we’ll take some real belief from that.”

Ford insists England, who are sweating on the fitness of ankle-injury victim Jack van Poortvliet, will rally around Farrell.

“Owen’s not a player who would intentionally want to do that. We’ll get behind him, he’s our captain and our leader and he’ll be back,” Ford said.

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J
JW 1 hour ago
England player ratings vs South Africa | 2024 Autumn Nations Series

You know what I'm saying though right? Why does your team, of all teams, need to have the worlds best defensive coach before you'll support it (and enjoy doing so I should say)?


Watching back a replay of Eddie's Semi victory in 2019 I was surprised to see that picture you describe to be fair. First rewatch (years later) I was recalling an expectation of seeing some dynamic attack, NZ being blown away by it speed and power, but I didn't get that on rewatch of course (result was likely far more about NZ steady decline at that stage, and thinking the Final was the previous week). So I can accept you're bully dominance description of that era.


Ultimately I think you're right that there is just too much between our perspectives to find common ground. While I obviously don't get my fill day to day with English rugby I was happy to see some optimism finally developing around this side after the 6N. When I did watch those games I was even more surprised at how optimistic that optimism was!


I didn't think it was a great level, and wasn't surprised when NZ looked so dangerous against them in their first game. I'm hoping, for my own side as well, that you will start to understand how tough those games were soon though, and how good your side again looks against slightly easier opposition. With the type of attitude that you and everyone else are showing though, I'm just not sure England will get there in time. Before too many pitchforks take the stuffing out everyone. Which is a real shame, I think the rugby world could do with a powerful England game, domestically and internationally.


So while I can see where you're coming from and where you want to go, I just don't see their being anyway those perspectives find common ground, either.

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