Yorkshire Post

England are ‘ready to go’ in the Six Nations – Borthwick

- Duncan Bech RUGBY UNION REPORTER

STEVE Borthwick insists England’s battle-hardened players are ready for the Guinness Six Nations as a result of facing greater club demands than any of their rivals.

Borthwick’s 36-man squad have comfortabl­y racked up the highest number of minutes played since the World Cup due to their Gallagher Premiershi­p and European commitment­s.

But while they will enter the Six Nations depleted by a greater workload – they have accumulate­d over two hours of game time more per player than next highest France – Borthwick believes they have benefited from the competitiv­eness of English clubs.

Six Premiershi­p teams have reached the knockout phase of the Investec Champions Cup while the domestic league itself is more compelling that ever following its reduction in teams.

“The players are match-hardened, so that’s a great benefit. Generally I will try to look at the positive side and I have a group of players that are match-hardened. They are ready to go,” Borthwick said.

“The other thing is the nature of the Premiershi­p. All of the games are counting so the leverage of all these games is huge.

“And there have been teams fighting in Europe to get qualificat­ion, fighting to find a way to win which, again, is a real positive.

“Everything we’re getting is saying all the clubs are running more than they were 12 months ago, so that’s a real positive.”

England may enter Saturday’s opener against Italy in a fitter state than they were at the equivalent stage in 2023, but Premiershi­p duty will not have equipped them for breakdown and contact area demands of a Six Nations.

And Borthwick has also told his players that there is a minimum requiremen­t every time they pull on a Red Rose jersey.

“The Six Nations is a real contest. It’s breakdown contest game so we need to ensure that we’ve got that running right as well as the level of repeatabil­ity around the contact area,” Borthwick said.

“We are going to improve as a rugby team. We will get tactically and technicall­y better, and we will get fitter.”

Argentinia­n coach Gonzalo Quesada took charge of Italy after the World Cup, replacing Kieran Crowley, and Borthwick insists England will have to think on their feet. He said: “They are two contrastin­g styles so the interestin­g question for Italy is what can they put together in that first game? We’ll have to be ready to recognise what style they are bringing very early in the game.”

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