Bangkok Post

Snakes alive! England hopes of series win on line in Bloemfonte­in

-

>> JOHANNESBU­RG: England have turned to snakes as they try and turn the tables on hosts South Africa in Bloemfonte­in after an extraordin­ary first match last weekend in the three-Test series.

Another defeat tonight in the second showdown and English dreams of winning a series in the republic for the first time will disappear, reducing the Cape Town Test to a dead rubber. They looked to be heading for a handsome first Test triumph when leading by 21 points after just 18 minutes in Johannesbu­rg only to collapse and lose 42-39.

To get their minds off a fifth consecutiv­e beating this year, the players opted for a snakes-and-spiders show.

“We had a reptile show and a barbecue so that the boys could get their minds away from what happened in Johannesbu­rg,” said defence coach Paul Gustard. “There were some long green snakes, some long black-andwhite ones too. The players chose to do it and organised the show.

“They reacted differentl­y to the slippery guests. Some seemed comfortabl­e close to the snakes while others were quite nervous.”

Head coach Eddie Jones hopes the reptilian diversion works as he tries to snap a run of defeats since February by Scotland, France, Ireland, the Barbarians and South Africa.

While his position does not appear to be in immediate danger, the Australian knows he was hired to transform England into world rugby heavyweigh­ts, not bumbling middleweig­hts.

Media reports suggest all may not be well in the England camp with Gustard leaving after the tour — the latest departee from the coaching staff.

The training methods of the Australian have also come under fire from an English club boss with 15 players returning injured from camps since Jones took charge two years ago.

But the most pressing problem is on the field with England winning 24 of 25 Tests under Jones before failing in the last four.

He wants England t o dominate South Africa early on at the 45,000-capacity Free State Stadium, but not crumble this time. “When you win like South Africa did last Saturday you go into the next game with a bit of confidence so we have to make sure we dent that confidence early on,” he said. “Bloemfonte­in lies at altitude and the ground is very fast. It has an average of 60 points per Test so we are anticipati­ng an ebb-and-flow game.

 ??  ?? England coach Eddie Jones, second left, and his players during training.
England coach Eddie Jones, second left, and his players during training.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Thailand