Sunderland Echo

England must find attacking ‘focal point’ in Tuilagi’s absence – Jones

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England must find a new attacking “focal point” without injured talisman centre Manu Tuilagi, Eddie Jones has conceded.

Sale powerhouse Tuilagi faces up to six month s on the sidelines after tearing his Achilles tendon, in the luckless Samoa-born star’s latest injury setback.

Jones accepts that England do not boast a direct replacemen­t for Tuilagi, given the 29-year-old’s unique line-breaking potency and skill set. And the head coach has admitted he will have to devise a new blueprint for England to thrive in Tuilagi’s absence.

“Manu was the focal point of our attack, and we have to find other ways of having focal points of our attack,” said Jones.

“We’ll miss Manu greatly, he’s been a terrific teammate, terrific team player, and we feel for him. But we move on, we’ll find other alternativ­es and other ways of playing.”

England will take on the Barbarians in the non-cap internatio­nal on October 25, before completing th e delayed Six Nations.

The hastily-arranged Autumn Nations Cup will then follow on immediatel­y, before the 2021 Six Nations should fall into its usual slot.

Tuilagi could miss that entire schedule, having suffered a new injury issue that typically requires careful and protracted rehabilita­tion.

Tuilagi left Leicester Tigers amid the coronaviru­s impact after contract disputes, walking away from Welford Road to join Sale as a free agent.

Sale boss Steve Diamond had only just hailed Tuilagi’s unbroken nine-match sequence of appearance­s for the Sharks when another injury issue struck.

Northampto­n’ s Dan Bigg a rf ell awkwardly and entirely accidental­ly on Tuilagi, and the England star wound up with his new injury problem.

Tuilagi spent years battling chronic groin problems at Leicester, that he later admitted he had exacerbate­d by hiding the extent of the injury in its infancy.

The candid and hugely-respected midfielder hit back to fitness and form in time for England’s 2019 World Cup campaign, however, driving Jones’ side to the final.

England could look to a more expansive game in Tuilagi’s absence, with Jones admitting new breakdown law interpreta­tions could play into his side’s hands.

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