The Courier & Advertiser (Angus and Dundee)

‘Pressure on us’ admits Underhill after Paris loss

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Sam Underhill admits the “pressure is on” as England attempt to rescue their Guinness Six Nations title pursuit from oblivion at Murrayfiel­d.

Underhill relishes an internatio­nal rivalry that began in 1871 and spans 137 Tests as Eddie Jones’ men look to wrestle back control of the Calcutta Cup for the first time in two years.

England launched the Six Nations with a comprehens­ive 24-17 defeat by France and Underhill detects a desire to atone for a wounding performanc­e endured three months after they were dismantled in the World Cup final by South Africa.

“For us the pressure is on, which is something you can ignore and try to play down or something you can embrace,” the Bath openside said.

“We’re incredibly hungry. In terms of last week especially, when you have a disappoint­ing result you want nothing more than another game.

“The fact it happens to be a Calcutta Cup is probably even better for us because there’s more pressure and ultimately that’s something you need to perform at your best.

“The Calcutta Cup is a pretty big occasion. Every Test is a big occasion but there’s a big rivalry here.

“From a personal point of view, I’ve got a Scottish grandmothe­r, a Scottish brother-in-law and one of my other sister’s boyfriends is Scottish, so I just turn my phone off before the game!

“It’s good to have bit of an edge to a game. That edge will add to the sense of occasion.”

Underhill won the sixth of his 16 caps at Murrayfiel­d two years ago and it was an eye-opening experience as England began a five-test losing sequence that produced their worst championsh­ip finish since the 1980s.

“I was on the bench, it was one of my first caps and my first experience here at Murrayfiel­d,” the 23-year-old said.

“It was probably my first insight into the emotion of the occasion and I was naive to it before.

“We were getting booed off the bus and then the reaction of the Scotland players when they won, seeing the crowd and how much it means to everyone up here.

“It’s definitely something to acknowledg­e and it’s definitely there – you can’t ignore it – especially when it’s as loud as Murrayfiel­d is. But that’s to be embraced as a player.

“It’s still quite an emotional sport. You need that emotional energy, especially in something like your defence.”

Storm Ciara is due to batter the UK this weekend with heavy rain and strong winds forecast to hit Edinburgh at kickoff, but defence coach John Mitchell views the weather event as part of the game.

“We’re ready for anything. That’s certainly in our preparatio­n,” former All Blacks boss Mitchell said.

“I’m not sure who the weather will favour. Certainly both teams will have to adapt to it.”

Meanwhile, Jones is “100 per cent” certain England can regain the Six Nations crown they most recently lifted in 2017 and expects his players to finish the tournament strongly knowing they were probably undercooke­d for the Paris opener.

“The World Cup final is a one-off final. I’m happy to say that if I went back to that game again, I can’t think there’s a team in the world that would have beaten South Africa that day. And that happens. No embarrassm­ent,” he said.

“France – for some reason we just weren’t on the button early and I think I underprepa­red the team for the game, so it took us some time to get into the game.

“There is a reason for that given the workload of the players. We underprepa­red for the game and I take full responsibi­lity for that.

“But there’s a reason for that and my view is that we’ll see the reason at the end of the competitio­n – that we’ll be full of running.”

 ??  ?? Sam Underhill says England are ‘incredibly hungry’ ahead of today’s game.
Sam Underhill says England are ‘incredibly hungry’ ahead of today’s game.

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