Glasgow Times

Jones ready to take on ‘street fighter’ Cheika

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EDDIE Jones is eager to renew his rivalry with “street-fighter” Michael Cheika when England and Australia clash at Twickenham on Saturday.

Jones will celebrate a successful autumn if the Wallabies are dispatched in the final Quilter Internatio­nal with wins over South Africa and Japan so far offset only by a controvers­ial defeat to New Zealand.

Australia have won a mere four of their last 12 Tests, placing Cheika under pressure with less than a year to go until the World Cup.

Jones and Cheika played club rugby together for Randwick and while England’s head coach has won all five meetings between the rivals since taking over in 2015, he refuses to underestim­ate his longstandi­ng friend.

“Cheika is my old mate, he’s always at his best when they’re under pressure and he loves that,” Jones said.

“He’s a street-fighter and that makes them dangerous. But at the same time we’ve had a tough year too and we don’t mind a scrap either, so it should be a good scrap.”

England survived a scare against Japan on Saturday by conceding a 15-10 half-time deficit that eventually morphed into a 35-15 victory sealed by Joe Cokanasiga’s 72nd-minute try.

Eleven changes had been made to the side that faced the All Blacks and it was only when Owen Farrell was introduced after the interval that the tide turned.

Jones rejects concern over England’s reliance on their Saracens playmaker, however.

“If I was Japan and I had Michael Leitch off the field, I’d be a bit worried too,” Jones said.

“If I was us with Owen Farrell off the field, I’d be a bit worried. If I was Ireland with Sexton off the field, I’d be a bit worried.” and Wales scored 50 second-half points to win 74-24 and make it eight games unbeaten.

They have not lost since midway through last season’s Six Nations Championsh­ip, while victory over South Africa next weekend would give Wales a first clean sweep of wins in one autumn campaign following earlier successes this month 16-9 in Dublin on Saturday night.

The 22-year-old Ulster flyer was watching at home on TV when Ireland registered their firstever win over New Zealand, the 40-29 victory in Chicago in 2016 that proved 111 years in the making.

Fast forward just two years and Stockdale was chipping the All Blacks defence and

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