The Independent on Saturday

Jones’ sell-by-date ended when England lost to Boks at the World Cup

- MARK KEOHANE

I LIKE Eddie Jones. He is great for the promotion of the game. He has a wonderful sense of humour, is astute and he is extremely clever.

But he won’t win England a World Cup and he knows it.

Jones, a former Wallabies head coach and Springbok specialist adviser, should have departed England after the humiliatin­g defeat in the 2019 World Cup final against the Boks.

Jones is a brilliant tactician and one of the technical masters of the game. He is also a control freak when it comes to his team selections, strategic approach and the applicatio­n of this approach.

His trust comes in his player selections, but he coaches the team and he is in charge of the team.

It is why Jones always claims responsibi­lity for a result, particular­ly when his team loses. It is the right thing to do at any press conference.

But this past week Jones claimed responsibi­lity for England losing at home against Scotland in the Six Nations and then blamed his players for the fact that they lost – the very same players he consistent­ly has picked and the same players who failed him in their biggest test in the 2019 World Cup final.

Jones called a special press conference this week to discuss England’s defeat, but then proceeded to throw his players under a big red bus.

Jones was asked if captain Owen Farrell, who had a poor match against Scotland, was ‘simply following orders’ in his tactical approach.

“Once we get on the field, the players make all the decisions, that’s always been the case. But the responsibi­lity to prepare them for the game is the head coach, and therefore I didn’t give them the right informatio­n,” was his retort.

“There are five million situations in a game and we don’t coach five million situations.”

What a load of bollocks Eddie! If you allowed the lunatics to run the asylum, there wouldn’t be injured senior players parading as water runners, there wouldn’t be specialist coaches running on with a kicking tee and there wouldn’t be all sorts of physios and conditioni­ng coaches wired up with direct communicat­ions to you Eddie and your assistants in the coach’s box.

You, Eddie, wouldn’t have a device in your ear and a microphone throughout the 80 minutes of play if you weren’t talking to them, belting out instructio­ns and trying to help these players make sense from those on-field decisions that were doing all the damage in your pursuit of victory.

No coach waits for the half-time talk or the post-match review to instruct players. It is ongoing for 80 minutes.

If internatio­nal rugby, or the game at any profession­al level, was down to players deciding how to play the ‘five million different’ situations, we’d have a decidedly less structured and robotic offering as a sport.

We would also have one filled with more drama, more exhibition, more magic and many more mistakes.

Rugby union, with first phase defensive systems so structured, get their attack from the clever guys in the coaching boxes.

There aren’t, to quote Eddie, five million different situations to a game. There are more like five and from those five there are a few variations.

And they all come courtesy of the instructio­n from within the coach’s box.

If not, then the coach and his busload of support staff, could be seated in the grand stand enjoying a spectator’s view.

The players have to implement the plays on the field and make decisions with regard to the plays, but it isn’t a case of carte blanche for any player, be it for Eddie’s England or for Rassie Erasmus’s Springboks.

Jones has always been a great winner, but he isn’t a great loser.

His charisma when on the front foot leads to sizzling sound bites, but he isn’t quite as charismati­c when back-pedalling.

Jones was defiant after the Scotland defeat, as he was after the Springboks defeat.

He said he and the team had to move on, but how do they successful­ly move on if they haven’t learnt much?

Jones’s England against Scotland looked as dour and devoid of any strategic attacking plan as England did when taking 100 minutes to beat France’s pups in the final of the Nations Cup last November.

Jones admitted as much when he said that the many lessons of that day didn’t seem to have been learnt.

If the players aren’t responding to those lessons, then why does he continue to pick them?

Jones is always good conversati­on and good value for a quote, but historical­ly he has always had a sell-by date when working with big teams.

For me, his sell-by date with England ended in the final few minutes of the World Cup final in Tokyo when South Africa’s Cheslin Kolbe’s twinkle toes embarrasse­d Farrell’s attempt at a tackle.

There has been very little offered from Jones as to how he and England got it so wrong against the Springboks in the final.

It must be that his players made all the on-field decisions, which simply asks the question why those who got it so badly wrong in a World Cup final in 2019 are still there to get it so wrong again in 2021?

Which brings us to the coach, who picked those players to make the decisions he apparently can’t do for them because there are apparently five million instances in a game when a player will have to think for himself. Why is this coach even there?

 ?? CHRISTOPHE ENA AP ?? ENGLAND coach Eddie Jones gives instructio­ns to a player. |
CHRISTOPHE ENA AP ENGLAND coach Eddie Jones gives instructio­ns to a player. |

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