Today in Sports
  • Home
  • Featured News
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • Baseball
  • More
    • Rugby
    • Golf
    • Boxing
    • Soccer
    • NBA
    • Racing
    • Cricket
  • DMCA
  • Disclaimer
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions
  • Contact us
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Featured News
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • Baseball
  • More
    • Rugby
    • Golf
    • Boxing
    • Soccer
    • NBA
    • Racing
    • Cricket
No Result
View All Result
Today in Sports
No Result
View All Result

Steve Borthwick must stop blaming inexperience for England’s failings | Six Nations 2025

February 2, 2025
in Rugby
0
Home Rugby
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


You might also like

Joe McCarthy’s journey from college fourth XV to Lions

Cullen’s fingers crossed for Van der Flier

The likely first Lions team for the opening match next week as 16 players missing

Steve Borthwick is a man of character in an age that prefers to reward personality. Try as he might to explain England’s latest collapse, to reassure supporters that a corner will be turned, he failed to grasp the gravitas of a seventh defeat in nine games in a manner that is now his side’s trademark. It was left to his predecessor-turned-pundit, Eddie Jones, to sum up England’s plight far more adroitly and in only four words when asked how he would have reacted if he were in Borthwick’s position: “I’m glad I’m not.”

It is a measure of Borthwick’s character that he chose not to turn on the referee, Ben O’Keeffe, for some questionable decisions against his team during the period in which Ireland scored 22 unanswered points. Borthwick pointed instead to his side’s indiscipline as they let a 10-5 half‑time lead slip through their fingers. “That’s something that needs to be improved this week,” was about as close as he came to chastising his players for capitulating.

He was offered the opportunity to blame his side’s conditioning – or lack of it – as he alluded to in the autumn, but instead started talking about how his side lost a couple of crucial aerial contests rather than highlighting how he is still without a head of performance and will be until the end of the season.

Again, England’s bench was ineffective. Chandler Cunningham-South was not alone in making mistakes – it is just that his were conspicuous – but, rather than lament the inability of his replacements to contribute, Borthwick claimed that their problems started earlier and spoke of “execution factors”.

It is in moments such as this that he most reminds you of Stuart Lancaster. Another England coach whose character cannot be questioned but who has just been shown the door by Racing 92, another excellent technician who has struggled in a top job again. Both have habits of drilling down into the granular detail of defeats at a time when supporters want to be told why they should keep believing. “There’s execution in attack, execution in defence and there’s execution in the kicking game,” Borthwick said. “And in some key moments it was a little bit off where it needs to be to win these Test matches.”

Most significantly, it is his repeated blaming of England’s inexperience that will both worry and infuriate supporters. Worry, because there are limits to what Borthwick can do about it in the space of a week, even if Jamie George’s return to fitness is a welcome boost. That England welcome France to Twickenham will shine a spotlight on the fact that most of the players Borthwick might like to bring into this side are unavailable to him, plying their trade in the Top 14.

And if Borthwick is going to move Marcus Smith to full-back and start Fin Smith or Ford then France is the game in which to do it, given their propensity to kick long, but for this fixture two years ago he dropped a bombshell at fly-half by omitting Owen Farrell and Les Bleus ran riot in a 53-10 victory.

Fin Smith might be worth starting against France. Photograph: Brian Lawless/PA

Infuriate, because of the resignation with which Borthwick keeps coming back to the theme of inexperience. It felt significant that, all week, Borthwick and his charges had talked of journeys, of processes, of wanting to win. No one expressed any genuine confidence that they would and if it is understandable to want to avoid bullishness on the basis it does not take much to be interpreted as hubris – particularly if you are English – again conviction was lacking in the final quarter.

skip past newsletter promotion

The latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week’s action reviewed

Privacy Notice: Newsletters may contain info about charities, online ads, and content funded by outside parties. For more information see our Privacy Policy. We use Google reCaptcha to protect our website and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

after newsletter promotion

All the more infuriating is the implication that experience guarantees success. The idea that progress is guaranteed with the benefit of experience. After last year’s Six Nations England were on an upward curve but there was always a nagging suspicion that maybe they had reached the outer limits of their potential. There is no guarantee that they will improve in time. To put it another way, it is misguided to believe that success cannot be achieved without experience. The France side that won the 2022 grand slam by brushing England aside in Paris began that match with 401 caps. The England XV that started in Dublin on Saturday had 568.

