The Citizen (KZN)

Fire in England belly

SIX NATIONS: SKIPPER HAPPY TO LET PATRIOTISM PREVAIL AGAINST WALES

-

England captain Jamie George is happy to let patriotic pride fuel his side when they face Wales in the Six Nations at Twickenham today. It has long been suggested the Celtic nations benefit from an extra dose of emotion when playing “colonial” power England but George is keen to stress his side have plenty of passion of their own.

The Saracens hooker, however, accepts it is down to England to get a capacity crowd of more than 82 000 roaring them on given they were booed off the field in their last match at Twickenham following a first loss to Fiji in a Rugby World Cup warm-up in August.

England went on to finish third at the World Cup and they launched their Six Nations campaign with a narrow 27-24 win away to Italy last weekend – George’s first match as skipper.

“Something we have talked about a lot as a group is passion and not being afraid to show passion. I’ve certainly been encouragin­g of that this week,” said George.

“If people want to use that passion and emotion, as long as we are controlled and clear about what we are doing rugby-wise, I don’t see why we shouldn’t do that.

“We don’t want to replicate anyone else’s emotion – we are never going to try to do things another team’s way. We want to be authentic.”

England have lost half of their Six Nations matches at Twickenham over the last three years, a run of results that pre-dates the start of coach Steve Borthwick’s reign.

“First and foremost, we’ve identified that our win rate there hasn’t been good enough,” said George. “The most intimidati­ng atmosphere­s come off the back of the most intimidati­ng teams.”

The only change to England’s match-day 23 in Rome is the return of Ellis Genge on the bench after the prop pulled out on the morning of the Italy game with a foot injury.

Wales suffered an extraordin­ary 27-26 loss at home to Scotland last weekend – a match where they were 27-0 behind.

They head to London on a seven-match losing streak at Twickenham, while it is 12 years since Wales last enjoyed a Six Nations success in south-west London.

But coach Warren Gatland boasts a fine record at “headquarte­rs”.

The New Zealander oversaw a European Cup and three Premiershi­p final victories at Twickenham with Wasps, and launched his Wales career with an upset win over England at the ground in 2008 before further triumphs in 2012 and 2015.

“The first four times I went there, we won – three Premiershi­p finals and a Heineken (European) Cup final,” said Gatland. “I don’t find it intimidati­ng at all!”

But the 60-year-old is well aware he is not the one playing the game tomorrow. “I love the atmosphere, and it is even more special if you can walk away with a win,” he said.

Wales have a new front-row, centre George North returns from injury for his 50th Six Nations cap and Ioan Lloyd makes a first Test start as flyhalf. –

 ?? Picture: Getty Images ?? JAMIE GEORGE
Picture: Getty Images JAMIE GEORGE

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa