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LONG READ Mick Cleary: 'Two more England losses and the vultures will be licking their lips.'

Mick Cleary: 'Two more England losses and the vultures will be licking their lips.'
1 month ago

England will be on familiar territory in Rome surrounded by ruins. The rubble of their own shattered dreams lay strewn across Twickenham on Saturday as night closed in. Dark times indeed.

There should be no attempt to sugarcoat the experiences of the last fortnight. Defeat is one thing: humiliation quite another. The scars will take a long time to heal and will be visible for any opposition right up to next year’s Rugby World Cup. Intangibles – aura, self-confidence, strut and swagger, fear of risk-taking, being cowed and insular – do actually matter. For starters, if they didn’t there would be no need for the legion of sports psychologists that have such a valid and valuable role in the business. England are in need of some serious therapy. The drapes will be drawn in the darkened rooms of Pennyhill Park in the coming days.

We shouldn’t expect Steve Borthwick to go tonto and publicly berate his players. He was staunch in his immediate defence of poor old George Ford who had a shocker with his kicks to touch, shanking the ball horribly and wasting a gilt-edged chance for position and potential points. Just because Borthwick backed his men in the post-match shakedown does not mean that he will wear the no.10 shirt at the Stadio Olimpico. In fact, he shouldn’t. Fin Smith needs to be back where he was a year ago, leading the line and getting good things from those around him.

England team
Maro Itoje tries to rouse the England team ahead of a chastening fixture against Ireland (Photo Dan Mullan – Getty Images)

It is not Borthwick’s style but he should note how Andy Farrell has managed to raise his players emotionally from the torpor of their opening night in Paris. The Ireland head coach couldn’t help but hide his anger at his side’s lack of ‘intent’ and ‘fight.’ These traits are non-negotiables. A snapshot of Farrell and assistant coach, Paul O’Connell, jumping from their Twickenham seats as Stuart McCloskey hunted down Marcus Smith ought to be framed at England’s training HQ. As Brian O’Driscoll wryly mentioned on ITV comms, he hadn’t seen O’Connell as animated even when they won a Grand Slam together. Desire, intensity, rage, every second matters, every action consequential – England have lost their way as regards the basic tenets of the game. They are careless, jittery and hag-worn, limp and lifeless. And for no apparent good reason.

You have to shake your head in disbelief to recall that it was only three weeks ago that we were extolling England for the quality of their leadership set-up – Maro Itoje, George Ford and Ellis Genge. What has happened to the men on the bridge? England have been run on to the rocks. Your heart bleeds for Itoje in particular. He is nowhere near his best and has had to suffer the indignity of being tactically subbed twice in successive weeks. No player is above the interests of the team? Well, that’s cobblers. Would Martin Johnson or Richie McCaw be handled in that way? No, they wouldn’t. Again, some of a team’s self-esteem leaks when the number board goes up and the captain begins his walk to the sidelines.

England need a big hurry-up first and foremost. Borthwick effectively has a professorship in coaching strategies drawn from all sports and all quarters. The head coach needs to thumb through his manuals and locate ‘H’ for hairdryer or ‘T’ for tea-cups.

Of course we understand Itoje’s recent trauma of losing his mother. But if he has been so affected and unable to reach his customary emotional heights then he should be spared exposure. If his niggling knee injury is impairing performance, then likewise – remove him from the fray. It would all be perfectly normal and acceptable if this were so.

As it is, England need a big hurry-up first and foremost. Borthwick effectively has a professorship in coaching strategies drawn from all sports and all quarters. The head coach needs to thumb through his manuals and locate ‘H’ for hairdryer or ‘T’ for tea-cups. If it takes a mass bollocking to get the desired response, then so be it. It worked for Farrell and Ireland. Something, anything, needs to happen if England are to pull out of this nosedive. Their form away from home has been modest.

Caelan Doris
Caelan Doris put in a muscular performance as England fell off too many tackles in a poor display (Photo Brendan Moran/Getty Images)

It is far from inconceivable that they could lose their final two fixtures against Italy and France. They are alone among the six nations of the championship in never having lost to Italy. Who would reach into their back pockets and wager that record will still be standing in two weeks’ time? That is the measure of the crisis that England find themselves in. Where is their Roy Keane to tell a few home truths?  Or their chest-out Lawrence Dallaglio? There are times when pumped-up rhetoric is misplaced, a simplistic reading of the room, inappropriate old-school vibes for the modern era. This is not one of those times.