In keeping with their head coach, this England side show an abundance of character. For the first half they carried out the gameplan perfectly, disrupting Ireland, striking when behind enemy lines and defending resolutely. You wonder if Borthwick’s insistence on a horses-for-courses approach for each match does not help, however, because the opposition will eventually figure out a way to combat it and England seem too wedded to their initial plan to launch a counter of their own. But you need only look at Tom Curry, hobbling on to the end, as evidence, or the crushing disappointment etched on the players’ faces when fronting up to discuss their latest defeat. The worry is that in the modern world, character only gets you so far.



Source link

Tags: blamingBorthwickEnglandsfailingsinexperienceNationsSteveStop
Share30Tweet19

Recommended For You

Joe McCarthy’s journey from college fourth XV to Lions

by TODAY IN SPORTS
June 9, 2025
0
Joe McCarthy’s journey from college fourth XV to Lions

Imagine how it was to be Joe McCarthy, rugby fanatic, 21-years-old, sprinting across the pitch at the Aviva Stadium, 51,000 pairs of eyes watching his every stride. Imagine...

Read more

Cullen’s fingers crossed for Van der Flier

by TODAY IN SPORTS
June 9, 2025
0
Cullen’s fingers crossed for Van der Flier

Leinster boss Leo Cullen faces a wait on several injured players, including star flanker Josh van der Flier, to face the Vodacom Bulls in Saturday’s URC final at...

Read more

The likely first Lions team for the opening match next week as 16 players missing

by TODAY IN SPORTS
June 9, 2025
0
The likely first Lions team for the opening match next week as 16 players missing

The Lions travel to Portugal this week for a training camp with 16 players missingTomos Williams signs jerseys after joining up with the British and Irish Lions squad(Image:...

Read more

Kyren Williams Focused On Being Best Version Of Himself Heading Into 2025 Season

by TODAY IN SPORTS
June 8, 2025
0
Kyren Williams Focused On Being Best Version Of Himself Heading Into 2025 Season

Kyren Williams has become the heart and soul of the Los Angeles Rams offense as he has a knack for making plays and getting into the end zone....

Read more

Baa Baas seek out Stormers bruiser

by TODAY IN SPORTS
June 8, 2025
0
Baa Baas seek out Stormers bruiser

Stormers lock Ruben van Heerden is reportedly being targeted by the Barbarians to face the Springboks in Cape Town at the end of the month. According to Rapport,...

Read more
Next Post
Crystal Palace want to sign Danilho Doekhi

Crystal Palace want to sign Danilho Doekhi

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related News

From nepotism to staggeringly bad contracts: the NFL’s most hopeless franchises | NFL

From nepotism to staggeringly bad contracts: the NFL’s most hopeless franchises | NFL

March 7, 2025
College gymnast, 18, dies after falling from pole during Eagles celebration | Philadelphia Eagles

College gymnast, 18, dies after falling from pole during Eagles celebration | Philadelphia Eagles

January 29, 2025
‘You Do Not Want To Go In There Less Than 90%’

‘You Do Not Want To Go In There Less Than 90%’

April 24, 2025

Browse by Category

  • Athletics
  • Baseball
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Cricket
  • Football
  • Golf
  • MMA
  • NBA
  • NFL
  • Racing
  • Rugby
  • Soccer
  • Tennis
Today in Sports

Get the Latest Sports News and Updates on TodayInSports.net. Soccer News, Basketball News, Baseball News, Golf News, Boxing News and More!

CATEGORIES

  • Athletics
  • Baseball
  • Basketball
  • Boxing
  • Cricket
  • Football
  • Golf
  • MMA
  • NBA
  • NFL
  • Racing
  • Rugby
  • Soccer
  • Tennis

Recent News

  • Yair Rodriguez ‘refuses’ bad blood showdown against Diego Lopes because he’d ‘rather fight him in the damn street’
  • Rico Verhoeven Vs Artme Vakhitov
  • A pessimist’s guide to the 2025 New York Giants
  • Contact us
  • Cookie Privacy Policy
  • Disclaimer
  • DMCA
  • Get the Latest Sports News and Updates on TodayInSports.net.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms and Conditions

Copyright © 2024 Today in Sports.
Today in Sports is not responsible for the content of external sites.

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Featured News
  • Football
  • Basketball
  • Baseball
  • More
    • Rugby
    • Golf
    • Boxing
    • Soccer
    • NBA
    • Racing
    • Cricket

Copyright © 2024 Today in Sports.
Today in Sports is not responsible for the content of external sites.