Daily Mirror

IT ALL CAME DOWN TO A TALE OF TWO CAPTAINS

- BY ALEX SPINK

A TALE of two captains left Warren Gatland purring and Eddie Jones with furrowed brow.

Gatland (right, top) was lauded by Jones for his “great achievemen­t” in winning a third Grand Slam after skipper Alun Wyn Jones inspired Wales to emphatical­ly dethrone Ireland.

In contrast, England captain Owen Farrell had two kicks charged down for tries, was fortunate to escape a red card and then subbed off early as England collapsed at Twickenham.

Jones (right, below) admitted: “Owen lost a bit of his edge. He’s the hardest taskmaster in the world and he’ll be disappoint­ed with his game.

“But he’s a young captain and like any young captain it takes time. You don’t put a C next to someone’s name and they learn every lesson on how to manage a game.”

This is not a concern for Wales given that their captain boasts 134 caps and grows in influence by the week, but it is becoming one for England.

There is a reason few fly-halves skipper sides at Test level – and World Cup winner Paul Grayson fears too much is being asked of Farrell. “I feel his job spec is so big that the full captaincy on his own is a massive ask,” the former England No.10 told Radio 5 Live.

“Owen Farrell has got so much on his plate as fly-half that when England got into trouble against Wales and Scotland, maybe he tries to do it all and he loses himself.

“He got himself into another messy collision which maybe happens when he is under stress and trying to fix things on his own.

“Maybe having finishers like Dylan Hartley coming off the bench in the final quarter with a calm head is something Eddie Jones looks at.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom