Daily Mirror

UGO: YOU GO EDDIE... JUST LIKE JOSE DID

- BY ALEX SPINK

UGO MONYE feels Eddie Jones’ time as England boss has ‘run its course’ – comparing where he is to Jose Mourinho’s last days at Chelsea.

The former England star said a dismal autumn for his old team, culminatin­g in them being booed off at Twickenham on Saturday, was a watershed moment for boss Jones (above).

“The moment you start losing the faith in the fans it becomes very difficult,” said Monye. “That’s the spot we’re in right now. England need to figure out whether they stick or twist.

“They’ve regressed since 2019. We haven’t beaten anybody in the top five in the world in the last 12 months, in the top 10 the only teams we’ve beaten are Australia, Wales and Japan.

“I don’t think anyone is saying Eddie is a bad coach, he’s got an incredible proven track record,” Monye (below) told the BBC’s Rugby Union Weekly podcast.

“But I look at football and the likes of Jose Mourinho. He’s still a great coach but that relationsh­ip ran its course at Chelsea as well as other clubs.

“I look at Arsene Wenger at Arsenal. He did incredible things, he was behind the Invincible­s, but he was there too long and he had to go.

“There are many examples of world class, incredibly well experience­d coaches who either stay too long or there is a disconnect between them, the players or them and the fans.”

The RFU has given itself a fortnight to reach a verdict on an autumn which brought a solitary win over Japan and decide whether Jones remains the right man to take England to the World Cup.

England have failed to win seven of their 12 Tests in 2022, their worst calendar year of results since 2008.

“I would like to see the RFU be bold,” said Monye. “They have fiercely backed this person, it’s been a tempestuou­s seven years.

“I feel that to a certain extent that this relationsh­ip has maybe run its course at this point, I really do.”

He added that Lions boss Warren Gatland could find himself in a position to choose between England and a short-term return to Wales.

“He’s there going ‘I tell you what, do I want to be coach of Wales or England for the next five years? No. But I reckon I could give it a real good crack for 10 months’,” said Monye.

“He knows how to get a team gelled and co-ordinated in no time because he’s done it for the last three Lions’ series.”

 ?? ??
 ?? ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom