The Timaru Herald

Cheeky Jones praises his ‘old mate’ Cheika

- Daniel Gilhooly

England coach Eddie Jones has offered an unexpected olive branch to Wallabies counterpar­t Michael Cheika, believing the death of a man who mentored them both would forge a bond this weekend.

Jones turned the narrative on its head on Thursday, describing Cheika as a ‘‘good old mate’’ two days out from their Rugby World Cup quarterfin­al in Oita.

Since taking charge of England in 2016, Jones hasn’t held back engaging in sometimes-cutting verbal jousts with his former Randwick clubmate.

Cheika hasn’t been as forthcomin­g in response, possibly because his team is on a six-test losing streak against the English under Jones.

Given a chance to have another jab at a packed press conference, former Wallabies coach Jones instead offered praise to a man whose fiveyear tenure will finish if Australia are beaten.

‘‘They are a great tournament side. I think ‘Cheik’ has done a really good job,’’ he said.

‘‘I’m proud of the job he does. He’s a good old mate of mine.’’

Jones referenced the pair’s long associatio­n with Randwick club icon Jeff Sayle, who died last month aged 77.

Sayle was an influentia­l figure in the career of both coaches and they paid emotional public tributes soon after learning of his death.

‘‘There will be a bloke in the sky who will be quite excited about Michael and I coaching against each other this week,’’ Jones said.

‘‘I’m sure he’s having a few beers next to St Peter now looking at the situation.’’

Hours later, Cheika returned the compliment­s, although in a guarded fashion. He said he’d prefer it if the likes of Jones and top Australian coaches from other sports didn’t have to leave home.

‘‘It always hurts me when there’s an Aussie over there [England]. Trevor Bayliss and Eddie and, I don’t know, Wayne Bennett. You want them at home but it is what it is. What do you do?’’

Jones also took the chance to play down the invitation to Canberra Raiders NRL coach Ricky Stuart who has joined the England camp as part of their preparatio­ns this week.

Cheika said he found it ‘‘weird’’ that Stuart should be involved, sparking a possible flashpoint.

Jones said the timing of the invitation to ‘‘old mate’’ Stuart in the week they’re playing Australia was a coincidenc­e.

‘‘It’s just an exchange of ideas,’’ Jones said. ‘‘If you look at the history of what we’ve done over these four years we’ve invited coaches in all the time because we want to share their knowledge, we want to make sure we keep learning.’’

– AAP

 ??  ?? Rival coaches Michael Cheika, left, and Eddie Jones have a long associatio­n dating back to their club playing days.
Rival coaches Michael Cheika, left, and Eddie Jones have a long associatio­n dating back to their club playing days.

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