Otago Daily Times

Six Nations set to kick off in shadow of Lions tour

-

LONDON: The coaches are doing all they can to deny it, and in France’s case they have a strong case, but for rugby aficionado­s around the world the Six Nations championsh­ip will double up as a highoctane trial for the British and Irish Lions.

The Lions tour to New Zealand in June and July is the high point of the 2017 rugby calendar and coach Warren Gatland and his assistants will make the decisions about the bulk of the touring party based on performanc­es over the next six weeks.

The competitio­n kicks off tomorrow, when Scotland hosts Ireland and England begins the defence of its title against France, at Twickenham. Italy plays Wales on Monday.

England coach Eddie Jones said last week he had been a little surprised by the intensity of the tournament, having taken over as England coach at the start of 2016, but he adapted to it well enough by leading the team to its first grand slam since 2003.

If England repeats the feat this year, finishing off with a tough trip to Dublin on March 18, it would take its winning run to 19 games, surpassing the tier one world record of 18 set by New Zealand, and ended by Ireland last year.

Jones, of course, is refusing to look beyond his first fixture but accepted that the Lions shadow will be a constant backdrop to the championsh­ip.

‘‘If you read the media, players are talking about the Lions, about the tour, how they want to be a Lion. It’s a massive attraction but can be a massive distractio­n,’’ Jones said when announcing his Six Nations squad.

The Australian will demand full focus on France, which showed signs of stirring under Guy Noves in November, despite defeats by Australia and New Zealand, as it seeks a first title since 2010.

The England side will have a different look to that which swept through the autumn internatio­nals with four wins to complete a perfect year of 13 wins. They are missing key players such as Chris Robshaw and Billy and Mako Vunipola through injury, but welcome back the likes of Maro Itoje, James Haskell and Jack Nowell.

England is the slight bookmakers’ favourite for the title but Ireland, riding high after taking the scalp of the All Blacks for the first time, is not far behind, despite having three away games.

Ireland is a relatively settled side. Conor Murray and Johnny Sexton, who miss their opening game, are a highclass halfback pairing and favourites for the Lions 9 and 10 jerseys.

Ireland will need to hit the ground running at Murrayfiel­d as Scotland is also enjoying something of a resurgence under Vern Cotter, who will be replaced by Gregor Townsend in June.

Scotland certainly needs it as it looks to improve a dismal record in the competitio­n it last won in 1999, the final year of its fiveteam format. In the 17 seasons since Scotland has finished in the bottom two 11 times.

An encouragin­g autumn, however, has lifted confidence and for Lions representa­tion too, as no Scot has been in a starting Lions test team since prop Tom Smith in 2001.

The victorious Lions in Australia four years ago were virtually Wales in different red shirts but the current Welsh side, still boasting the heart of that team, is somewhat in limbo, despite victories over South Africa, Argentina and Japan in November that came after a fivematch losing streak.

Rob Howley has taken temporary coaching responsibi­lities while Gatland is on Lions duty and his first major decision has been to relieve Sam Warburton of the captaincy in favour of Alun Wyn Jones, who also replaced him for the final Lions test in 2013.

He will expect to get off to a winning start in Rome, having won the last 10 meetings with Italy, but certainly will not be expecting a cruise.

Italy secured what it will hope was a breakthrou­gh victory against South Africa in the autumn, its first against any of the southern hemisphere big three, as new coach Conor O’Shea stamped his mark on the team. — Reuters

If you read the media, players are talking about the Lions, about the tour, how they want to be a Lion. It’s a massive attraction but can be a massive distractio­n

— England coach Eddie Jones

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand