Daily Mail

England held back by the fear of losing

- SIR CLIVE WOODWARD

IF WE learned one thing from the Autumn Cup final at Twickenham yesterday, it is that France will be the team to beat at the 2023 world Cup.

As a demonstrat­ion of their strength in depth and latent talent it was hugely impressive, although Les Blues will ultimately be disappoint­ed to have lost this game.

France made a mess of the last two minutes of normal time and challenged at the breakdown unnecessar­ily. They should have let england have the ball and fanned out across the field, a defensive system that had worked well all afternoon.

Instead they dived in and coughed up the penalty from which england drilled the ball into the corner and went to work. That was the decisive moment and, although england were good enough and discipline­d enough to make it count and force sudden death, France will be kicking themselves.

Until that moment, their Shaun edwards- drilled defence had looked rock solid.

They also got unlucky with a bad call. From the kick-off after half-time in extra-time, it was pretty clear that Sekou Macalou had not knocked on. The TMO should have stepped in. As it was, england got the scrum and cleared, and France were denied crucial field position.

england — and this group of talented players — can rise to the challenge over the next couple of years but they won’t win a world Cup by playing the brand of rugby they have produced this autumn.

They must find ways of offering much more in attack. Certainly nobody is losing sleep in Cape Town or Auckland watching england kick the ball away incessantl­y.

The players know that — you could sense it in the post-match interviews — and hopefully this performanc­e will have provided the wake-up call they need.

They have been sceptical of criticism, but having scraped a win against a France team missing their 30 best players, there can be no arguments now.

I have no issue with the team selected. That was england’s best side yesterday, with the possible exception of injured duo Manu Tuilagi and Mako Vunipola. But at present they are not maximising their potential.

Their kicking game has been too crude and predictabl­e — kick tennis was the rut they got into again yesterday — and it doesn’t challenge and stress the opposition. It lets them off the hook.

England must bring their dynamic runners into the game and develop a more sophistica­ted, all-court strategy.

I accept this can take time to evolve, but the clock is ticking.

That is why I remain disappoint­ed we saw so little emphasis on attack this autumn.

One of the more mystifying statements from eddie Jones recently was that england were not going to look at their attacking until after the Lions tour next year. Really?

The fear of losing is holding england back.

Individual­ly, Billy Vunipola has been a big success in recent weeks. I wrote after the Georgia win that he seemed back to his best — fit, busy, involved — and he maintained that throughout the tournament.

He has refined his tackling technique, is going lower like Tom Curry and Sam Underhill, and pulled off at least three piledriver­s yesterday.

But let’s finish with the French. I’ve been beating the drum on this for a while, and at times I suspect people have thought I was overstatin­g the case.

After all, France finished runners-up to england in the Six Nations and they are a long way from the finished article.

All that is true. But having tracked the France Under 20 team who won two junior world Cups on the bounce, and having spent a lot of time in France in recent years, I have sensed their strength in depth building, along with their belief in the new generation.

Throw in a forward- looking coach in Fabien Galthie, and edwards driving them to new levels of fitness and determinat­ion defensivel­y, and they are suddenly becoming formidable.

england v France games have lacked the authentic Le Crunch element for a while, but the three Six Nations encounters between now and the world Cup are going to be epic, probably Championsh­ip-deciding contests.

we are entering a vintage era of Anglo-French clashes once again — Le Crunch is back!

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Crunched: Watson loses the ball under pressure from Jalibert
GETTY IMAGES Crunched: Watson loses the ball under pressure from Jalibert

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