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Why it's gone wrong for England and Jones - Moody

England players deflated after second Test defeat
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Lewis Moody has backed Eddie Jones to turn England’s flailing form around ahead of the 2019 Rugby World Cup.

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After winning 24 of his first 25 matches in charge of England, Jones’ men have fallen to five successive Test defeats and could face a series whitewash against South Africa on Saturday.

A 25-13 loss to Scotland during the Six Nations began England’s barren run, with reverses against France and Ireland following in the final matches of the tournament.

England have made strong starts to both Tests against the Springboks this month, however they have been unable to hold on, as the hosts have stormed back to victory.

Following last weekend’s 23-12 loss in Bloemfontein there were some criticism of Jones and his coaching staff, but Moody has faith the Australian can get England back to winning ways.

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“It’s so easy to criticise when things are going wrong, but the time to be critical is when you are winning,” World Cup winner Moody told Omnisport. “As a team I’m sure they are, Eddie’s an intelligent man.

“England – like the football team – have the weight of the world and expectation on their shoulders when they take the field, so it’s difficult to be critical of these guys.

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“He’s been employed to do a job and the team aren’t functioning as we would all like at the moment, but he’s an intelligent coach who will go away and look at those reasons.”

One area Moody feels Jones should have done better was during England’s internationals against Argentina, Australia and Samoa in November.

Rather than mixing up his selection Jones opted to keep faith with the players who had served him so well, but Moody believes that was a wasted opportunity.

“I think maybe where they fell down was not giving the opportunity they normally would in the Autumn series,” he added. “Normally they use that to see what talent is out there, but we didn’t see that.

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“Instead we saw the same team time and time again. And eventually teams are going to get wise to it, and at the minute England are in a tough place.

“But I do think the amount of work these players have had to go through, you can see emotionally they are at the end of their tether and are desperate for a break.

“The success from this tour [of South Africa] for me, would be having the opportunity to blood players they’ve not had a great deal of opportunity to see.

“Because going into a World Cup you need to know who you can depend on.”

Lewis Moody is a Land Rover ambassador. Land Rover has a heritage in rugby at all levels; from grassroots to elite. Follow @LandRoverRugby

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Phantom 37 minutes ago
Nations Championship: 'The data shows the north has finally caught up with the south'

Fact: the gap between the North and the South has narrowed considerably - that I get. However, determining that only selecting only Home grown players or playing in the home country is is the optimal strategy is a bit of a toss up and highly reliant on the economies of the home union. I do understand that England and to a lesser degree Ireland selects home based only. The top 14 is a massive threat to their domestic product. France would probably not be affected (the money is at home). Fiji, Argentina, Samoa, Italy and you could even argue Scotland have only benefitted from this. Their players either go overseas to learn at higher levels (Fiji, Samoa, Argentina) or players coming into their leagues to strengthen the home product and their National teams (Scotland, Italy, Japan).

South Africa used to limit its selection to the home based players, but the reality of a weak currency vs what players could earn oversees meant that you lost access to your best players at some stage of their careers, with very few exceptions. Kolbe left SA as he was considered too small for International Rugby (yes coaches/selectors view), but ironically in France he forced selectors to notice his endeavors and select him. He is only reaching 50 caps now despite being north of 30 - granted rotation and the odd injury also played a role, but for the most part it is having debuted or becoming a regular so late.



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