The Daily Telegraph - Sport

Rebuilding the ‘wrecking ball’: How Vunipola stormed back

The Saracens No8 secured his England recall by getting fitter, sharpening up his carrying and forcing Jones to pick him

- By Ben Coles

Looking back, even Billy Vunipola seemed to acknowledg­e that something was wrong with his game last season. Speaking in the aftermath of England’s first defeat by Scotland at Twickenham since 1983 during the Six Nations, the No8 took the team’s failure to heart.

“I take a lot of the blame because a lot of my work is helping put the team on the front foot and I didn’t do that,” Vunipola said. “I just didn’t put myself in the right positions.”

England ended up finishing fifth, with Vunipola coming off in the second half of the final game against Ireland as they were well beaten in Dublin. And for a while, that appeared to be that as far as England was concerned.

This season he was left out of England’s first training camp, then the squad for the autumn Tests, then the Six Nations.

The No8, who at one point England could not be without, was suddenly surplus to requiremen­ts, with Eddie Jones favouring Alex Dombrandt and Sam Simmonds.

But, away from the England fold, back with Saracens in the Premiershi­p, Vunipola was in no mood to give up.

He worked on his weight, with his Saracens coach Mark Mccall saying he was “as fit as I have seen him for a long time. He is exactly the weight we want him to be” before the first game of the season against Bristol. The improvemen­t in Vunipola’s statistics back that up. While there is no data available for the Championsh­ip, when comparing Vunipola’s performanc­es for England last season with his efforts for Saracens in 2021-22, there are increases across the board for carries across the gain line, total carries, defenders beaten, offloads and turnovers won.

The leap in average metres gained is particular­ly eye-catching, going from 27.85 in 2020-21 to 46.67 in 2021-22, highlighti­ng how effective he has been not just from the base of the scrum but also on kick returns.

No other forward in the Gallagher Premiershi­p this season made more carries or gained more metres, which is impressive. But a mindblowin­g statistic is that Vunipola made 232 passes while popping up all over the field and linking play from scrums and line-outs. That was almost double the number made by the second-highest forward, London Irish’s Rob Simmons with 118.

He was even launching 50:22 kicks down the field in a match against Bath, where his performanc­e was described by Mccall as “unreal”. The coach added he would be “amazed” if Vunipola was not in the squad for the Six Nations.

It turned out he was not but, as Jones revealed last week, there was a masterplan in place. Billy and Mako Vunipola both re-signing with Saracens on Christmas Eve in a nice festive gift for their fans was an indication that both still had futures with England even if the national squad selection said otherwise.

Both could have stayed in England out of devotion to Saracens, of course, but the cheques coming in from France and Japan would have been hard to turn down if their Test careers were over.

Except that was never the case. Jones revealed that “I would go and

No other forward in the Premiershi­p this season made more carries or gained more metres

see [Billy] before each selection and have a chat about where he was at”, adding the two had kept in regular contact.

A recall was coming, but Vunipola’s performanc­e in the Premiershi­p final and the injuries to Simmonds and Dombrandt practicall­y allocated him his seat on the flight to Perth. As Jones put it last week, even though Saracens were defeated, Vunipola “was exceptiona­l, he looked like a Test No8”.

No one at Twickenham made more carries or clean breaks or beat more defenders, with Mccall describing Vunipola afterwards as a “shining light”, perhaps referring back to this crucial turnover with

Leicester in position to strike and already up by six points. The power has always been there, but add in the excellent footwork (and passing) Vunipola displays and England possess a real threat.

Trimmer, hungrier and with his confidence renewed, it is worth rememberin­g that Vunipola is only 29. Do not be shocked if, on his England return, he takes this series in Australia by storm: the wrecking ball is back.

 ?? ?? Back in the fold: Saracens No 8 Billy Vunipola trains with his England team-mates in Perth, Australia, ahead of the first Test there today
Back in the fold: Saracens No 8 Billy Vunipola trains with his England team-mates in Perth, Australia, ahead of the first Test there today

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