The Phnom Penh Post

England back ‘kamikaze kids’ to smash Pumas

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ENGLAND coach Eddie Jones has welcomed back battering ram Mako Vunipola and backed his “kamikaze kids” to wreak havoc in this weekend’s World Cup Pool C clash with Argentina.

Flankers Tom Curry and Sam Underhill start for Saturday’s crunch fixture in Tokyo, while prop Vunipola returns to the bench along with winger Jack Nowell, who has also recovered from a long-term injury.

“I think they will be useful in terms of that contest at the breakdown,” Jones said Thursday, referring to Curry and Underhill whom he christened with their nickname because they “hit everything that moves”.

The Aust ra l ia n, who had t he f ul l complement of 31 players to select from, admitted that Vunipola and Nowell were yet to reach peak fitness but tipped them to have an impact as England look to secure a quarter-final spot with one game to play.

“They’re still a way off but they trained really well yesterday and showed they’re fit enough to make really significan­t contributi­ons.”

Jones made nine changes from the team that thrashed the US 45-7 with only Joe Marler, George Kruis, Curry, Billy Vunipola, George Ford and Elliot Daly keeping their places.

Scrum-half Ben Youngs will win his 92nd cap, overtaking 2003 World Cup hero Jonny Wilkinson and putting him behind recent captain Dylan Hartley and prop Jason Leonard. Prop Dan Cole can draw level with Youngs if he comes on.

Pumas hooker Agustin Creevy – who earlier this week branded England’s rugby as “boring” and warned the game would be “like a war” – was named among Argentina’s replacemen­ts.

“It’s an interestin­g team,” Jones said of the 2015 semi-finalists.

“We know Argentina are at their best at World Cups. They’re a pretty good team if they can get Creevy to come off the bench.”

Jones, whose team have trashed Tonga (35–3) and the US (45-7), has stuck with the double playmaker strategy of captain Owen Farrell at insidecent­re and George Ford at fly-half.

“It’ll be a tough game but we’re prepared for any conditions thrown at us and to play any sort of rugby to win,” said Farrell.

Jones pinpointed the scrum as key to the game – one the Pumas need to win after losing 23-21 to France in their Pool C opener.

“It’s part of Argentinia­n rugby culture,” said the former Australia and Japan coach.

“It’s going to be a massive test on Saturday but they haven’t scrummed against us,” warned Jones.

“We believe our scrum can be a real weapon – so hang on to your seats!”

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