Daily Mirror

BLAME US, NOT EDDIE

Itoje insists it was the PLAYERS who produced an inept display... NOT THE COACH

- BY ALEX SPINK Rugby Correspond­ent @alexspinkm­irror

THIS time Maro Itoje was not prepared to see Eddie Jones throw himself into the line of fire.

This time he could not stay silent and allow his boss to take a bullet for him and his red-faced team mates. Itoje knew the drill, he had seen it after the World Cup final in Japan and defeat by France in Paris a year ago.

England lose badly and Jones protects his players by deflecting the flak on to himself by insisting it was he who got it wrong. Sure enough, the whistle blew on one of the most inept Red Rose displays ever and Jones was straight in among the flying shrapnel. Itoje was not having it. “We’re the ones on the field, we’re the ones responsibl­e for our own performanc­e,” he said.

“All the players know, as I’m pretty sure everyone does, that wasn’t up to scratch. That wasn’t good enough.

“As players we didn’t put our best foot forward. The basics of our game, we didn’t bring.”

England were second best in every area. Against a nation that had not beaten them at Twickenham since 1983 they barely got a touch of the ball. They lacked discipline, direction and composure.

While Hamish Watson and Jonny Gray caused havoc up front, England’s big men infringed on an industrial scale.

And while Finn Russell, Cam Redpath and Stuart Hogg sparkled, England’s decision-makers resembled robots out of batteries.

Jamie George admitted they “were not quite at the races” by which he could only have meant they were still in Moss Bros hiring their suits.

For the Six Nations champions were so far off the pace, in thought and deed, that this constitute­d the biggest five-point hammering in

rugby history. Hogg beat more defenders than the opposition combined, England scoring fewer points than any Red Rose team for a dozen years.

“When you play for England you need to make sure there are certain standards you hold yourself to,” said George. “We didn’t do that.

“We were a bit lethargic and illdiscipl­ined and that meant we couldn’t apply any pressure. There was an air of desperatio­n almost.”

Nobody would accept that building the spine of the team around Saracens players who had not played for two months was a mistake.

Except, that is, former Scotland boss Matt Williams, who laid into the Sarries quintet on Irish TV, in particular No.8 Billy Vunipola.

“If we didn’t know the pubs were closed you would swear he had been in one,” said the Australian. “He was out of shape. There was no way he was ready for internatio­nal rugby.”

With Vunipola in the sin bin, Duhan van der Merwe scored the try which proved decisive.

Scots will remember it as the day 38 years of hurt came to an end. For England it was the first time neither a crowd nor their team turned up. ENGLAND - Pens: Farrell 2. SCOTLAND - Try: Van der Merwe. Pens: Russell 2.

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England players look dejected including Itoje (far left)
LONG WAY OFF THE PACE England players look dejected including Itoje (far left)

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