Daily Express

NOWELL HAILS RED ROSES

- By Alex Spink

JACK NOWELL has told the England women’s team to stay true to themselves and the Rugby World Cup can be theirs.

The Red Roses play hosts and reigning champions New Zealand in Saturday’s final at Auckland’s Eden Park.

They do so with Nowell urging them to ignore outside noise ranging from criticism of their playing style to baseless claims that a team unbeaten in 30 Tests will crumble under the weight of expectatio­n.

The Exeter star was part of the men’s team that reached the last World Cup final in Japan and he is clear how England, captained by Sarah Hunter, right, should approach their big day.

“Don’t change,” he said. “There’s a reason you’ve got to the final and that’s the way you’re playing. You’ve been playing unbelievab­le rugby. Stick to what you’re good at.”

Nowell said watching the Roses fly the flag so powerfully in New Zealand was “inspiring” for the men’s team as they bid to put behind them home defeat by Argentina when they play Japan on Saturday.

“When you see the women’s team winning the games they are, doing what they’re doing in the World Cup, it certainly does inspire the lads to push on,” he said. “If they’re doing it we want to make sure we are too.

“The growth of women’s rugby has gone through the roof in the last couple of years. To win the cup would be huge for English rugby, both the women’s and men’s game.”

As Nowell spoke an editorial in New Zealand claimed there must be a “stomach-churning thought gnawing away” in English minds that their long-running winning streak “will come to a grinding halt at the most unwanted time”. That followed intense sniping at a forward-dominated game plan that has enabled the two-time winners to sweep all before them en route to their eighth final. But Nowell pointed to Abby Dow’s length-of-the-field try in the semi-final win over Canada. “Unbelievab­le try,” he said. “They had the confidence to go from where they did.

“In games like this you can always go into your shells and change the way you’re playing – and think ‘it’s a final we probably shouldn’t be doing that’. But if it’s on, it’s on.”

Manu Tuilagi trained with the men’s team yesterday after a blister cut short his game against Argentina. Hooker Jamie George and No.8 Sam Simmonds appeared to also take prominent roles.

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