Caernarfon Herald

Owens: There will be same intensity even without crowd

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WALES hooker Ken Owens has warned England to expect no less intensity at an empty Principali­ty Stadium than if there were 70,000 Welsh fans screaming at them.

Eddie Jones says his England side are suffering from the drop in aggression that is evident across rugby and football due to the coronaviru­s-enforced absence of spectators at grounds.

England suffered their first Twickenham defeat to Scotland since 1983 before beating Italy 41-18 in another underwhelm­ing home display.

But Wales have registered wins against Ireland and Scotland to head into Saturday’s home game with England dreaming of Six Nations Grand Slam glory.

“I think the two games we’ve played have been really physical, top-end Test matches,” Owens said. “It feels exactly at the level we’ve had in previous years playing in Six Nations, how Test rugby should be played.”

On the absence of crowds, Owens said: “People have heard me singing the anthem out of tune, which hasn’t been great.

“It is different. In the Ireland game all the pyrotechni­cs stopped and then there was this deathly silence, which was almost surreal. “You didn’t know what to make of it.

“It obviously does have an affect not having a crowd because you feed off the energy of the crowd and that atmosphere pushes on.

“I can probably see what he (Jones) is on about to a certain degree.

“Back-to-back efforts, especially defensivel­y, and a couple of big hits, if you get a tackle on the front foot you are feeding off the energy of the crowd.

“But it’s something we’ve all got to deal with and learn to adapt. As a profession­al player there’s no real excuse. You have to find your own motivation, that energy to play at the intensity needed in Test level.”

Wales won a 12th Grand Slam under Warren Gatland two years ago, the third leg of which was a 21-13 victory over England in Cardiff. But expectatio­ns were low this year after autumn defeats to Scotland, Ireland and England.

Owens said: “Everyone was really frustrated with the autumn. There was a lot of hard work put in which was perhaps maybe not quite translated on to the field.

“The time the boys and coaches have spent to get through that period, plus the review in between has really helped.”

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