The Rugby Paper

England is not job for me insists Deano

NICK CAIN talks to Newcastle boss Dean Richards about England’s prospects in Six Nations and beyond

- By NICK CAIN

DEAN Richards, the fan’s favourite to replace Eddie Jones as England coach, last night ruled himself out of the job.

The former England and Lions No8, now coach at Newcastle Falcons, insisted: “I’ve no interest in coaching England at all. Absolutely not. It just isn’t something that floats my boat.”

Richards, above, says he has landed on his feet in the North East – “it’s a lovely spot” – and that the weekly rhythm of club rugby is a perfect fit for him.

He explains: “The internatio­nal game has its big rush hours, but otherwise there is a lot of treading water, and lots of planning, and I know I would get pretty bored.”

He adds: “I really love the day-to-day involvemen­t of club rugby – (in the Premiershi­p) we do what they do at internatio­nal level in a year by the end of September. I don’t know where they get the buzz from, but at the Falcons every game is a big game. I would struggle with so many weekends without a game.”

In England coaching terms Richards is the one that got away.

His credential­s are impeccable – two European Cup crowns and four Premiershi­p titles as Leicester rugby director (1998-2004), along with his resurrecti­on of Harlequins and now Newcastle.

They would make him virtually unassailab­le but for the Bloodgate ban he served from 2009 to 2012.

Richards says he is pleased that the RFU are putting an England coaching succession policy in place, although he worries that they might be too rigid in insisting on prior internatio­nal experience.

“It hasn’t been great over the years, and I thought Martin Johnson had done his apprentice­ship and was starting to do well just before he left the job.

“Now, with England looking at coaches and succession plans, it’s looking better. I can see that internatio­nal experience would be preferable, or perhaps even recent playing experience in a young coach.

“If you look at it from Gregor Townsend’s point of view, he was coaching one of Scotland’s only two pro teams so he had very good knowledge of the national set-up.

“For Rob Baxter to make the step up would be more difficult than for Gregor because of the politics involved in English rugby and the size of the change.

“I think Rob would be a very good England coach – that’s if he wants to do it – but the first six months would be very difficult, and I can understand where the RFU are coming from regarding prior experience coaching at internatio­nal level.

“However, I don’t think it should be a necessity. It is more about how you manage the transition, and who you put around the new coach to help them through the initial period.”

DEAN Richards is predicting a record-breaking third consecutiv­e England Six Nations title, with a 2018 Grand Slam as the icing on the cake – and the even bigger prize of becoming World Cup winners in 2019 within the reach of Eddie Jones’ squad.

The Newcastle Falcons boss knows a thing or two about Grand Slams. ‘Deano’ was the great No.8 grappler in the England side that delivered back-to-back clean sweeps in 1991-92, and he is convinced that Jones’ crew have the class to clean up in this campaign despite their long injury list.

Richards also has a keen profession­al insight into the players available to the England coach because his orchestrat­ion of Newcastle’s Premiershi­p resurgence demands he does the due diligence on their opponents. Added to which the Falcons rise up the table has seen his own players rewarded with internatio­nal selection, with flanker Gary Graham picked in the England squad for their opener against Italy, and tighthead Jon Welsh and hooker Scott Lawson in the Scotland squad for the trip to Wales.

Richards believes England are favourites for the title because they face their most taxing tests of the campaign at Twickenham. “The two most difficult games, against Ireland and Wales, are at home, and for that reason I think England should win a Grand Slam, with all their away games against the teams in blue.”

He is confident they will beat Italy in Rome, and that although England will have two further trips they will have the measure of Scotland, as well as France – a country in which he has played (Roanne) and coached (Grenoble).

First Edinburgh. “Gregor Townsend is doing very well north of the border, but the Scots have not got the luxury of the depth Eddie Jones has. They have injury problems in the front row, and overall England have quality players to come in as replacemen­ts that the Scots haven’t got. Everyone will know what is coming from the Scots, so we should not come unstuck in Edinburgh.”

Then Paris: “With France it will all depend on how structured they are with new coach Jacques Brunel in charge. There’s no doubt that you need a Frenchman to lead the French, and he could cause a problem by getting them back on track.” Although Richards agrees with the widespread belief that Ireland will again give England their most serious examinatio­n of the tournament, he refuses to join the equally widespread dismissal of the French as contenders.

“The French are an unknown quantity, and a threat because of that. The overseas players in their clubs are world-class, and when you put the best French players alongside them in the European Cup they have proved this season they are very strong.

“The French have had a lack of depth but now the new incentive system (where the FFR rewards clubs financiall­y for French-qualified players) means more opportunit­ies for French players at club level.”

