Have England come good for the Rugby World Cup just in the nick of time?

By Nicholas Bishop / Expert

If it was not injury, it was misadventure. So many of England’s selection hopes before the 2015 World Cup were pinned on centre Manu Tuilagi, who had been injured since the summer of 2014.

When it finally seemed that he might become available again, he was arrested for criminal damage and the assault of a police officer only short four months before the start of the tournament.

Stuart Lancaster was reluctantly forced to eliminate Tuilagi from consideration, and England ended up fielding four different starting combinations at 10, 12 and 13 in as many pool games.

That memory still evokes a wistful imagination of what might have been for the ex-England coach.

Eight years earlier, one of the most important selection decisions had been made not among the pool of players, but behind the scenes.

Before the 2007 World Cup in France, South Africa’s coach, Jake White, brought on board his good friend Eddie Jones as a consultant, and that gave the Springboks a magic ingredient to add to the traditional strengths they already had in abundance.

While White could teach defence, the kicking game and aspects of forward strategy such as the driving maul, Jones would add the missing element: a creative edge to the backs off set-piece.

Some of Jones’ ideas can be seen at work in the Boks’ finest performance of the tournament, a 36-0 demolition of their eventual opponents in the final, England (jump to 21:35, 39:10, 59:05, 1:27:15 to see them on the following reel).

Jones quickly identified that the main source of creative genius behind the scrum was number 9 Fourie Du Preez rather than outside-half Butch James – and Fourie was then playing at the peak of considerable powers.

Jones found an assortment of ways to utilise those talents, ranging from long cross-kicks to the sideline from tapped penalties to a selection of shortside moves off both lineout and scrum. Between them, Jones and Du Preez represented the sharp, thinking man’s rapier to the traditionally brawny Bokke bludgeon.

Perhaps the Australian was thinking of his own appointment to the South African role when he asked another highly experienced international coach, Kiwi John Mitchell, to be his main coaching stablemate in the lead-up to the 2019 World Cup. Two rugby intellects can work better than one, especially if they complement each another harmoniously.

Only four weeks before the start of the 2019 competition, Jones has enjoyed a stroke of luck his predecessor in the job never enjoyed. Tuilagi has returned to full fitness at just the right moment to become a highlight feature in a tournament from which he was so conspicuously absent four years earlier.

The midfield in 2015 was scheduled to be composed of George Ford, Owen Farrell and Tuilagi, but the mixture of injury and misadventure blew that plan out of the water.

It is no coincidence that this is exactly the same combination Jones selected at 10, 12 and 13 for England’s most impressive warm-up performance against Ireland at Twickenham, and I fully expect it to be England’s first choice during the World Cup in Japan.

The addition of Tuilagi at number 13 and Joe Cokanasiga at 14 gives Jones the luxury he never enjoyed in his first couple of seasons as England coach – two big men in the backline who can help create and finish launch plays from set-piece.

Tuilagi is 114 kilos and has been lovingly nicknamed ‘The Pinball Machine’ by his coach for his knack of banging unfortunate tacklers around. Cokanansiga is even bigger, Jonah Lomu-esque in stature, at 1.93 metres and 122 kilos.

Against Ireland, those two additions gave Jones’ cleverly conceived backline starter plays from the scrum and lineout a lethal edge. The first deep cut was made from the scrum as early as the 12th minute:

The first key decision for the defence at a scrum on their right side near their own 22m line is where to position their own scrumhalf and shortside winger.

In this case, Conor Murray drops to the near sideline, and winger Jordan Larmour drifts across on a deeper line in backfield defence:

With Billy Vunipola able to make a pass from the base and both Murray and Larmour out of the picture, England have already engineered a potential seven-on-five situation.

The conversion of that advantage depends on the success of their decoy runners and the finishing power on their openside wing, and here the view from behind the posts is of great value:

England first pare down the seven-on-five to a four-on-two by forcing Ireland midfielders Ross Byrne, Bundee Aki and Garry Ringrose to plant their feet for the tackle, with accurate decoy lines by Farrell and Tuilagi:

Outside the screenshot, they still have fullback Elliott Daly and right winger Cokanasiga available, with Ford and Johnny May to supply the transfers.

Once the ball reaches Cokanasiga’s hands, it is effectively game over for the defence. Although both Aki and Larmour are in pursuit, there is never any real likelihood they will be able to chase and bring the big man down once he gets up a full head of steam.

What makes this kind of set-piece play work is the credible quality of the decoys. Ireland have to be convinced that Tuilagi, in particular, is a genuine threat on the straight or ‘unders’ ball. At the end of the first quarter, they received any assurances they needed on that score in full measure:

Tuilagi first takes the ball on a switch from the lineout and ploughs the Ireland 7 and 10 out of the road, in much the same way as he once did to Dan Carter and Richie McCaw on that memorable afternoon at Twickenham back in 2012.

