Coventry Telegraph

Van has to be the man as England prepare for World Cup

- By DUNCAN BECH

THE final autumn campaign before next year’s World Cup began in earnest as England collapsed to a shock defeat by Argentina, Wales crumbled before New Zealand and Ireland and Scotland produced wins against South Africa and Fiji respective­ly.

Here is we learned from the weekend.

Argentina expose repeat failings

An air of weary resignatio­n greeted England’s fifth defeat in nine Tests this year after the Pumas emerged worthy 30-29 winners.

The last time Argentina prevailed at Twickenham in 2006 Andy Robinson was sacked as head coach, but there are few scenarios in which Eddie Jones departs before next year’s World Cup due to the unequivoca­l backing he receives from the Rugby Football Union. This first defeat in the fixture since 2009 having amassed 10 successive wins was dire, however, and exposed failings in discipline, attack and selection – recurring issues of recent times that must be urgently addressed.

JVP’S time to shine

Jack van Poortvliet was on the pitch for only 29 seconds when he made a crucial interventi­on to halt Argentina’s momentum in the wake of quickfire tries from Emiliano Boffelli and Santiago Carreras.

Using his vision and accelerati­on, he leapt on a defensive lapse to race over for a score that propelled England back into contention. Jones has chopped and changed at scrumhalf, but it is time for the 21-year-old rookie to be made a permanent fixture in the starting jersey as the World

Cup looms just 12

Tests away.

Using his vision and accelerati­on, he leapt on a defensive lapse to race over for a score that propelled England back into contention.

Europe leads the way

The year is almost over yet France and Ireland are inseparabl­e when deciding the best performing team of 2022. Andy Farrell’s men toppled world champions South Africa 19-16 to follow up their historic series win in New Zealand in July, preserving their place at the summit of the global rankings. France, meanwhile, are the Grand Slam champions and by edging Australia 30-29 on Saturday amassed an 11th successive win. The Springboks head to Paris and the Wallabies to Dublin in fixtures that could identify

who heads into 2023 as the game’s dominant force.

Russell’s Scotland saga continues

Scotland head coach Gregor Townsend is in a mess of his own making, his decision to omit Finn Russell from his squad for the autumn now looking ill-advised as he has had to perform a U-turn in the wake of the head and knee injuries sustained by Adam Hastings against Fiji.

Townsend has endured a patchy relationsh­ip with the nation’s most creative player but having justified

Russell’s omission on the grounds of “form and consistenc­y”, he has had to eat humble pie and recall the mercurial Racing 92 fly-half.

Wales on the slide

The statistics paint a damning picture. Wales fell to their 33rd successive defeat to New Zealand, lost the try count 8-2 and in the process leaked 55 points – the most they have conceded in Cardiff against any side in 138 years.

Easier challenges come next in the shape of Argentina, Georgia and Australia but pressure is beginning to mount on Wayne Pivac, who has engineered only two wins in nine outings against Rugby Championsh­ip sides.

 ?? ?? Jack van Poortvliet races away to score an England try
Jack van Poortvliet races away to score an England try

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