Northern Edition

Select Edition

Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

The Eddie Jones tough love that Ollie Lawrence is still grateful of

By PA
Ollie Lawrence on England duty last Saturday versus South Africa (Photo by Paul Harding/Getty Images)

Ollie Lawrence has insisted Eddie Jones’ tough love shaped him into the player he has become as England’s former head coach prepares for his Allianz Stadium return with Japan. Jones gave Lawrence his debut as a 21-year-old in 2021 but months later he offered an unflattering appraisal of the barnstorming centre in his book, Leadership: Lessons from my Life in Rugby.

ADVERTISEMENT

“He is still a kid, only 21, but the way that some of the media raves about him you would think he is already assured of becoming one of the best players in the world,” Jones wrote. “He might do that, one day, but his attitude was not hungry or disciplined enough.”

Lawrence was frozen out in the last year and a half of Jones’ reign but once the Australian was sacked, his international career was revived by Steve Borthwick. Under Borthwick, the hard running Bath three-quarter has been an ever-present and is now cemented in the choice midfield alongside Henry Slade.

Video Spacer

England’s tactics against South Africa over 80 mins | RPTV

Boks Office, with guest Steven Kitshoff, discuss England’s loss to the Springboks. Watch the full show on RugbyPass TV now

Watch now

Video Spacer

England’s tactics against South Africa over 80 mins | RPTV

Boks Office, with guest Steven Kitshoff, discuss England’s loss to the Springboks. Watch the full show on RugbyPass TV now

Watch now

Jones faces England at Twickenham next Sunday for the first time since his departure amid claims from Danny Care that he is a “despot” who oversaw a “toxic” environment, but Lawrence has come to appreciate his management style.

“I’ll always be grateful to Eddie because he gave me my first England cap. He is one of those coaches, as we all know, that likes to challenge players,” Lawrence said. “There was a point in my career where he challenged me on my attitude and whether I was working hard enough to warrant being in the squad and whether I was pushing myself enough in training.

Team Form

Last 5 Games

0
Wins
2
5
Streak
1
12
Tries Scored
19
-24
Points Difference
-71
2/5
First Try
3/5
3/5
First Points
3/5
2/5
Race To 10 Points
2/5

“At the time you can look at it and be frustrated and be, ‘Oh, the boss isn’t on my side here’. Back then I was probably a bit annoyed. I was probably like, ‘Why is he on my case so much, why is he on my case?’ But now I look back three or four years on and think that was probably the best thing that I needed then.

“I’d come into an England squad at a young age, things had gone well for me at Worcester and then you are on the international stage and you are with all these players, so there is another level you have to raise your game to.

ADVERTISEMENT

“Maybe at the time I didn’t see that but looking back I can definitely see why he may have thought that I wasn’t pushing myself as much as I needed to. Hopefully that lesson back then has helped me to be where I am now.”

Related

Women’s Rugby World Cup England 2025 tickets application phase is now open! Apply now.

ADVERTISEMENT

LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

2 Comments
F
Flankly 3 hours ago

Nice to hear more balanced commentary on Eddie's leadership of England. I still wish we could have witnessed what he was cooking up for the 2023 RWC. Fans did not like him, some of the suits did not like him, and the outcomes from his experiments in 2022 were certainly hard for folks to swallow. But we know he had a plan, and it's a shame we never saw him finish what he started.

s
sean.kilfoyle 45 mins ago

well spoken and 100% agreed! The glimpse on the tail end of that Eng NZ Autumn series match in 2022 was something else.

Load More Comments

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

m
mJ 19 minutes ago
Key Wallabies trio running hot a year after being left in cold

The attack has had patches where they’ve just gone lateral without front foot ball and realistically the big difference in this tour is the forwards have won the battles and the backs are reaping the reward. The maul was really good and when they went a man down to back the maul and get a couple of tries gave them a good buffer and Wales had to chase the game and that opened the game up and created more opportunities for the backs. Really AAA backing the maul and Skelton ripping the Welsh maul apart was the game changer. All three of the players mentioned have been playing well. Lolesio probably had his best game against the Welsh and good to see him get some space, have some confidence in his game and get some reward. Wright is really in the groove now after a pretty ordinary RC. Ikitau has put two very good games together and would like to see him at 12 again. Skelton and Salakaia-Loto I thought were hugely influential, Uru supported Skelton really well at the lineout and mauls and Valentini just did his thing. Valentini is just so consistent and he doesn’t overplay his role. And McReight just gets through a mountain of work and just goes and goes. He is a key defensive player, link player, key support player and chases everything. The Wallabies defence still needs improving but it’s like a switch has been flicked when they have the ball. The forwards are getting some front foot ball and we are playing with width in the backs. The backs are passing rather than one off. They do really need to back it up again this weekend against a good Scottish team.

4 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING New Zealand miss out in player of the year awards New Zealand miss out in Player of the Year awards
Search