Ford recalls dramatic draw with Scotland as pivotal for England
George Ford recalls England’s riotous draw with Scotland two years ago as a pivotal moment in the team’s discovery of how to cope with pressure.
Ford stepped off the bench to cross almost three minutes into injury time to deny the Scots a first win at Twickenham since 1983, but the dramatic climax was just part of the story.
England had built a seemingly unassailable lead by storming 31-0 ahead, only for a breathtaking fightback orchestrated by Finn Russell to seize a 38-31 lead for the underdogs.
It was the latest example of the side’s growing capacity to squander winning positions and Eddie Jones blamed the habit on the psychological wounds of the 2015 World Cup, adding: “It’s like we have some hand grenades in the back of a jeep and sometimes they go off when there’s a lot of pressure.”
With the rivals locking horns once more in Saturday’s Guinness Six Nations clash at Twickenham, Ford insists England have learned to stay composed.
“In terms of being under the most intense heat, to go through an experience like that was great for us really,” the Leicester fly-half said.
“We’ve noticed we’re a lot calmer in those situations. The crucial thing when you come to a situation like that is to understand what you need to do. The execution of it comes after.
“We’re calmer and not so desperate to try to snatch to winthegame.Weunderstand the process and that our best chance of eventually scoring istodoallthebasicsandbuild some pressure.”