The Press

Borthwick adds new twist to oldest rivalry

- Steve Douglas

The oldest fixture in rugby union was, not so long ago, one of the most one-sided.

From 1991-2007, England and Scotland met 29 times. Scotland won just three of the games – and all of those victories came in grim Edinburgh weather at their home of Murrayfiel­d.

How the tide has turned.

The boys in blue crossed the border and headed south this week, looking to claim a fourth win in their last six meetings with the auld enemy when they face off at Twickenham tomorrow.

It’s a match that launches a new era in English rugby. Steve Borthwick takes charge for the first time since replacing Eddie Jones as coach.

The Calcutta Cup is often viewed as a bigger deal for Scotland. Maybe not this time.

‘‘We haven’t played a game yet,’’ England back-rower Sam Simmonds said, ‘‘but, within the few training sessions that we’ve had, it feels like we’re going in the right direction. There’s a buzz around the squad of excitement and enjoyment’’.

Boos rang around Twickenham the last time England played there. That was in late November, at the end of the team’s 27-13 pumping by South Africa that spelt the end for Jones and his seven-year tenure.

England’s players might get some more slack from the home fans tomorrow, as Borthwick is unlikely to get a slick performanc­e straight out of the gate as he moulds his own team (with eight changes) at the start of a World Cup year.

A below-par performanc­e might be accepted, even expected. Another loss isn’t.

Scotland will be hit with the combined might of a full house and fired-up opponents eager to impress their new coach – factors that weren’t in play when the Scots won at an empty Twickenham in 2021 during the pandemic.

Two years earlier, there was the epic, breathless 38-38 draw between the old foes. Before that, a string of unbroken, mostly comfortabl­e England wins since the 12-12 draw in 1989.

So Scotland cannot relax. Not after a largely underwhelm­ing 2022 where the high point was the first game of the year – an attritiona­l home win over the English.

‘‘We’re in a good place,’’ said Scotland captain Jamie Ritchie, pointing to the domestic form of Edinburgh and Glasgow and what he saw as an encouragin­g autumn series featuring victories over Fiji and Argentina.

Then there’s the return of the mercurial Finn Russell at first-five now that he has patched up his difference­s with Scotland coach Gregor Townsend.

London Irish winger Ollie Hassell-Collins will make his England debut, along with Harlequins hooker Jack Walker if he comes off the bench. Prop Dan Cole has been recalled for the first time since the 2019 World Cup final.

Townsend dropped Ali Price for in-form London Irish halfback Ben White. Another Lion, centre Chris Harris, has made way for Huw Jones, who has four tries against England. The game was a week too soon for recovering Lions forwards Zander Fagerson and Hamish Watson. Townsend was still bullish.

‘‘Over the last five years we have been a good match for them,’’ Townsend said, ‘‘and I’m sure this will be competitiv­e, too’’.

 ?? ?? Steve Borthwick will be hoping England can climb the ladder of success under his coaching.
Steve Borthwick will be hoping England can climb the ladder of success under his coaching.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand