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61
Wasps Rugby Discussion / England players non availability
« on: July 19, 2022, 02:26:15 PM »
From Will Kelleher on Twitter :

Crunching the numbers on the #PremRugby fixtures this morning.

By my reckoning #England's top players will be available for 11/24 regular-season Prem rounds for their clubs.

They will miss R1, 2, 8, 9, 10, 11, 16, 17, 18, 19, 20, 21, 22 plus two more weeks, as mandated rest.

62
Wasps Rugby Discussion / England squad for 3 rd test
« on: July 14, 2022, 07:34:20 AM »
15. Freddie Steward

14. Jack Nowell

13. Guy Porter

12. Owen Farrell

11. Tommy Freeman

10. Marcus Smith

9. Danny Care

1. Ellis Genge

2. Jamie George

3. Will Stuart

4. Ollie Chessum

5. Jonny Hill

6. Courtney Lawes (C)

7. Lewis Ludlam

8. Billy Vunipola

Finishers

16. Luke Cowan-Dickie

17. Mako Vunipola

18. Joe Heyes

19. Nick Isiekwe

20. Jack Willis

21. Jack van Poortlviet

22. Will Joseph

23. Henry Arundell

64
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Times match report - England humiliated
« on: July 02, 2022, 02:09:03 PM »
England humiliated by 14-man Australia

Australia 30 England 28

Alex Lowe

Saturday July 02 2022, 1.15pm, The Sunday Times


Eddie Jones had dismissed England’s humiliating defeat by the Barbarians as a practice match. Well, if it was a rehearsal for how to lose a game against a team reduced to 14 men for nearly an hour then it worked a treat. England were abject in Perth, defeated by Australia for the first time in nine attempts.

The RFU’s blind loyalty to Jones will be tested to the extreme now. Flashes of promise last autumn were sandwiched by successive Six Nations campaigns in which they managed just two wins out of five. Bill Sweeney, the chief executive, wasted no time in offering his backing to Jones; citing unseen “solid progress”.

Now this. Australia were disarray. They had lost Quade Cooper to injury before kick off and two more players — Tom Banks and Allan Alaalatoa — inside the opening half hour.

Darcy Swain, the lock, was then sent off for a head butt on Jonny Hill, with whom he had had a running feud — and yet England were humiliated. They lost having led 14-9 after 61 minutes courtesy of a try from Ellis Genge and Owen Farrell’s boot.

Australia bossed the final quarter with tries from Jordan Petaia, Folau Fainga’a and Pete Samu to seal the game. With the Test lost, England began to generate quick ball and finished with a flourish; Henry Arundell scored a brilliant solo try and Jack Van Poortvliet, his fellow debutant, touched down with the final play of the game.
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But do not be fooled by the final scoreline. This was far worse a performance than a two-point defeat. There can be no excuses for England, who had picked an encouraging team for this Test — but those signs of progress remain hidden.

There were some notable exceptions to the criticism — Ellis Genge, Billy Vunipola, Lewis Ludlam and Freddie Steward in particular — but England’s attack was again disjointed and scruffy. They conceded too many penalties and they crumbled mentally at a time when they needed to take control of the game.

The tour heads to Brisbane and then Sydney. If England are to head home as series winners, there needs to be a remarkable transformation.

This was only the third time England had lost to the Wallabies in 12 years, since they confounded rugby wisdom by demolishing the Australia scrum here in Perth in 2010 but still lost.
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Cooper had led England a merry dance that day but the first indication all was not right today was the sight of Australia’s fly half sitting under the posts five minutes before kick off.

He had suffered a calf injury in the warm-up, triggering a desperate late reshuffle. Noah Lolesio was promoted to start at fly half and James O’Connor was hauled out of a hospitality suite to sit on the bench.

The Wallabies experienced further upheaval 20 minutes into the game when Tom Banks, the full back, suffered a broken arm. He was followed down the tunnel five minutes later by Alaalatoa, the tight-head prop.

Then the defining flashpoint of the game. Hill, the England lock, received a yellow card for pulling Swain’s hair. As the two second rows separated, Swain connected with a fairly soft head-butt on Hill. The force, though, was irrelevant. It was a red card and Australia, having lost three men and with a loose-head prop — albeit a Test centurion James Slipper now on at tight head — were also down to 14 men.

It was defining because of how the two sides reacted. The next passage of play rather summed up England’s performance.

Australia had sacrificed a penalty give metres out, and a chance to draw level at 6-6, but England handed them back the opportunity, with Tom Curry driving in from the side of a ruck.

That the Wallabies had hung in there to be level at 6-6 by the interval was a noble effort. They were having to think on the fly, with Samu Kerevi, more commonly used as a bulldozing centre, taking over as their primary tactical kicker.

