The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Cockerill flattered but focused on Edinburgh and not England job

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Richard Cockerill jokes he’s been banned too often by the RFU to be employed by them as England coach, but he’s dismissive anyway of being on a shortlist drawn up to eventually replace Eddie Jones.

The Edinburgh head coach’s focus is wholly on Edinburgh, and RFU chief executive Nigel Melville’s mentioning of his name when discussing future England coaches seems to be a distractio­n he’d rather not have.

“They must have a really shortlist of candidates,” mused Cockerill.

“It is a surprise to me; Eddie is contracted to 2021 as I am here. I am happy to be doing what I am doing here.

“I would like to get involved in internatio­nal rugby but it certainly won’t be until my time here is up. It is always nice to be mentioned in those circles but I have been mentioned before and I am still here. There is no job to be taken. I am not sure the RFU would want me to do it anyway. I have been banned enough by them!”

Cockerill is “an Englishman and a very proud one” but nationalit­y doesn’t come in to it when he coaches, he stressed.

“I’ve coached in three different competitio­ns (Premiershi­p, Top 14 and now PRO14) so that’s experience, but the reality is that it is irrelevant if it is an English, French, or Scottish team; I am here to coach and get the best out of the guys.

“My relationsh­ip isn’t with a country, it is with a group of players that I am coaching and the environmen­t we are working in.

“My job is that of a pro coach and I will do whatever is best for Edinburgh who I coach at this point. I have an emotional attachment to this club because we have put a lot of effort and time to try and get it as good as it can be.

“Part of it is obviously to pay the bills but the real driver for me is to do a really good job because I want to be a good pro and be treated with respect as a coach.”

The primary focus is on Newcastle at the weekend, a match that if won would put Edinburgh in the driving seat to win the pool and make the quarter-finals in their return to the competitio­n after several years.

“We’ve got a great opportunit­y to go and win at the weekend and put ourselves right in the box seat to qualify and that’s what we’ll try and do,” continued

Cockerill.

“But even if we don’t win we still have another two opportunit­ies to get out of this group.

“That’s the thing about the pool stage and actually understand­ing how that works. Even at the weekend when we got the fourth try it was about let’s not give them any extra (losing bonus) point which could give them a fillip.

“Even if we just get a point out of this game, it’s another point closer to qualifying. But we’d really like to create games for us that are big games that we have to win.

“Newcastle on Sunday is not a mustwin as there will be other opportunit­ies. But we’d really like get to (the final group game) Montpellie­r and have a game to qualify or a game to finish top.

“We need to play in those sorts of games, this is a learning curve for us. If that comes quicker than we expected then I’ll take it.”

Newcastle have added former Scotland and Edinburgh back rower John Hardie to their squad on registrati­on yesterday as well as Jack Payne, the academy tighthead prop they brought to Murrayfiel­d after injuries to three regulars but were refused permission to register at the eleventh hour.

 ??  ?? Richard Cockerill: surprised by link.
Richard Cockerill: surprised by link.

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