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Dan Cole provides candid admission on the future of his England career


Dan Cole of England sings the national anthem during the Guinness Six Nations 2024 match between Scotland and England at BT Murrayfield Stadium on February 24, 2024 in Edinburgh, Scotland. (Photo by Dan Mullan - RFU/The RFU Collection via Getty Images)
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England tighthead Dan Cole is uncertain whether the epic 33-31 loss to France in Lyon in round five of the Guinness Six Nations was his last match of international rugby.

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At the age of 36 and with 111 caps to his name, the Leicester Tigers prop is in the twilight years of his career, but has enjoyed an international renaissance since Steve Borthwick became England boss.

Having been in the Test rugby wilderness for three years after the 2019 World Cup final, Cole was recalled to the England squad for the 2023 Six Nations and has featured heavily since then.

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Cole started against Scotland, Ireland and France in this year’s Championship, and stood toe-to-toe with Les Bleus’ gargantuan pack in Lyon. In fact, he has produced some of the best scrummaging performances of his career since his Test return, notably against the Springboks in the World Cup semi-final last year.

He was asked whether the match in France was the last for England on his For the Love of Rugby recently, to which he could not give a concrete answer, but joked that the decision might well be taken out of his hands.

“That answer I can’t really give,” he said when asked. “It might be, it might not be. As ever, I joke about it in camp but my international career is day to day. If I can get through the day, it goes to the next one.

“I’ve had eight weeks away from home, I have to spend some time with the family. They come first.

“I’ll speak to Steve and the coaches and we’ll go from there. That’s if they want to pick me, which obviously there’s a chance they might not, so therefore it might be my last game because they might not pick me.

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“You never want to jump too far in the future. There’s still a fairly big part of the domestic season to play, so my thoughts now move to Leicester and playing at home and trying to get as high up in the Premiership as possible.

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NoLongerARuck 26 minutes ago
Nations Championship: 'The data shows the north has finally caught up with the south'

The Six Nations produced so many compelling games and so much of action packed moments that you can only conclude that its the best international comp out there at the moment except for a world cup. If Wales improve it will be even better especially given the strides Italy have made in recent times. The Rugby Championship is now taking a hiatus in a year it really should be building toward something better which is terrible considering the competition was so tight last year. The Nations Champs promises much but one gets the feeling that the 6 Nations teams will not be at their peak given its at the end of their long season. In terms of rugby quality and entertainment Id rather watch the 6 Nations over everything else other than a world cup right now. The North arguably offers more in terms of entertainment than the South at club level as well. The Prem, the Champs Cup, URC and Top 14 all feature plenty of scoring and different playing styles while Super Rugby seems to be the same thing game in game out. While the South tries to speed up the game artificially with new trials and law variations the North has shown you can do it with good refereeing which penalises cynical play harshly and encourages positive actions on the field. In terms of entertainment the North wins. In terms of winning? They are making strides but until they win another world cup or get a team to rank number 1 again for an extended time again they cant really say they are better than the South.

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