Scottish Daily Mail

Jones’s men as lousy as ref Gauzere

- MARTIN SAMUEL

For the second time in a week, the numbers did not add up for an England team. In India, the cricketers could not excuse 112 and 81; for the rugby side in Cardiff the vital statistics were 40, 14 and 24-24.

The most points conceded by England against Wales; the number of penalties England served up in the match; and the score at 62 minutes before England’s team discipline fell apart again.

And, just as the cricketers could not make a convincing scapegoat of the pitch in Ahmedabad having lost 20 wickets for less than 200 runs, the final 18 minutes in Cardiff made complaints about referee Pascal Gauzere moot.

Gauzere was abysmal, but so were England. They matched each other in incompeten­ce. owen Farrell was, therefore, wise not to be drawn on the random nature of Gauzere’s performanc­e. It would simply have opened the door to criticism closer to home.

However erratic the surface, 112 and 81 are not cricket scores. However poor Gauzere’s officiatin­g, any side conceding 14 penalties does not deserve to win a game of rugby. It speaks of an absence of game intelligen­ce, an arrogance in consistent­ly getting on the wrong side of the referee.

Warren Gatland looked on as Maro Itoje, who some propose as his next British and Irish Lions captain, conceded five penalties, taking his total in this tournament to ten. How could he make him his captain, given that one of his roles would be to have a smooth relationsh­ip with authority?

‘Go and have a word with your team,’ Gauzere said to Farrell on Saturday. What might a referee tell

Itoje? Go and have a word with yourself?

Gauzere was guilty of many of the same sins as England. Arrogance? Check. Absence of game intelligen­ce? That, too. Allowing play to restart before the first Wales try after little more than a private conversati­on with Dan Biggar was a rogue act.

The referee would have seen where England’s wingers had come from to be party to an England team meeting Gauzere had as good as called, and he should have appreciate­d the need to return to their starting position.

What he did made it impossible. It was unsporting; it was unfair. When Farrell complained, he treated him with disdain. ‘I speak first,’ said Gauzere and then, having spoken, turned and jogged away. There is a word for a man like that. You’ll find it in Chaucer.

The second try, let’s call it the knock-on for short, is hotly debated by everyone from former profession­als to students of motion and physics. And Specsavers. ‘Who is Pascal Gauzere and why are hundreds of people trying to get him an emergency eye test with us?’ asked the company’s Twitter feed. Another meme had Gauzere getting his instructio­ns from Ant and Dec as one of their Saturday Night Takeaway pranks. ‘okay Pascal, now tell them it’s a try...’

Yet, joking aside, by the end of the game, England had made Gauzere’s performanc­e just about irrelevant.

Within four minutes of drawing level, Itoje conceded his fourth penalty; two minutes later Ellis Genge another; six minutes on, Dan robson a third.

England, from playing their best rugby of the tournament, were nine points adrift within 13 minutes. They have conceded 41 penalties in three Six Nations games. It is a ludicrous total.

It is not just Itoje’s leadership potential that is in question. How could Gatland make any player his captain, given that indiscipli­ne? Who is taking ownership of this?

We hear Farrell bark instructio­ns during the match, but there is no sense of recriminat­ion when the team’s efforts are so carelessly undermined. A captain cannot guarantee performanc­e levels, but the onus for controllin­g discipline surely falls at his door.

That of the coach, too. Before the 2019 World Cup, at a training camp in Treviso, Eddie Jones refereed a 15-a-side match involving his squad. Apparently, he was ruthless on indiscipli­ne. Any infringeme­nts he felt warranted a yellow card were dealt with by dismissal.

The team continued with 14 men and the offender had to spend his time out doing exercises. Jones wanted to make a point about the consequenc­es of indiscipli­ne at the World Cup. It paid off. England were one of only three teams not to have a player successful­ly cited or shown a yellow or red card in Japan. So what happened? How did they get here? And how has Jones (left) lost control of what is pretty much the same group?

Gauzere’s performanc­e won’t be forgotten, but are unlikely to be repeated. Unless England address their thoughtles­sness, however, disappoint­ments such as this will become only too familiar.

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