Sunderland Echo

NOW FOR THE SIX NATIONS!

TRIUMPHANT ENGLAND COACH LOOKING AHEAD AFTER COMPLETING PERFECT YEAR AGAINST AUSSIES

- Rugby Union

Eddie Jones insists England must bristle with ambition when they seek to build on a perfect first year under his guidance by successful­ly defending their RBS 6 Nations title.

Australia were crushed 37-21 at Twickenham on Saturday to complete a clean sweep of autumn victories and equal the record of 14 successive Test triumphs set by Sir Clive Woodward’s World Cup winners in 2002-03.

An unblemishe­d 12 months comprising of 13 wins sees England end 2016 placed second in the global rankings, but Jones has already turned his mind to plotting the downfall of his European rivals.

“The Six Nations, in my limited experience of it, is a different competitio­n to the autumn,” Jones said.

“Being an outsider to the Six Nations, I thought there was an absolute fear of losing rather than wanting to win. What we want to do in the Six Nations is go out there and win it.

“Also, you get the guys coming back having played three or four weeks of European rugby and they’re in a fatigued state.

“You’ve got to find a way to regenerate them and get them used to playing internatio­nal rugby.

“The only thing I’m interested in now is winning the Six Nations and to win the Six Nations we need more consistenc­y in our set piece.

“I want to have the most dominant scrum. The scrum in the Six Nations is enormously important so we want that dominance.”

Despite missing the injured Billy Vunipola, James Haskell and Maro Itoje, England produced a conclusive end to the autumn by overcoming a poor start to run in four tries, extending their mastery of the Wallabies to a fourth successive victory.

Jones spent Sunday debriefing his players, who return to their clubs with clear instructio­ns on areas for improvemen­t knowing that any drop in standards will result in demotion from the Six Nations squad.

“If you don’t keep performing, you won’t be in the team,” said Jones, who will finalise his selection for the Championsh­ip at the end of the month.

“No one owns an English jersey, you borrow the jersey for 80 minutes. You’re lucky to get it again, you have to work hard to get it and if you don’t have the right attitude, then you won’t get it.

“If players aren’t hungry and you see it in their performanc­e straight away, then they won’t be here. We have enough depth to change the squad if we need to.

“There’s a tipping point in the team when you get six, seven, eight players with that absolute desire to want to do well then if you’re not in that group, you tend to fall out.

“That’s how great teams keep on getting better. We haven’t got that tipping point yet but we’re moving towards it. The team is a dynamic organism and it has its own life so you just have to keep doing the right things, keep doing the right processes and do the bits and pieces and it’ll come together.”

One player who is in no danger of missing out is Owen Farrell, England’s goalkickin­g points machine who has pieced together a solid if unspectacu­lar autumn while shaking off the lingering after effects of the back injury that delayed his start to the season.

Farrell excelled throughout the whitewash of Australia in June and Jones views the 25-year-old as the “standard bearer” for the team.

“Owen is the spirit of the team. He’s an absolute competitor,” Jones said.

 ??  ?? Jonathan Joseph celebrates scoring England’s fourth try at Twickenham on Saturday
Jonathan Joseph celebrates scoring England’s fourth try at Twickenham on Saturday

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