Irish Daily Mirror

HERRING HAS NO FEARS ABOUT IRISH ANDOVER

- BY ALEX SPINK Rugby Correspond­ent @alexspinkm­irror

SAM BURGESS has blamed “individual egos and selfish players” for England losing Andy Farrell to Ireland.

Farrell’s appointmen­t to succeed Joe Schmidt has sparked a fierce debate as to how England allowed one of their own to now be blocking their path to Six Nations and World Cup glory.

The answer lies in the humiliatio­n of the 2015 World Cup when England became the first host nation ever to be knocked out in the pool stages.

Rugby league import Burgess was cast as the villain of a failure which prompted the Rugby Football Union to replace head coach Stuart Lancaster with Eddie Jones – who then fired Farrell.

Three years on, both Farrell and Lancaster are enjoying such huge success in Ireland that one will take over as national team boss a year from now and the other, already coach of European champions Leinster, could well join him.

Sir Clive Woodward said he was “almost filled with despair” at the turn of events.

”I think you should be gutted,” Ireland star Rob Kearney agreed, on the Eggchasers Podcast. “English rugby, what you guys have lost has been an enormous factor in the success of Irish rugby over the last few years.”

When Kearney’s comment hit social media and Burgess was once again name-checked in the subsequent blame game, Slammin’ Sam let rip.

“I seem to be getting a few tweets regarding the Rugby WC in 2015 .... still,” Burgess posted on Twitter. “If people actually re-watched the games I participat­ed in you will see I added to the team.

“What cost us an early exit was individual egos and selfish players not following our leader, which essentiall­y cost the coach and other great men their jobs.

“Tournament­s are not won by the coaching staff or one player. It takes a commitment from the full group.

“I guarantee you this, I was committed but others had their own agendas.” ULSTER hooker Rob Herring believes Ireland will enjoy a seamless transition when Andy Farrell steps into the coaching hotseat.

Asked if Joe Schmidt has establishe­d a “culture” during his five years at the helm, Herring (above) said: “I think so. There are definitely things he has embedded into the side.

“Just the small habits, I don’t think they’ll disappears when he leaves. So in terms of legacy, that will be going on for a long time.”

 ??  ?? IT WASN’T MY FAULT Burgess (second right) blames some team-mates for England’s fall KICKED INTO TOUCH But boss Lancaster has flourished since FUTURE BOSS Andy Farrell chats with Ireland star Sam Arnold
IT WASN’T MY FAULT Burgess (second right) blames some team-mates for England’s fall KICKED INTO TOUCH But boss Lancaster has flourished since FUTURE BOSS Andy Farrell chats with Ireland star Sam Arnold

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