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Steve Borthwick talks up potential heir to the England throne

By PA
England head coach Steve Borthwick/ PA

Steve Borthwick insists England must be ready to go to a dark place of “pain and suffering” as he prepares to unleash his British and Irish Lions-stacked bomb squad on New Zealand.

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George Ford will direct operations against the All Blacks at Allianz Stadium on Saturday amid a prediction from Borthwick that the veteran fly-half will eventually become England head coach.

On the bench Borthwick has strengthened his reputation as a bold selector by picking six Lions including a heavyweight front row of Luke Cowan-Dickie, Ellis Genge and Will Stuart, as well as back-row warrior Tom Curry.

England’s bomb squad has turned the tide against Australia and Fiji so far this autumn, with the sight of five forwards being introduced en masse around the 50-minute mark generating excitement around an expectant Twickenham.

Not using the likes of Genge and Curry from the start against New Zealand is a brave call, but it is part of a strategy to ensure there are enough big hitters on the field in the final quarter to help close out what is expected to be another desperately tight battle between the rivals.

Head-to-Head

Last 5 Meetings

Wins
1
Draws
1
Wins
3
Average Points scored
22
22
First try wins
60%
Home team wins
60%

As part of the quest to topple the All Blacks for the first time since the 2019 World Cup semi-finals, Borthwick has also outlined the physical challenge awaiting his players.

“There’s no doubt that playing against New Zealand, the team is going to have to dig very, very deep,” the head coach said.

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“This team is going to have to go into a place where there is pain and suffering because there will be this need to keep running.

“There’s a need for this to be the most selfless team performance England have produced, because that’s how good New Zealand are.

“The players are going to have to give absolutely everything of themselves. More and more now, you are seeing a team that plays so much with their hearts.”

Ford’s priority will be playing with his head, however, as he pulls the strings in preference to Fin Smith, who is jettisoned from the 23 altogether with Marcus Smith supplying fly-half cover from the bench.

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The 32-year-old will win his 104th cap on Saturday and is in the form of his life as he closes in on a fourth World Cup, his rugby intelligence providing England with a de facto player-coach.

“George is a very calm leader, but he also has the ability to put the team on to the front foot,” Borthwick said.

“He’s a phenomenal player and many years from now he’s going to be a brilliant coach.

“His character and understanding of the game means I wouldn’t be in any way surprised if he was England head coach at some point in the future. I think he will be, if that’s where he chooses to go.”

Wing Tommy Freeman has been ruled out of the rest of the autumn because of a hamstring strain but lock Ollie Chessum could recover from a foot injury in time to face Argentina on Saturday week.

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Comments

12 Comments
A
AA 31 days ago

Borthwick is putting considerable trust in a chap who cannot tackle a crossword compared to Fin . Even if he might make a coach, or not , in the future. He is supposed to be the England 10 .

Not a coach .

I have looked at the top world cup winning coaches, G.Henry, S Hansen, C.Woodward,R Erasmus . They all won the world cup with far less clout that Borthwick has at his disposal .

With the W.Cup 2 years away seemingly picking favourites will not do him favours come the world cup . Anything less than a world cup win will be a failure.


Saying that, he has now constructed a super squad. BUT

Now is the time to select for the future in ALL positions and that includes no 10.

f
fl 31 days ago

Its not beyond the realms of possibility that in a few years we could see a coaching team of:


Jonny May (conditioning)

Ellis Genge (strength & scrum)

Jamie George (scrum & lineout)

Maro Itoje (lineout)

Courtney Lawes (contact skills)

George Ford (attack)

Owen Farrell (defence)

t
tf 31 days ago

Who would be head coach?


Johnny May is top of your list or are you pulling in another - Dylan Hartley, Captained a lot of them early I think.

C
CN 31 days ago

Would have one of Farrell or Ford double up as kicking coach?

D
Dave Didley 31 days ago

Owen Farrell coaching defence would be very funny.


His trademark upright tackle technique.

J
JD 31 days ago

Borthwick has barely begun his tenure as coach and he’s already talking about succession. Therein lies the problem - instability - with a team that should be right at the top.

f
fl 31 days ago

You’re being silly. Borthwick isn’t talking about being succeeded by Ford. He said that Ford could be england head coach one day if that’s what he sets out to achieve.


Steve Borthwick became England head coach aged 43. If Ford becomes England head coach at the same age then Borthwick would have been in the job for 14 years - which would be a record for a 1st tier team.

P
PMcD 31 days ago

Like most of his career, I suspect Ford will be behind Owen Farrell on the coaching front also.

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