In the second instance, his starting position flat on his face is far less promising, but he still manages to get back up on his feet and shed three Ireland forwards before delivering an offload to Ben Youngs.

Tuilagi duly received the ultimate reward for his ability to take standstill ball and turn attacking water into wine at the end of the first period:

Another ‘Barnes Wallis’ bouncing pass makes no difference at all to Tuilagi’s ability to cut the line!

It is this powerful threat which makes defensive choices so difficult for the opposition number 13, who regularly has to decide whether to stay for the inside run or shift for the attack out wide.

In the second half, Ringrose again found himself hooked on a Tuilagi decoy, and unable to marshal the wider power threat of Cokanasiga outside him:

At the key moment, the Ireland outside centre is in a no-win scenario. If he drifts out to Cokanasiga, he will cut Tuilagi loose. In the event, he takes the more pressing threat, and that releases the big England right winger up the middle:

Once Cokanasiga receives the ball, his finish is even more impressive than its cousin in the first period. He runs straight past three potential cover tacklers to score near the posts without a significant hand being laid upon him.

Summary
The headline of this article may appear a tad ungenerous after Jones’ spectacular run at the beginning of his England tenure, winning 25 of his first 26 matches in charge.

But, in truth, this side have been flying under the radar for the past 20 months or so. Since the start of 2018, they have won only nine of their 18 games and have fallen behind both Ireland and Wales in the northern hemisphere pecking order.

Maybe, just maybe, the stars have realigned for Jones at the last moment in 2019 – just as they did in 2007.

(Photo by David Rogers – RFU/The RFU Collection via Getty Images)

In particular, some decent backline size has arrived at the 11th hour. While Ben Teo’s rise and fall was equally meteoric in both directions, the man England needed so badly at the 2015 World Cup, centre Manu Tuilagi, has returned after three seasons blighted by injury.

The midfield plan for that tournament, featuring George Ford at 10, Owen Farrell at 12 and Tuilagi at 13, now looks likely to become England’s number one combination in Japan.

It gives Jones’ patented launch plays from the set-piece a real cutting edge, with Tuilagi able to convince defenders on the carry and decoy inside, and Joe Cokanasiga finishing with extreme pace and power outside him.

It is a potent mix which even New Zealand may not be able to match.

For the first time in their rugby history, England can project four players of islander ethnic origin in their starting XV – the Tongan Vunipolas at loosehead prop (Mako) and at number 8 (Billy), a Samoan from another famous rugby family at 13, and a Fijian giant on the wing.

There may be a rose rather than three Lions on the shirt, but it could just be the perfect blend, discovered in the nick of time, to ensure that a second World Cup in the professional era is coming home.

The Crowd Says:

2019-09-11T13:24:00+00:00

ThugbyFan

Roar Guru


Hi Nic and tbfh, England are a big show in this RWC2019. M.Tuilagi and the massive Fijian quick on the wing are a scary addition to their already formidable pack. How ironic that the 2 coaches of the SH gun sides in the RWC2003 were determined to stop England winning that competition, and help win the cup for Australia or New Zealand. We now see 4 tournaments later and those two coaches are working together to help that common enemy of 2003, England, win the competition. Should we just cancel their passports and leave them to suffer eternity in Borisstan. :)

2019-09-10T03:42:34+00:00

Phil

Roar Rookie


Hi Nick The 12th minute try is yet another example of wingers coming off their wing to take the inside attackers instead of staying wide. Yes it's the same conversation we're having again because you are offering examples of why it doesn't work. As you have stated, the cover defence was there (and there in numbers) but the defending openside winger comes off his man, tackles no one, and his opposing wing (AND FASTEST PLAYER IN THE TEAM) is given a free passage to the tryline. What would have happened if he didn't come in off his wing do you think? Thanks Phil

2019-09-09T01:02:35+00:00

Ralph

Roar Guru


It is certainly a good team and if their draw wasn't so tough I'd think they were finalists for sure.

2019-09-08T09:02:28+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


Yes, i personally can't quite see Wales having the scoring power to win enough games against the better teams to get all the way to the cup. But this looks to me like a WC without one standout favourite. Which is really exciting. Feels very probable that, for instance, England win it all, and also that they get knocked out before the final. Bring it on.

2019-09-08T06:56:56+00:00

pm

Roar Rookie


Actually looked up some stats to see if I'm right that England usually are fading in the second halfs, and apparently they're not, just must be almost every game i watch they do. I couldn't see any trend to it here though http://stats.espnscrum.com/statsguru/rugby/stats/index.html?class=1;spanmin1=01+Jan+2017;spanval1=span;team=1;template=results;type=team;view=results

