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The Martin Johnson pep talk that inspired Jack van Poortvliet

By PA
(Photo by David Rogers/Getty Images)

Jack van Poortvliet will enter World Cup year inspired by a talk from Martin Johnson that will fuel his drive to become the first-choice England scrum-half. Van Poortvliet had made the position his own by the end of the July tour to Australia and ended the series by replacing underperforming veteran Danny Care in the first half of the Sydney decider.

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However, with Ben Youngs and Raffi Quirke available once more for an Autumn Nations Series that opens against Argentina on November 6, the 21-year-old rookie – who plays with the calm of a seasoned campaigner – faces a battle to retain the jersey.

A breakthrough year for van Poortvliet included hearing Leicester great and England’s 2003 World Cup-winning captain Johnson speak to a group of ten emerging Tigers.

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“Everyone’s dream as a young player would be to play for England and ultimately, once you have played for England, you want to win the World Cup for England,” said van Poortvliet, one of the players who featured prominently some years ago in the RugbyPass Leicester academy documentary series.

“Martin is a very, very impressive individual and the way he speaks about his time as a player and his influence was extremely inspiring. I will remember some of the things he said for a very long time. He got a few smiles when he told some old stories. It was a good day to have a chat with him.

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“He spoke about how amazing that whole experience was of winning that World Cup. That just makes the taste for it grow even more. That is the ultimate goal for this squad – to win a World Cup. But we haven’t got many games until the World Cup so we have got to make sure we make the most of every game leading up to it and make sure we get better.

“I remember coming out of the talk extremely inspired. One thing I really took from it was that he never missed a session. He was on it all the time. It was a big thing we took as young players – if you want to improve you have got to be on it and focused in every session you do on the field.”

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While the man in possession of the scrum-half jersey, van Poortvliet faces fierce competition from Youngs and Quirke for the opener against the resurgent Pumas. Even after helping to rescue England from their dismal start in Sydney, he was given a stark reminder by Eddie Jones of the selection landscape.

“The big message Eddie had for me was you can’t take it easy now, you have got to keep pushing,” he said. “He was big on it always being harder the second time around and keeping your spot, so keep pushing and keep improving.”

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Flankly 26 minutes ago
Jake White: If I was England coach, I’d have been livid

I am not an England fan, but still very disappointed at what Borthwick is serving up. Regardless of winning or losing, they should be executing the basics at a world class level. That was the reason they replaced Eddie with Steve. After two years England has not built the solid foundations that the RFU were presumably after. Its hard to see it as anything other than a coaching problem.


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On Felix Jones, my guess is that they can't agree on a non-compete so they kept him on payroll for the duration of the Nov tests. The risk was that he would be hired by Rassie or Razor prior to the tests.


As relates to law tweaking, it feels like WR are more comfortable discussing changes in laws than insisting on implementation. For my money the biggest thing they could do is to be strict and consistent in officiating ruck behavior. In every game we see flopping, lazy lying, clearing of unbound players, making plays while off your feet, delays in placing the ball, side entry, offside line infringements, and similar nonsense. It's really really bad, and the WR attitude seems to be that we should turn a blind eye in pursuit of "flowing rugby". In truth it's just boring, because it randomizes the outcome.

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NH 2 hours 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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