England had shown their attacking potential only in flashes. Genge and Vunipola drove them forward but the ball was slow and Danny Care, much to his frustration, was unable to put pace on the game.

This was only the second time that Smith and Farrell had played together. England’s most threatening moment was a flat pass on the gain-line from Farrell to Tom Curry, who cut past Len Ikitau.

Smith could have been put away for a try on Curry’s left shoulder but the flanker went right and Joe Marchant was halted by a superb tackle from Marika Koroibete.

Maro Itoje lunged for the line, Smith tried to jink past Koroibete and the Wallabies infringed, allowing Farrell to extend Englands advantage to 6-0, having put them into the lead after Curry had won a breakdown penalty in the sixth minute.

The Wallabies’ backs-against-the-wall mentality was reinforced by the Australia coaches in the changing room, with messages of “brutality, work ethic and optimism” drilled into the players by the coaches.

England, who replaced Curry with Ludlam at half time, gifted Australia the lead three minutes into the second period with another breakdown penalty before tightening up their approach; mauling their way through a seven-man Wallaby pack and over the line with Genge scoring.

A jinking run from Jack Nowell and a smart offload from Billy Vunipola earned England a lineout five metres from the Wallaby line — but this time their maul was halted and Michael Hooper pounced to win the turnover.

England kept the squeeze on and another breakdown penalty allowed Farrell, who had missed the earlier conversion, to open a five point lead. It was at this point that England had to keep their foot on Wallaby throats.

But Australia wiped out that lead in no time, with Petaia twisting over the line. James Slipper appeared to knock on in the build-up but it was not checked and Lolesio landed the pressure conversion to push Australia back into the lead with 14 minutes remaining.

England were reduced to 14 men again when Vunipola was shown yellow card for a shoulder to Hooper’s head. Vunipola was the secondary tackler and it was a passive but direct hit, with the referee deciding upon review to upgrade the sanction from penalty to a yellow.

England were in trouble. Steward scrambled to deny Petaia in the corner but from the lineout Fainga’a peeled off the back of a maul to score before Samu forced his way over to put Australia out of reach.

65
Wasps Rugby Discussion / So what's the thinking on the Bond?
« on: June 28, 2022, 03:30:25 PM »
June 30 is less that 48 hrs off and no news. SE will need a statement by 07.00 on the 30th.

Educated guesses as to what might happen?

(other than cue meltdown on the DW site)

66
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Top 14 Final
« on: June 25, 2022, 03:12:08 PM »
MHR beat CO by 29-14  to win the Bouclier de Brennus, for the first time.

67
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Castres through to Top14 final
« on: June 18, 2022, 12:03:02 PM »
Beat ST last night 24-18. Worzel will be at SdF next week.

Montpellier play UBB in the other semi today.

68
How Steve Borthwick rebuilt Leicester’s dynasty with prayer meetings, saunas and chocolate

Alex Lowe says the former England captain has restored arguably the biggest name in club rugby to their former heights

Halfway up the stairs to the gym at the Leicester Tigers training ground is a television screen that has been playing clips of Saracens players on a loop all week. There are others placed strategically around the building doing the same, supplying reminders of key opposition threats to reinforce the game plan for Saturday’s Gallagher Premiership final. “It’s subconscious learning,” one player said, and it has been this way all season; symbolic of the attention to detail that Steve Borthwick has used to lift the club off its knees.

Borthwick, who cut his coaching teeth under Eddie Jones with Japan and England, took charge of the ten-times champions in 2020. The fallen giants had virtually hit rock-bottom. Leicester finished 11th in 2018-19, above only Newcastle Falcons, and would have been relegated the next season had Saracens not been deducted 105 points for salary-cap offences.

“I was excited about coming here because it’s rare you get the opportunity to try to lift the biggest club from where it was and try to do something special,” Borthwick told The Times. “Being brutally honest, I didn’t expect what I found. Maybe I was naive.”

Borthwick and Andrea Pinchen, the chief executive, have guided the club through a turbulent 21 months, dealing with contract wrangles, the departure of leading players such as Manu Tuilagi and a salary-cap inquiry. Based on the pair’s three-year plan, Leicester are ahead of schedule. Borthwick has recruited a team of outstanding coaches and promoted a new generation of exciting players. Tigers became the first team to spend an entire season top of the Premiership. This will be their first final since 2013.

Collapse of a dynasty

During their record run of nine consecutive appearances in the Twickenham final between 2005-13, Leicester fell into the habit of booking the team’s travel, their preferred hotel in southwest London and a corporate hospitality tent early in the season. Fans would do the same, snapping up early tickets to the big dance, certain their team would always be there. But no dynasty lasts for ever.

