Sunderland Echo

Jones to face ‘brutally honest analysis’ of England’s Six Nations failure

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Eddie Jones’ future will be decided by a “brutally honest analysis” of England’s dismal Six Nations performanc­e with the Rugby Football Union declining to give him unequivoca­l support ahead of its tournament review.

The second fifth-place finish of the Jones era has placed the Australian’s position under intense scrutiny as a panel overseen by RFU chief executive Bill Sweeney begins the process of reviewing a failed campaign with its verdict due in mid-April.

Losses to Scotland, Wales and Ireland condemned England to their worst Six Nations performanc­e on the grounds of points difference and Sweeney stated that “it’s important to stress that Eddie’s not in denial”.

England entered the tournament as champions after compiling an eight-Test winning run, but apart from a magnificen­t round four victory over France they have looked a shadow of the team that reached the final of the 2019 World Cup.

When asked if Jones or his assistants could be sacked as a result of recent performanc­es, Sweeney said: “I don’t think I could honestly answer that one.

“It needs to be a thorough, brutally honest analysis of what went wrong and why and what the issues are.

“I spoke to him on Sunday. He’s as disappoint­ed as we are. He’s hugely competitiv­e and we will do this debriefing session together as a panel and see what we learn from it.

“Eddie’s massively competitiv­e and hugely disappoint­ed. You would expect that. He is equally frustrated at the inconsiste­ncy of the performanc­e against France and a week later you have a performanc­e against Ireland which is very disappoint­ing.

“I know it is fine margins but to come away with a loss there when things are looking back to the way we were performing against Ireland in the autumn and the World Cup…

“We need to get to the facts of it. We need to lift the hood up, have a look in there and say are we headed in the right direction?”

Counting in Jones’ favour is a win ratio of 77 per cent – the highest of any England head coach – with the 61-yearold entering his sixth year at the helm.

“I think you have to recognise and respect Eddie’s achievemen­t since he’s been here – three Six Nations titles, a Grand Slam, a World Cup final. That’s a tremendous performanc­e,” Sweeney said.

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