Of course there are many technical issues to rectify, notably their game management and tactical strategy. Their defence is woeful, broken almost at will. Discipline plays into that failing with penalties and yellow cards conceded. England’s work at the breakdown is also under-clubbed. Statistician Russ Petty came up with a remarkable stat via Opta that England’s combined total of penalties and turnovers (38) was their worst in 15 years. The ledger of statistical shame continues: 12 entries into the 22 compared to Ireland’s nine. Guess which team had the greater return.

The back-row as it stood on Saturday is too ‘samey’.   England need an Ollie Chessum at 6, the power of a Pieter-Steph du Toit, the athleticism of a Tadhg Beirne. That has been an Itoje sort of role in the past.

England have seemingly abandoned the notion of phase play, putting all their eggs in a kick-chase policy, Maybe it’s their lack of faith in their breakdown work which would be a grave deficiency if it held any truth. At the risk of banging an old drum, then let’s give it a full Keith Moon wallop if it means getting Jack Willis back into consideration (brother Tom is a slightly different case although his presence wouldn’t go amiss). But Jack Willis ought to be more straightforward. The Toulouse flanker is one of the finest breakdown players in Europe if not the world. Any England 2027 World Cup mission has to have him in the No 7 shirt. It’s never too late to revoke a policy if the potential reward is that great. South Africa and Argentina don’t seem to fare too badly when picking from overseas.

The back-row as it stood on Saturday is too ‘samey’.   England need an Ollie Chessum at 6, the power of a Pieter-Steph du Toit, the athleticism of a Tadhg Beirne. That has been an Itoje sort of role in the past.

It’s sobering to realise that England do have a solid set-piece, even if Borthwick did blunder in not starting the more reliable thrower in Jamie George. England’s opening period of play against Scotland and Ireland has been lamentable.

Henry Pollock
Henry Pollock was one of England’s better performers but Steve Borthwick’s backrow balance is not quite there  (Photo Mike Hewitt/Getty Images)

Borthwick is safe in his job even if you could imagine that were he the England football manager his position would be in jeopardy. That said, he does need to up his game, to change tack (less kicking, more nuanced attack) and even his muted public demeanour. He was right to say that after 12 consecutive victories England did not merit the ‘world-beaters’ claim that was made on their behalf but, please Steve, spare us the notion that your team ‘is on a journey of development.’  It doesn’t wash. Two years ago, maybe. Within 18 months of a World Cup, no and no again. The 2026 Six Nations is not a laboratory testing ground.

England are in the mire, bizarrely so given how they came into the new year. But there it is. Sport is a merciless reckoner. Two wins now on the road might balance the scales. But two losses and the vultures will be licking their lips. And who could deny them a feeding frenzy?

Comments

25 Comments
P
PE 44 days ago

I am surprised that more is not being made of the very strange management of Itoje’s grief. As someone who has lost and not coped very well, grief can be a mental health disaster and effects every person in a different way. I nearly bankrupted my business due to sleepwalking through work for 18 months without realising that I was severely depressed as a result of the death of my son. So I fully empathise with what he is going through. I thought Itoje’s selection for the Welsh game was very strange and suggested to me that Borthwick was mismanaging his captain’s welfare. If his grief demanded that he play, then he should have started that game and Borthwick and his coaches should have been able to judge if that was what was best for him. But if Itoje needed more time, he should have been allowed to take it. I have a really terrible feeling that he was pushed to be available and the compromise was a bench spot. The worst possible outcome for player and squad. I hope that he recovers his form, but more than that I hope that he givea himseld time to grieve one way or another. He will never ever fully recover from the death of his mother, but over time he will learn to live with the grief.

J
JB 45 days ago

England head to Rome surrounded by ancient ruins, but the wreckage that really matters was left scattered across Twickenham on Saturday night. Dark times, no exaggeration.

The last fortnight shouldn’t be sugar-coated. Losing is one thing; humiliation is another. Scars like this don’t fade quickly, and they will be visible to every opponent right up to the next World Cup. Confidence, edge, swagger, the courage to take risks — these intangibles matter. If they didn’t, elite sport wouldn’t employ armies of psychologists. Right now, England looks mentally broken.


