The Scotsman

Farrell eager to escape acclaim ahead of 100th England cap

- By DUNCAN BECH

Owen Farrell will find relief from a week of acclaim over his impending 100th cap for England by losing himself in Saturday's clash with New Zealand.

Farrell's acute discomfort with praise will reach a peak the previous evening when Eddie Jones' squad gather to honour their captain with words and a presentati­on organised by his Saracens team-mates. The 31- year-old who grew up dreaming of playing for Wigan, the rugby league team captained by his father Andy, is instead poised to join Jason Leonard and Ben Youngs among England's Test centurions.

"I'm not too good at listening to stuff about myself. The sooner we get on to the game, the better," Farrell said. "You're not used to hearing people say nice things about you. A lot of it normally goes unsaid. I don't think it'll go on for too long. If you let it, this week can be a lot. I don't intend on being like that, I intend on doing my job like the rest of the team."

For Farrell that job involves becoming completely immersed in Saturday's alltoo rare visit of the All Blacks to Twickenham as England reach the critical phase of their autumn. The three-time Lions tourist describes the contentmen­t of a Zen-like state where only the 80 minutes on the field have any meaning. "The best part of the games is how engaging they are, when you're lost in them, when you're not thinking," he said.

"There's nothing else going on, there's no worry, there's no anything. You're just in it. It's timeless. Everything is slow, but time goes so quick.

"It feels like everything is slower. It feels like there's a calmness to it, but it's still aggressive. They are conflictin­g things to speak about, but it happens like that. It's like any big day - say your wedding day or something like that - where it goes so quickly. It's been brilliant but you don't know what's almost gone on at times.

"It's like that but in a really short, intense, 80 minutes, which is probably why it feels so different to anything else. That's what everyone talks about when they say they are in the zone, or the flow of the game. It's something that people end up chasing a lot. If you chase it too hard it doesn't come even more, so it's about being able to let go."

 ?? ?? ↑ Owen Farrell: Keen to get on with the job against All Blacks
↑ Owen Farrell: Keen to get on with the job against All Blacks

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