Leicester have not been back to the final since winning their tenth title — and their eighth in 15 years — against Northampton Saints in 2013. Tigers lost four consecutive Premiership play-off games as their dominance began to crumble and then, in 2018, failed to make the play-offs at all, triggering a collapse.
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Richard Cockerill, who had delivered three titles, was succeeded by Aaron Mauger, Matt O’Connor and then Geordan Murphy as Leicester rattled through four different head coaches/directors of rugby in less than two years. All had close ties with the club, but none were able to arrest the slide.

For Dan Cole, a 14-year veteran who has played more than 200 Premiership games and won three titles, the lowest moment came towards the end of that 2018-19 season, when Tigers were locked in a relegation battle with Newcastle. The campaign had begun with O’Connor being sacked after one game.

“About two or three weeks before we played Newcastle away in a relegation clash, we played Northampton at home on a Friday night and got beaten,” Cole said.

“I remember sitting in the changing room and thinking, ‘We are stuffed. Everyone has thrown everything into it, we are trying as hard as we can and we are not getting the results. And it’s been the case for several weeks.’”
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Tigers managed to scrape a 27-22 win against Newcastle. “That result kept us up,” Cole said. “But since then we have built back up.”

They have done so by using the pandemic to reset the whole club. It was a painful process at times, but a necessary one. Leicester were too wedded to the past, clinging to a belief that what built their success once would work again. “The mistake was always turning to ex-Tigers [as head coach or director of rugby]. We needed new outside voices,” a club source said.

The rebuild

It was an open secret during the 2019 World Cup in Japan that Borthwick, the England forwards coach, was bound for Leicester. By the time he eventually started work, in July 2020, the country was in lockdown. Borthwick walked right into a contract storm, with 25 per cent pay cuts being implemented across the league and the salary cap dropping from £6.4 million to £5 million.

Tuilagi and Kyle Eastmond were among five players who refused new deals and were released. Ellis Genge and George Ford held out until the last moment. The loss of Tuilagi was hugely emotional, given his close family ties with the club, but it was the best thing for Leicester.

Tuilagi is a world-class player but he was expensive and so often absent with England or through injury. His departure allowed Leicester to move on — cutting another link to the past — and rebalance their squad.

Jordan Taufua, signed as a marquee player, and Tomas Lavanini, the underperforming Argentina lock, were believed to have cost £1 million a year between them. Both found new clubs in France.

Twelve of the team Borthwick selected for his first game in charge, against Exeter Chiefs in August 2020, are no longer at Leicester. It was a turbulent, intense time but vital in Borthwick’s bid to construct a squad of committed players, epitomised by individuals such as Julian Montoya, Jasper Wiese, Guy Porter, Harry Potter and Richard Wigglesworth.

Burns’s return, as well as providing high quality cover, restored an element of laughter and levity to the dressing room

“When I joined I showed the players a Kubler Ross change curve and said to them, ‘I don’t know where the team is on here,’ ” Borthwick said. “I didn’t know whether we were still on the way down, at the bottom or whether we’d started on the way up.

“Very simply, I wanted to lay out a direction of how we were going to play and how we were going to train — and let’s work unbelievably hard to try to get up this curve as quickly as we can. That was our responsibility.”

Borthwick lived up to his message by turning down an opportunity to be on the British & Irish Lions coaching team last year because he would have missed too much of pre-season. If he was demanding dedication, he had to show it.

Then came the salary-cap investigation, which resulted in a fine of £309,841.06 but had the potential to undermine a project built on trust and integrity. Even though the transgressions predated the Borthwick-Pinchen regime, he was worried. “I would be lying if I said there weren’t moments when you had dark thoughts about what the ramifications were going to be.”

Although the pandemic forced the club to make 30 people redundant as they sought to stay afloat, some have been rehired and the process triggered a desire to become a more people-first club. All staff members, from club shop workers to the chief executive, are welcome to join team meetings and will be introduced. A weekly prayer group has been set up for players; parents have been invited in to watch training; children have been welcomed into the changing room for chocolate after matches.

When Leicester put together their bid for a government loan during the pandemic, the local MP was surprised to discover how much the club invested in the local community; in hospitals and in helping schools in deprived areas.

“For us, lockdown gave us the opportunity to really stop and have a look at everything that we were doing — to do more of what was good and reset a whole lot that wasn’t good,” Pinchen said.

Borthwick was shocked by the state of the training base when he arrived. Gym equipment was broken and the facility was not set up as he felt it should be.

Money was tight — even scraping pennies together to bring in more gym mats and apparatus was tough — but improving the medical and recovery facilities was a priority, including the installation of a sauna.

The players were based in a different building to the coaches, which created an unhealthy divide and discouraged communication. Borthwick changed the layout of the building to bring everyone together, scrapping designated car-parking spaces and clamping down hard on every element of what he felt was disrespectful or unprofessional behaviour. “You are the standards you walk past,” he would say.

