Western Morning News

Marler set to return in Wales

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ENGLAND are weighing up the value of Joe Marler’s scrummagin­g expertise as they look to secure their place in the Autumn Nations Cup final by toppling Wales.

Alongside Mako Vunipola and Ellis Genge, Marler is one of three loosehead props in contention for a place in the starting XV to be named by Eddie Jones this morning.

A knee injury prevented Marler from taking part in the Six Nations title-clinching victory over Italy last month and the wins against Georgia and Ireland that have placed a tournament decider against France on the horizon.

If the ballast he brings to the scrum is chosen, Saturday’s Twickenham showdown would be his first England appearance since grabbing the testicles of Wales captain Alun Wyn Jones in March, an offence that resulted in a 10-week ban.

“Joe’s back in contention. He’s a vital cog in our box this week and if he’s selected we’ll look to have him involved the best we can,” forwards coach Matt Proudfoot said.

“Joe’s a really mature, experience­d player. Wales really look to get in between you, break your set piece apart, and a player with that experience holds it together, keeps your plan in place.

“From his personal skill set, he’s really good defensivel­y, brings a nice edge defensivel­y. And then his ability to attack the opposition tighthead is one of his strengths.

“We understand that Wales have a really experience­d front row and a really experience­d pack. The way they scrummed against Georgia last weekend really impressed me.”

Jones must also cull one from Billy Vunipola, Tom Curry, Sam Underhill, Ben Earl and Jack Willis to finalise his side, unless he opts for a six-two split on the bench in which case Max Malins is likely to lose out.

Wales ended a run of six Test defeats by dispatchin­g Georgia 18-0, temporaril­y relieving some of the pressure on head coach Wayne Pivac.

Even at Parc y Scarlets they are heavy underdogs to defeat an England side that bullied Ireland into submission, but Proudfoot denies they are vulnerable as Pivac struggles to make his mark since replacing Warren Gatland.

“I’ve been involved in a national setup where it’s a new management style and it takes time. They have their own style,” Proudfoot said.

“This week is going to be a really different challenge as our focus is on what Wales did to Georgia. They were just as dominant. It’s going to be a really tough challenge for us.”

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