Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Maro Itoje: 'That’s more important than any speech I can make'

By PA
England's Maro Itoje looks on during the Autumn Nations Series 2025 match between England and Australia at Allianz Stadium on November 09, 2024 in London, England. (Photo by Andrew Kearns - CameraSport via Getty Images)

Maro Itoje has made realising England’s potential his number one priority after being installed as captain for the Six Nations.

ADVERTISEMENT

Itoje has taken charge of the team in place of Jamie George following a 2024 that produced just five wins in 12 Tests, a disappointing year that has turned the upcoming tournament into a pivotal period for head coach Steve Borthwick.

The nadir of those results was three successive losses at Allianz Stadium during the autumn and England were roundly criticised as a result, but Itoje insists proving people wrong cannot be the motivation for delivering in the Championship.

Video Spacer

Maro Itoje speaks at the Men’s Six Nations launch in Rome

England captain Maro Itoje spoke to the media at the official Guinness Men’s Six Nations launch event in Rome and at the Colosseum.

Video Spacer

Maro Itoje speaks at the Men’s Six Nations launch in Rome

England captain Maro Itoje spoke to the media at the official Guinness Men’s Six Nations launch event in Rome and at the Colosseum.

“This Six Nations is huge for us. It’s not necessarily about silencing critics or anything like that, it’s about achieving what we want to achieve as a team,” Itoje said.

“To succeed you need to win. We want to grow, develop and progress. To do those things we need to get the right results.

“England have the potential to do well and win against all the teams. Really we want to fulfil our potential and take a step in the right direction. That will be judged by how successful we are.

“We have fallen short over the last year in the final stages of games. While I think we are on a positive trajectory, it requires more to get the results you want.

ADVERTISEMENT

“It’s not good enough to say: ‘do what you did yesterday and expect a different result today’.

“We need to work harder in almost all aspects because we are not where we want to be. To get to where we want to get to, we need to do more.”

It is the first time that Itoje will skipper England, although he deputised for George last year when his Saracens team-mate left the field later in games.

The 30-year-old has long been seen as captain-in-waiting, although Borthwick’s predecessor Eddie Jones said in 2021 that he doubted he would ever be promoted to the post, describing him as “very inward-looking”.

ADVERTISEMENT

But a season that started with the Lions second row being placed in charge of Saracens continues with his rise to the most coveted role in English rugby.

A consistently excellent performer and one of the national side’s few world-class players, Itoje believes he must focus on the basics if he is to be a success.

“What is required for me is to build on a lot of the things that I am already doing,” he said.

“We often speak about great leaders and what they do, or great captains, and first and foremost the most important thing, without any shadow of a doubt, is that you play well.

“That’s more important than any speech I can make, that’s more important than any interview that I could give, or how I walk, how I talk.

“My priority is making sure that I play well, because by playing well, that is the best form of leadership that one can do.”

ADVERTISEMENT
Play Video
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Long Reads

Comments on RugbyPass

T
Tom 2 hours ago
Eben Etzebeth staring at huge ban after another red card

Well… I'd say the modern Boks are not a particularly violent team but it's impossible to getaway with much violence on an international rugby field now. The Boks of yesteryear were at times brutal. Whether or not the reputation is justified, they do have that reputation amongst a lot of rugby fans.

As for point 2.. it's a tricky one, I don't want to slander a nation here. I'm no “Bok hater”, but I've gotta say some Bok fans are the most obnoxious fans I've personally encountered. Notably this didn't seem to be a problem until the Boks became the best in the world. I agree that fans from other nations can be awful too, every nation has it's fair share of d-heads but going on any rugby forum or YouTube comments is quite tedious these days owing to the legions of partisan Bok fans who jump onto every thread regardless of if it's about the Boks to tell everyone how much better the Boks are than everyone else. A Saffa once told me that SA is a troubled country and because of that the Boks are a symbol of SA victory against all odds so that's why the fans are so passionate. At least you recognise that there is an issue with some Bok fans, that's more than many are willing to concede. Whatever the reason, it's just boring is all I can tell you and I can say coming from a place of absolute honesty I encounter far, far more arrogance and obnoxious behaviour from Bok fans than any other fanbase - the kiwis were nothing like this when they were on top. So look much love to SA, I bear no hatred of ill will, I just want to have conversations about rugby without being told constantly that the Boks are the best team in the world and all coaches except Rassie are useless etc



...

205 Go to comments
Close
ADVERTISEMENT