Scottish Daily Mail

Laidlaw sounding battle cry for Scots to floor the French

It’s molten mayhem at Twickers as England face Wales

- By JOHN GREECHAN

GREIG LAIDLAW will urge Scotland to use the energy of Murrayfiel­d — and their pride in the jersey — to fuel a defensive masterclas­s against France tomorrow. Laidlaw, whose selection ahead of Ali Price at scrum-half is intended to bring more composure to a side humiliated by Wales in Cardiff last week, insisted: ‘We have a plan B. ‘We were off the boil last weekend. That is the beauty of the sport. We can get back on the horse and fix things in a week. ‘It is up to the boys who have been given the honour to wear the jersey to get out and show what it is to play for Scotland. ‘We knock those French boys down, tackle them low. They won’t like having to keep getting off the floor. ‘We will have to keep tiring them out. Both through our defence and our attack. If we start well and play with speed, I don’t think they will like it.’

RAIN clouds are due over Twickenham today, but it will take a monsoon to douse the inferno on the pitch. Rhys Patchell has been warned that he is going to feel ‘some heat’, but he is not the only one.

England versus Wales has always been a fiery fixture and this 2018 instalment is not about to break the mould. All attempts to portray this as just another match are undermined by the mutual antagonism which soon rises to the surface, as it has done this week.

After Wales head coach Warren Gatland had some fun at Eddie Jones’ expense, his England counterpar­t responded to the slings and arrows by firing a cannon the other way.

The Welsh mind-games had focused on a perceived fitness advantage, a sense of superiorit­y at the breakdown and the familiarit­y of their rivals’ game. Jones’ retort involved questionin­g the courage of Wales fly-half Patchell and accusing captain Alun Wyn Jones of intimidati­ng referees.

The fact that Jones felt the need to go on the offensive in such aggressive fashion is being viewed as testament to the threat posed by Wales. Even without so many leading men through injury, they routed Scotland in Cardiff last week and have come to London with hope and momentum.

Perhaps Jones is feeling some of the heat or, more likely, he is just trying to find advantages wherever he can, using sledgehamm­er psychology if that is what it takes. Some Welsh observers have reacted with indignatio­n, but Jones will just point them towards his C.V. at Twickenham, which has extended an era of home rule.

Under this regime, Dylan Hartley and Co have created a fortress where visitors fear to tread. Since Jones took charge, they have won every match at home and today they are striving to claim their 15th consecutiv­e Six Nations victory at Twickenham. Wales were the last raiders to beat them in the Championsh­ip, in 2012, and they were also the last European winners there — at the 2015 World Cup.

Not many of this depleted Welsh contingent have savoured the glory of beating the old enemy in the Six Nations, but captain Jones has five such conquests to his name, so he serves as a symbol of hope.

Hartley, the home skipper, dismissed history as an irrelevanc­e, but Eddie Jones has focused on the traditions of this fixture and rivalry and, in his third Championsh­ip campaign, knows what to expect.

‘When you live next to a country, it is always a bit more intense,’ said the Australian. ‘If you look at Australia and New Zealand, it is always a big rivalry. In Europe, it’s England and Wales.

‘There is a pattern. Someone speaks a lot at the start of the week, they want to make some noise and create issues in the game. That is the normal state of affairs.’

The main men have certainly had their say in the build-up to this game and French referee Jerome Garces will be primed for an intense examinatio­n of his own temperamen­t. There will be a particular edge to the scrum collisions after the two packs engaged in set-piece training together in Bristol last year. That session served as a useful recce. Today it is all-out conflict.

England will aim to go ‘hunting’ again, with Patchell identified as the primary target, but the hosts may find the Wales No10 and his team-mates highly elusive.

Gatland’s men are ‘cocky’, according to Eddie Jones, and why not? They were magnificen­t against Scotland and are flying high. Wales can go for broke, with the nothing-to-lose mentality of bullish underdogs.

Yet, on paper, this is a no-contest. England do not lose at home. It is world No 2 against No 6. Without so many wounded Lions, few of the Welshmen would earn a place in their opponents’ side, based on Test pedigree.

England have the winning habit. They have power, set-piece clout and relentless aggression.

Wales will believe that flanker Josh Navidi can give them the upper hand in those key ruck contests, and Gatland also has faith that the fitness of his team will tell late on. But England have made strides in that regard and their recent knack of blowing opponents away with final-quarter onslaughts is the proof. Both sides have weapons of mass destructio­n on the bench — notably Ben Te’o for the hosts and George North for the visitors.

England are favourites and they should prevail, but the Welsh win last Saturday has set the scene for a tense, raw, pulsating Test match.

Tickets cost a fortune but they could sell the stadium out four times over. This fixture never loses its appeal. Prepare for molten mayhem. ENGLAND: Brown; Watson, Joseph, Farrell, May; Ford, Care; Vunipola, Hartley (capt), Cole; Launchbury, Itoje; Lawes, Simmonds, Robshaw. Replacemen­ts: George, Hepburn, H Williams, Kruis, Underhill, Wiggleswor­th, Te’o, Nowell. WALES: Halfpenny; Adams, S Williams, Parkes, S Evans; Patchell, G Davies; R Evans, Owens, Lee; Hill, A W Jones (capt); Shingler, Moriarty, Navidi. Replacemen­ts: Dee, W Jones, Francis, B Davies, Tipuric, A Davies, Anscombe, North.

 ??  ?? Full stretch: Greig Laidlaw gears up to face France
Full stretch: Greig Laidlaw gears up to face France
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