Sunderland Echo

CARLING LEAPS TO THE DEFENCE OF SINCKLER

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Will Carling has defended Kyle Sinckler after his illdiscipl­ine contribute­d to England’s second-half collapse in their 21-13 defeat by Wales.

Sinckler gave away successive penalties at a key stage of the Guinness Six Nations title showdown as a 103 interval lead ebbed away, a late hit on Gareth Anscombe and choke hold on Alun Wyn Jones resulting in referee Jaco Peyper’s interventi­on.

For the previous 56 minutes the Harlequins prop was magnificen­t and England’s best player alongside Tom Curry, but with evidence that the “emotional timebomb” described by Warren Gatland was about to detonate, Eddie Jones replaced him.

Sinckler’s short fuse was identified as a weakness by Gatland during the build-up to the Principali­ty Stadium collision and new leaders Wales duly exploited it, although the blame for defeat spread far wider than the tighthead’s indiscipli­ne.

“Kyle Sinckler a cheap target by some pundits. Man was amazing in defence 1st half,” said Carling, England’s leadership mentor, on Twitter.

“He was a huge target for the Welsh, no issue with that, but he is fast maturing and learning to keep his edge (which I love) and maintainin­g control. The man is going to be awesome.”

Cast as the pantomime villain, Sinckler was booed from the pitch but on tackle count alone he made a destructiv­e impact on a dramatic Test that hung in the balance until Cory Hill drove over in the 68th minute.

Jones has appealed for perspectiv­e over the combustibl­e 25-year-old, stating “He’s a young player on the way up. Look after him a bit, hey”, and for Mark Wilson an enthrallin­g Test was lost elsewhere.

England finished the first half with a swagger after weathering an early storm to take command through Tom Curry’s try and the boot of Owen Farrell, but composure then deserted them as they were outsmarted and outfought in the air.

Wilson, the Newcastle flanker, admits they were tactically outmanoeuv­red as Wales claimed a record 12th successive victory.

“It was a proper arm wrestle and was enjoyable to play in. You can’t fault the effort of the boys and we put a shift in over the 80 minutes, but we weren’t as good at them,” Wilson said.

“We have to take our hat off to Wales, tactically they got it spot on in the second half. We can’t fault our hard work or physicalit­y, but we weren’t as good as them tactically.

“Their aerial game was really strong there was some indiscipli­ne from us and they capitalise­d on that.

“Cardiff is an emotional place to play and the crowd gets them fired up. Throughout the game the players enjoyed it. There were still smiling faces with 65 minutes gone when it was going tough.

“We’re fully focused on the title and we’ll do everything in our powers to win the tournament. It’s a massive three weeks ahead.”

 ??  ?? England’s Jack Nowell (centre) in action during the Guinness Six Nations match at the Principali­ty Stadium, Cardiff.
England’s Jack Nowell (centre) in action during the Guinness Six Nations match at the Principali­ty Stadium, Cardiff.
 ??  ?? Wales players celebrate beating England.
Wales players celebrate beating England.

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