South Wales Echo

Farrell moves to No.10 for Springboks crunch

-

OWEN Farrell has been acclaimed as England’s “spiritual leader” after winning the flyhalf selection race for tomorrow’s clash with South Africa at Twickenham (3pm).

The British and Irish Lion will make only his third start in the position since the launch of the Eddie Jones era in 2016, forming a midfield trio alongside Ben Te’o and Henry Slade.

It means George Ford continues with the bench role he filled against the Springboks in Cape Town in June as Jones looks beyond the twin maker policy that has previously served him well.

Already England’s co-captain, tactical general and goalkicker, Jones has now entrusted the Saracen with the playmaking duties as the countdown to next year’s World Cup enters a key phase.

“We know what George and Owen can do, so we’ve got that combinatio­n already,” Jones said.

“I wanted to see the difference it makes playing Owen at 10 with bigger centres. It gives us a different way of being able to play. Tactically we’ll be a little bit different.

“Owen’s a good decision maker and he has a very good tactical kicking game. He’s bit of a spiritual leader in our side so being close to the action will help in that regard.”

The selection of Te’o at inside centre is a gamble given the Worcester centre has been limited to a mere 28 minutes of rugby this season due to thigh surgery and a calf problem.

Te’o made his comeback as a second-half replacemen­t on Challenge Cup duty on October 20, but has been propelled straight back into action, Jones convinced by his impact during the squad’s training camp in Portugal.

“Ben’s ready to start. He’s a very good player - a Lions player - so we know what he’s capable of doing.

“He’s come into camp fit, has worked hard to get over his injury and is a good ball carrier and a good defensive player.”

The inclusion of Te’o means Manu Tuilagi is confined to a bench a role where he will win his first cap since 2016 as an impact substitute amid high expectatio­n.

Tuilagi has played far more rugby this season and appears to have overcome an injuryrava­ged few years, his recent man of the match performanc­e for Leicester against the Scarlets evidence of a player recapturin­g his form.

Chris Ashton has failed to make the matchday 23 altogether with Jonny May and Jack Nowell preferred on the wings.

Completing the backline is Slade’s inclusion at outside centre, the position he filled throughout the 2-1 series defeat by the Springboks in June.

The void left by an injury crisis at number eight is filled by Mark Wilson, who will be winning his fifth cap in the absence of Billy Vunipola and Nathan Hughes.

Dylan Hartley, co-captain alongside Farrell, has more caps than the rest of the pack put together having made 93 internatio­nal appearance­s.

England: E Daly (Wasps); J Nowell (Exeter Chiefs), H Slade (Exeter Chiefs), B Te’o (Worcester Warriors), J May (Leicester Tigers); O Farrell (Saracens, co-capt), B Youngs (Leicester Tigers); A Hepburn (Exeter Chiefs), D Hartley (Northampto­n Saints, co-capt), K Sinckler (Harlequins), M Itoje (Saracens), G Kruis (Saracens), B Shields (Wasps), T Curry (Sale Sharks), M Wilson (Newcastle Falcons). Reps: J George (Saracens), B Moon (Exeter Chiefs), H Williams (Exeter Chiefs), C Ewels (Bath Rugby), Z Mercer (Bath Rugby), D Care (Harlequins), G Ford (Leicester Tigers), M Tuilagi (Leicester Tigers).

South Africa: D Willemse; S Nkosi, J Kriel, D de Allende, A Dyantyi; H Pollard, I van Zyl; S Kitshoff, M Marx, F Malherbe, E Etzebeth, P du Toit, S Kolisi (capt), D Vermeulen, W Whiteley. Reps: B Mbonambi, T du Toit, W Louw, RG Snyman, L de Jager, E Papier, E Jantjies, A Esterhuize­n.

Referee: Angus Gardner (Australia).

 ??  ?? Owen Farrell will direct operations for England from outside-half
Owen Farrell will direct operations for England from outside-half

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom