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Steve Borthwick responds to speculation over Kevin Sinfield's England future

Steve Borthwick (left) with Kevin Sinfield last Saturday (Photo by Alex Davidson/The RFU Collection via Getty Images)

Amid speculation that Steve Borthwick’s assistant coach Kevin Sinfield will step down from his England duties at the end of the World Cup, the head coach remained tight lipped when asked about the rumours this week.

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England head into their final match of the World Cup this Friday against Argentina in the bronze final- a repeat of their opening match of the tournament. Reports emerged after the semi-final loss to South Africa that the rugby league legend will be leaving Borthwick’s coaching staff after the World Cup with the imminent arrival of South Africa assistant coach Felix Jones.

When quizzed about Sinfield’s future after England’s captain’s run at the Stade de France on Thursday, Borthwick said that he has learnt in his time in charge of England that it is “unwise” to comment on all rumours that circulate.

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Siya Kolisi talks about the Springboks facing off against the All Blacks in the World Cup Final

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Siya Kolisi talks about the Springboks facing off against the All Blacks in the World Cup Final

“I’ve been in this job nine, 10 months,” the former Leicester Tigers head coach said. “One thing I’ve learnt very quickly it’s impossible and unwise to comment on every rumour and piece of speculation that is thrown out. I make no comment.”

Sinfield joined England as defence coach alongside Borthwick at the end of 2022 following the departure of Eddie Jones. Though it took a while to see results, Sinfield’s work with England has bore fruit this World Cup.

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England have conceded the joint-fewest tries of any team at the World Cup, with seven, despite going deep into the tournament. On top of that, they completed 86% of the tackles against South Africa last weekend, their highest success-rate so far this World Cup, which shows the progress they have made throughout the tournament.

Having lost to England 27-10 on the opening weekend of the tournament, lock Maro Itoje is all too aware that the Pumas will be seeking revenge on Friday in Paris.

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“We are competing for third place at this World Cup, so there’s loads to be motivated about,” the Saracen said.

“I guess, from their point of view, we beat them earlier they’ll probably want to turn that around.

“It’s going to be a great contest. Two teams coming off the back of a loss wanting to get it right.”

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Comments

3 Comments
f
finn 386 days ago

I strongly suspect Sinfield will stay on

M
Mark 392 days ago

Sinfield has done a lot of successful coaching,both with England &Tigers
But I have always thought it would only be temporary.
He would be happier moving back to Wigan to continue with his charity work MND

T
Tom 393 days ago

So Sinfield is gone then, that's a shame and a bit odd.

Borthers would have fiercely denied this otherwise.

Sad to see him go after the England effort Vs SA… from a physicality and defensive point of view we're making progress.

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Hellhound 15 minutes ago
France put World Cup pain behind them with unbeaten run in November

France is starting to look like they are finally over their WC headache, although they were lucky that NZ had a very bad game. The Argies as usual is one game good, the next bad. If they can sort that out and be more consistent, they could become contenders for the WC.


NZ, Argentina (if they are more consistent), and now the Wallabies too is in an upward curve (can they be consistent?), as well as Fiji(as inconsistent as Argentina) looks like possible contenders. The Boks will be as usual a huge threat to defend their title. Things are looking up for the South, so the North should rightfully beware of the Southern Hemisphere threat.


With the French looking dangerous, the English with their close runs (mostly a mindset problem) and the Scottish seems to be the NH main contenders. The Irish is good, but not excellent anymore. They are more overbearing and with their glory days mostly gone with old players hanging on by a thread, by 2027 if they don't start adding in the younger players, they won't make it past yet another WC Quarter final. The problem is that their youngsters, while good is nothing special.


That is just 8 teams without the Irish that can become real WC contenders. Lots of hickups to be sorted still for these teams, excluding the Boks to become a threat. Make no mistake, the top Tier is much closer than people realise and the 2027 WC will be a really great WC, possibly the best contended WC ever.

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