England don’t just need tweaks; they need a jolt. Defence is leaking, discipline is poor, breakdown work is passive, and the attack has collapsed into a joyless kick-chase. The back row lacks balance and edge. Phase play has all but vanished. These are mindset issues as much as technical ones.


This isn’t a “development journey” anymore. With a World Cup approaching, excuses are redundant. Something has to change — selection, style, emotional tone — because if England don’t rediscover urgency and belief fast, the nosedive will continue, and the scrutiny will only intensify.

R
RL 45 days ago

Vultures don’t have lips…..

M
Mark 45 days ago

The very simplest of gauges regarding the form, make up of a team is to pick a combined 6n squad of 23….and its important to be honest not sentimental….would there be even 1 england player in it?

England are carrying way to many has beens, and a few who are simply not of test match quality, they critically lack both the biff & bang and the guile and invention.

Honesty is where all redemption must begin!!

N
Neil 45 days ago

Just a thought….. England lose the next two without getting a bonus point…. A pumped up Wales manage to beat Italy on the last day with a bonus point…. 🫣

u
unknown 46 days ago

Borthwick isn’t up to the job and needs to go, he’s had long enough without any meaningful return. Wigglesworth and El-Abd should go too given the disastrous state of the defence and the weakness at lineout and breakdown. Many of the senior players leadership team should go as well as they are being picked on reputation rather than form

u
unknown 46 days ago

I wholeheartedly agree with Mick Cleary's article. Steve Borthwick is - what in business is known as - a slow adopter!

He was late in understanding the use of the bench. Now - having had some success last year with 5 number 7s in his match day 23 - he’s now slow to recognise that opposition teams have moved on and worked out how to counter the impact.

On Saturday, England had only 2 legitimate line-out jumpers .. competing against 4 Irish. No wonder England's line out malfunctioned!

Worse still, with either Pollock or Earl (or both) loitering in the midfield, Ireland made an absolute dog’s dinner (technical term!) of the breakdown.

England need tempo in order to play ‘their game’ .. and Ireland denied them this.

Finally, Borthwick's selection was missing players with real ‘go forward’ .. and apart from Genge and Hayes, England simply lacked punch!

Im afraid that Borthwick has to carry the can for all of this!!!

He's tactically limited .. stubborn to the point of obstinacy .. and slow to adapt.

u
unknown 46 days ago

Borthwick just isn’t very good. He isn’t innovative or cunning. He is uninspiring and stubborn. The England team could be so much better with the right person in charge. Borthwick is not the right person

S
SB 46 days ago

That said, he does need to up his game, to change tack (less kicking, more nuanced attack)

England did not kick nearly enough against Ireland, the stats support this. They went away from their strengths and struggled to do the basics. I do think 2 losses could be on the cards to finish this tournament and that would pave way for perhaps Scott Robertson to take over, I understand he has a 12 months ban from joining another top team but perhaps that can be negotiated.

u
unknown 45 days ago

Given that Scott Robertson was sacked, from a contractual perspective it would be very hard for NZ union to impose a 12 month non-compete!

J
Jacque 46 days ago

I expect Italy to beat England.


“Again, some of a team’s self-esteem leaks when the number board goes up and the captain begins his walk to the sidelines”


Siya is subbed of all the time because NO PLAYER is bigger than the team.

Why is Itoje being picked if not in form?


There has been too much hype around this England team in the last 12-18 months.


Quite right being 4th on the table.

u
unknown 45 days ago

If Italy maintain their current performance levels and England theirs then Italy not only win but win handsomely. England will finish fifth. A massive improvement is needed by England in terms of selection, tactics, desire, energy, execution and work rate to stand any chance against an Italy side who have been impressive

H
Hammer Head 45 days ago

At this point, I can’t see England beating France. And unless they secure bonus points the most they can achieve is 10 log points. So at the very least Scotland finishes ahead of England on the table.

u
unknown 46 days ago

Back in the day Johnson was often subbed off so it’s not an English requirement that the captain plays the 80. That’s why teams should have multiple leaders and a collective drive and spirit. This is a team sport and shouldn’t rely on the presence of one individual. Others need to step up and lead

J
J Marc 46 days ago

Vultures have lips ?

H
Hammer Head 46 days ago

Excellent point

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