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What Ollie Lawrence makes of the debut-making Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii

By PA
Ollie Lawrence watches on with England last weekend (Photo by Bob Bradford/CameraSport via Getty Images)

Ollie Lawrence has admitted he is stepping into the unknown when he takes on Australia’s rugby league superstar Joseph-Aukuso Suaalii at Allianz Stadium on Saturday.

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England centre Lawrence lines up opposite Suaalii after the 21-year-old was given his Test debut less than a month after switching to union from NRL side Sydney Roosters for £2.7million.

It is hoped that Suaalii will help lift the Wallabies out of the doldrums in time for next year’s British and Irish Lions tour amid predictions in Australia that he will become their most successful cross-code convert yet.

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Lawrence insisted that preparing to face a player with no union experience since representing Australia U18s presents a challenge. “It’s obviously difficult because he’s just switched codes and so we’ve been looking at the league side of things,” the Bath centre said.

“I have seen a lot of his footy over the years and he has been an incredible player in league. If you just look at his stature, he is a big lad at 6ft 5ins and he is quick, so you know you have to take time and space away from him as quickly as possible.

Team Form

Last 5 Games

1
Wins
1
3
Streak
3
9
Tries Scored
10
23
Points Difference
-80
0/5
First Try
2/5
2/5
First Points
2/5
0/5
Race To 10 Points
2/5

“There is definitely a bit of unknown about him and we don’t know how he will step up, but I’m excited to go up against world-class players. Like we do for every opposition, we look at their strengths and weakness and look where we can go after them.”

Apart from the task of containing Suaalii, Lawrence must also show the best of himself in attack after he was starved of the ball in the 24-22 defeat by New Zealand that opened the Autumn Nations Series.

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The 25-year-old is a devastating runner for Bath yet carried just twice against the All Blacks and not once after the 11th minute. England have made increasing his involvements with the ball in hand a matter of urgency and have switched his centre position with Henry Slade to offer him more scope to threaten in the outside channels.

“It’s a tactical move and we (Lawrence and Slade) spoke about it to the coaches this week. Hopefully it will get the best out of both of us,” Lawrence said. “It was frustrating not getting my hands on the ball against New Zealand. From me personally, there is an expectation to help the team go forward with the ball.

“The more I can get my hands on the ball, get the team moving and get us momentum, hopefully that will help us play as an attacking unit. I’m definitely working on getting more touches on the ball by getting into the right position and offering myself up.”

England are reeling from three successive defeats to New Zealand in which they have thrown away commanding positions heading into the final quarter. It is a theme of their recent performance against top four opposition that they are looking to address.

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“We should have seen the game out against New Zealand, so there’s an element of disappointment,” Lawrence said. “We are growing and want to be one of those championship teams. Championship teams finish off games, it’s quite simple really.

“We have got some really talented players. That has been shown in the Premiership and now we have to show it on the international stage.”

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R
RedWarrior 14 minutes ago
'Sorry Ireland, we didn't need to get motivated playing you': All Blacks great

From Peter O’Mahony’s comments to Sam Cane to Reiko Ioane’s message to Johnny Sexton last year, this is now a Test with a lot of “spice”, to which Brooke believes “if you’re going to give it out, you’ve got to take it as well.”


I think "Arrogance" is the word here.

Sledging during the match is not the same as abusing players and spectators after the final whistle.

As well as that being a nastily arrogant act, NZs inability to admit when they get things wrong is a further symptom of entitlement and arrogance.

Mocking beaten players and spectators is wrong: even when the "Great All Blacks" no ifs, no buts.

Remember NZ were too big to have a beer with a team they didn't rate, never mind swap a jersey. Perhaps time these "Humble Heroes" were brought down to earth a bit.

A truly global game like soccer, where everybody plays, and the winners are truly world class: they shake hands, they swap jerseys, they respect opponents.

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