2019-09-06T23:51:04+00:00

Fox

Roar Guru


Yes he is very good footballer no question – and got some pace – runs very good lines like Savea and Cane as well – the hallmark of good 7 in NZ not just the breakdown ability. Part of the renaissance of the side for sure. Not sure he is quite as good as Savea and Savea is a yard quicker at full pace but yes I agree he is no Clydesdale. But Savea is the complete 7 now with some dynamics in his game that are cut above the rest IMO. You should watch this as well – It will remind you just how quick and dynamic he is – Is there a 7 anywhere that his wing-like acceleration and both (important) speed and power in the leg drive? If AB’s progress he will be one of stars of the cup – barring injury of course. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=acajpsozjTQ Also Nick I thought you would find this article very interesting indeed and your comment that All Blacks could be ghosting may be even more astute than you think. Hansen subtle comment on just how close the other teams are to the AB’s was interesting as well. https://www.nzherald.co.nz/rugby/news/article.cfm?c_id=80&objectid=12265465 And lastly, a very good analysis of England v Italy game https://www.nzherald.co.nz/rugby/news/article.cfm?c_id=80&objectid=12265698

2019-09-06T06:51:59+00:00

Oblonsky‘s Other Pun

Roar Guru


I think so too! :happy: . And please be aware, I’m really appreciative that you are trying to do so – as with the rest of your great analysis.

AUTHOR

2019-09-06T05:45:26+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


He reminds me of the Elefant self-propelled gun the Germans created in WW2. Very powerful but couldn't fire too often before it broke down!

AUTHOR

2019-09-06T05:43:30+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


I think it would make more sense if you stacked those four side by side, horizontally H. Thus 1= NZ......... 1= SA....... 1=........ Wales 1=........ England I don't see any big diffs in the pecking order, as recent swings in the World rankings have shown!

AUTHOR

2019-09-06T05:38:59+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


I’ve gotta say… ffs I hope it’s not the case. Just the thought of Eddie riding a wave of success at the RWC has my stomach churning already. He will be insufferable! This is prob the worst part Chook, 'graciousness' is not a factor in his make-up :thumbup:

AUTHOR

2019-09-06T05:37:17+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Tbh we seem to be broadly in agreement, maybe just coming at the issue from diff angles! As far as the Aus v SA part goes, it prob looks a bit different from the outside than it does from the inside.... I am simply trying to explain how the AB coaches looked at the issue, which may seem odd from the history attaching to it at the time :happy:

2019-09-06T01:15:54+00:00

Matt

Guest


Wales will win if AAC Foley Kepu Dempsey Toomua Simmons and Beale are in the 23

2019-09-06T01:12:18+00:00

Gary

Guest


Fox doesn't understand the complexities of Irony and Sarcasm. He is just one of those guys. :silly:

2019-09-06T00:30:50+00:00

Locky

Guest


1/ NZ 2/ SA 3/ ENG 4/WALES 5/IRE 6/SCOT 7/FRANCE 8/WALLABIES

2019-09-05T20:36:53+00:00

Oblonsky‘s Other Pun

Roar Guru


My reply that was discussing the relative value of EQ and IQ, and how IQ has only really become a super valuable trait since the Industrial Revolution seems to have been lost in the aether.

2019-09-05T20:33:44+00:00

Oblonsky‘s Other Pun

Roar Guru


Maybe it is just as important, if not more, than the rational brain too – EQ ahead of IQ. I would entirely agree with that. IQ has only become a particularly valuable tool for the vast majority of people since the Industrial Revolution. When we were all farmers, our IQ didn't really matter that much at all (assuming you had an IQ over a threshold required to complete ordinary tasks). Prior to the Agricultural Revolution, when we were all nomadic hunter gathers, EQ was even more relatively important compared to IQ. Those who are succeeding today with high IQs are incredibly lucky that they are living in the first period in history where it is one of the most useful biological traits. I do understand what you are saying, and who am I to tell Graham Henry and Wayne Smith they were wrong? However, all I am saying is that when I look at the history of the 2010-11 period, and the ABs results against the Wallabies and the Boks, that makes me raise an eyebrow.

2019-09-05T19:52:35+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


Thats right, Mitchells there, forgot about that. Wonder if the two have had any punch ups yet :-). pretty sure I know who would win that one :-) Mitchell certainly could explain any 'sudden' improvement, particularly from a hard nosed winning perspective. Both are 'change' fans and Eddies swung his bat when he first took over. Mitchell has an uncanny ability to start well and, a bit like Eddie, build up resentment from others over time. So its about timing. I see a lot of Mitchell in the England match. Expansive, confident, relentless. ...with the two...now I'm even more concerned...England rightful favourites now...and...theyve won their only title away, and have been poor finals time at home. An oz and a kiwi to put England on the pedestal...how times have changed. :-)

2019-09-05T19:11:26+00:00

Ulrich

Roar Rookie


Something clearly went wrong for the Boks in 2006 as well Nick. Remember 49-0 ?

2019-09-05T19:10:33+00:00

Ulrich

Roar Rookie


Well, they certainly fired against Scotland. Scotland are not a bad side.

2019-09-05T19:09:48+00:00

Ulrich

Roar Rookie


What are you talking about Neil? We know disappointment - thanks to Japan.

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