The Daily Telegraph - Sport

English sides ‘left mentally tired’

Gopperth sees benefits of central contracts Young says fatigue factor in internatio­nal woe

- By Mick Cleary RUGBY CORRESPOND­ENT

Jimmy Gopperth, the Wasps flyhalf, believes that the systems in New Zealand and Ireland leave players “mentally fresher” to play internatio­nal rugby.

New Zealand-born Gopperth, 34, has played in all three systems, for the Hurricanes and Blues in Super Rugby before moving overseas for stints first at Newcastle and then at Leinster before signing for Wasps in 2015. The playmaker has little doubt of the benefits for Test players in those set-ups.

“Those guys are mentally fresher for the simple reason that they get longer rest periods,” said Gopperth in response to Damian Hopley, the head of the players’ union, calling in yesterday’s Daily Telegraph for discussion on the introducti­on of central contracts in England.

“The All Blacks clocked off for 14 weeks when they finished their tour in Europe in November. Most of them only turned up for Super Rugby duty a week or so before that competitio­n started last month.

“Of course, they all had individual training programmes, little topups to do, and as a profession­al you are never going to let yourself go. The upside is that because you have been able to switch off, you come back really sharp and eager to go.

“At Leinster, you’d only see the Ireland boys [such as Johnny Sexton or Jamie Heaslip] for, say, 10 provincial games. That’s probably why the Irish teams are top of that European pile at the moment. It’s totally different here. It’s the raw end of those sort of deals.

“Look at what someone like Owen Farrell has got to do. Saracens have got a Champions Cup quarter-final at Leinster in 10 days’ time so the club will probably want to play him this weekend, too, to get continuity, into the cup, back for the Premiershi­p, off to South Africa, back for a World Cup season – well, good luck with that.”

Gopperth is quick to point out that Premiershi­p directors of rugby, such as his own at Wasps, Dai Young, are very mindful of player welfare. Gopperth has just enjoyed a golf break in Tenerife, while England internatio­nal players such as Joe Launchbury, James Haskell and Elliot Daly will have time off next week following Sunday’s Premiershi­p game against Leicester as Wasps did not make it through to the Champions Cup knockout stages.

With a possible seven games left, were Wasps to make it through to the Premiershi­p final, the England players’ match appearance­s for their club stand at Haskell 16, Launchbury 14 and Daly nine.

“None of them get anywhere near the recommende­d total of 32 games,” said Young. “But yes, England did look flat and jaded against Ireland. Is that the fault of the system? Well, they won back-to-back titles in that self-same system the previous two years, one of them a Grand Slam. There’s a lot of factors.

“It’s true that Ireland have greater rest periods. You can’t hide from that. England missed some hugely influentia­l players such as Billy Vunipola, while when Nathan Hughes stepped up, he hadn’t played much and got injured himself. It’s not one thing feeding in.

“It’s a demanding set-up here. There’s not a game in the Premiershi­p that doesn’t count for something, be it relegation, top six or seven for Europe, top four for the play-offs. The way that salary cap is set means that wages have gone up and we have had to trim our squads, from 45 to 42 to 41 to 39 this season.

“I heard Billy Vunipola say that he’d play for less money if it meant fewer games. I’ve not had many coming through my door saying that. Look, if England were like this for two or three more seasons, then you would probably have to look at the reasons why.”

 ??  ?? Raw deal: Jimmy Gopperth says England’s structure does not let them get the best out of their internatio­nal players
Raw deal: Jimmy Gopperth says England’s structure does not let them get the best out of their internatio­nal players

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