Richards, who has earned the reputation of being one of most astute talent spotters in the game, adds: “I particular­ly like the La Rochelle loose-head Dany Priso, who is incredibly dynamic, but the French have players coming through across the board. The big question is whether Brunel can harness them and bring them together as a team.”

His summary of the French is astute, reflecting his knowledge of the game on the other side of The Channel: “In France it seems to take longer to bring teams together, and they do not seem to be able to manage runs of eight wins on the trot. It is usually three or four at best. France should have won the World Cup by now, and if they start singing off the same hymn sheet for once, they could be tremendous.”

Yet, when it comes to winning World Cups, Richards believes it is England who have a second world champion side in the making going into the 2019 tournament.

He shines the spotlight on two players he considers essential to the England 2019 mission. “Without Billy Vunipola and Owen Farrell they do not have quite the same impact – they are key to how England progress – but if you look at the quality of players the Premiershi­p academies are turning out, there is a side there that could win the World Cup.”

Richards adds: “There are some incredibly good youngsters, and if you supplement that with players like the Vunipolas and Farrell, it is very exciting times.”

Richards does not trade in hyperbole but his enthusiasm is off the leash as he looks at England’s qualities in certain positions. Richards says he likes the options Jones has at fly-half.

“It depends a lot on who is available at 13 and scrum-half. Eddie Jones will pick horses for courses. I like the idea of two playmakers at 10 and 12 (like George Ford and Farrell), but sometimes it is not what is required – and you pick a side to beat the opposition.” He is similarly positive when he turns his attention to the England scrum, and tight-heads in particular. “I like Harry Williams down at Exeter, and he, Kyle Sinckler and Dan Cole are not a bad trio to have on the tight-head.” Richards also likes what he sees in the back row, and despite the injuries to Billy Vunipola, Nathan Hughes and James Haskell banned, he says

Jones is still spoilt for choice. “Eddie is very lucky because he has a wealth of talent to pick from. Billy Vunipola is a natural No.8, as is Nathan Hughes. I don’t believe either of them are flankers, and England have plenty of those to choose from. There is Sam Underhill, Chris Robshaw, Sam Simmonds, Jack Clifford, Don Armand, the Curry boys. He also has the option of playing Maro Itoje or Courtney Lawes at blindside.” He continues: “Sometimes injuries mean that you put in a manufactur­ed No.8, and then it depends what you do with your 6 and 7 to balance it out. Sam Simmonds is likely to start at No.8 against Italy with Billy and Nathan Hughes injured – although Thomas Waldrom can still do a job – with the options of Itoje, Lawes and Robshaw, Underhill at flanker, although Gary Graham wouldn’t go amiss. He’s got a lot of options.”

Richards’ assessment of Graham and where he fits into the England back row matrix as another 6.5 is thought-provoking.

“If Michael Hooper, or Neil Back before him, are your classic 7s, Gary is not that style. He’s more in the Robshaw mould of new style 7 who offer physicalit­y and work-rate. Gary’s got a never-say-die attitude and although he’s a bit rough around the edges he’s a better footballer than people think. Sometimes, because he does the work of others, his game gets a bit out of shape, but, given a consistent chance, he could be a great asset.”

He adds: “There’s no doubt that a quick openside with good hands is still the best link between backs and forwards, but when you don’t have them you opt for that physicalit­y -and Gary is a hard lad who is not afraid to put his body on the line.”

Richards reflects on two other unsuccessf­ul Falcons back row candidates. “I’ve also got Mark Wilson and Will Welch who put in big performanc­es in our back row every week. If any one of those three were picked by England I would have applauded it, and I’m very pleased for Gary just as I am disappoint­ed for the other two.”

Overall, however, Richards applauds what Jones has achieved and is not anxious about the improvemen­ts that many – including the England coach himself – believe his team have got to make before the World Cup.

“All of that will be done in the final five or six months,” Richards says. “Eddie is doing a very good job – he has created this focal point of the World Cup just as Clive Woodward did in the build-up to 2003. This year’s Six Nations is important, but it is not as important as the World Cup. Ultimately, you can only judge Jones on the World Cup, and I think they have a side to be competitiv­e with New Zealand.”

 ?? PICTURES: Getty Images ?? Essential: Owen Farrelll
PICTURES: Getty Images Essential: Owen Farrelll
 ??  ?? Work-rate: Gary Graham
Work-rate: Gary Graham
 ??  ?? Champ: Deano with England 1992
Champ: Deano with England 1992
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Key player: Billy Vunipola
Key player: Billy Vunipola
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Likely to start at No.8: Sam Simmonds
Likely to start at No.8: Sam Simmonds
 ??  ?? Chris Robshaw
Chris Robshaw
 ??  ?? Courtney Lawes
Courtney Lawes
 ??  ?? Sam Underhill
Sam Underhill
 ??  ?? Maro Itoje
Maro Itoje

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