The white boards in the corridor, which were liable to feature crude jokes, are now used for more constructive purposes. Everything about the environment — from the screens showing clips to installations celebrating in-game achievements — is designed to drive performance and generate a unity of purpose. Freddie Burns was brought back to Leicester, not only because he offered useful cover for Ford and Freddie Steward but because he was an engaging personality; he has brought levity and laughter to the group. Leicester has a reputation for being a serious and earnest, as does Borthwick. But more than anything, he wants energy givers. “When he walked into the place two years ago, it was full of energy takers,” a source said. “He will not take them back there.”

Montoya is another giver. The Argentina hooker, voted player of the year by the fans and the squad, was given a week off before an away game at Harlequins, and he was furious. He came into training every day. He did not take part but he was there, on the sidelines, involved, supportive. Porter has been offered a more lucrative contract to return to Australia, potentially opening the door to international rugby, but wants to stay.

Those characters were bolstered by a richly promising class of academy talent in Steward, Dan Kelly, Jack van Poortvliet, James Whitcombe and George Martin, all of whom have flourished in the environment. Steward is close to being the best full back in the world. Van Poortvliet is on a trajectory that could take him to the World Cup with England.

The coaching

Borthwick is the oldest coach at the club, at just 42. He has built around him a young, respected management team, with Kevin Sinfield, Richard Wigglesworth, Aled Walters, Brett Deacon, Matt Smith and Tom Harrison. Wigglesworth, 39, is particularly impressive, contributing fully as both a coach and a player without missing a beat. He holds the group’s attention when he speaks, delivering his message with clarity and a flick of humour. Harrison, 31, has done wonders with the scrum. Walters won the World Cup with South Africa and is the high-energy head of physical performance. He is also a mean darts player.

“I’m not afraid to surround myself with people who have more knowledge in areas than I do,” Borthwick said. The atmosphere he creates in the coaching room is collaborative, handing the other coaches a freedom to challenge, to test his ideas and suggest their own.

“He’s one of the best leaders I’ve worked with, if not the best,” Sinfield, 41, said, which is quite some compliment from the former Great Britain rugby league international. “He’s driven, he’s smart and probably the biggest compliment I can pay him is that he cares a lot.”

Borthwick has a voracious appetite for improvement and is not a great sleeper. Every car journey is an opportunity for analysis, whether of an opponent or looking for trends in the French ProD2. He has engaged Scott Simon, a former marine who works as a consultant with England, to improve his leadership and that of his senior players.

The crux of Borthwick’s coaching style is detail, as it was when he played. Nothing is wasted. Clarity and purpose have been the two buzz words attached to his regime.

When Borthwick says that his mind has already ticked over to the next game within minutes of the final whistle, it is no exaggeration. By the time the players come back in on a Monday, the messaging and the plan for the next week is already set, with the detail thrashed out in 7.30am meetings with his coaches.

There is a clarity and a simplicity to the way Leicester play that is underpinned by information from the data analytics consultancy Oval Insights. It may not be pretty to everyone — they kicked 75 per cent of possession in the semi-final against Northampton — but it is effective because everyone is operating on the same page. “There are tiny details from Steve, down to foot position in a maul. Everything we do has a purpose that relates to the game,” Cole said. “There were times when you would do a warm-up because it was what had been done in the past, or the schedule was the schedule because it has been for the past 15 years.

“Steve was not beholden to that. One of the great things about Steve is that he understands how Leicester play, how it connects the fans, how it connects the city, how it connects the county. But he has also come in with an immense knowledge and he has blended the two. Steve does a great job of making the game simple for us.”

The big dance

It has been nine long years but Leicester are finally going back to the ball. For a player such as Cole, and the thousands of long suffering fans, Saturday could be a redemption story. But Steward was only 12 when Tigers won that 2013 final; he is the fresh face of a new Leicester generation.

Borthwick was captain of Bath and of Saracens, where he was instrumental in helping the London club carve out their Premiership dynasty as the third great English club powerhouse of the professional era. His mission now is to take the first back to No 1.

“I have played at two other clubs and the size of this place dwarfs them; the passion the supporters have,” Borthwick said.

“There is obviously excitement around the group and that is natural and brilliant. I am so happy for our supporters and the people who saw the club through very difficult circumstances. And I am really happy for the players - but quite clearly we still have a job to do. I am not bothered about what happened in the past. I am not bothered about the months ahead. Let’s be the best version of ourselves today.”


70
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Should we be worried by this?
« on: June 15, 2022, 09:13:58 PM »
https://uk.advfn.com/stock-market/london/wasps-22-WAS1/share-chat?page=21

Simon Gilbert was the Political Correspondent for the Coventry Telegraph. A mate of Les Reid.

73
Wasps Rugby Discussion / Prem Final on FTA
« on: June 13, 2022, 10:46:32 PM »
For those that want to watch the game and don't have BT Sport, it is being shown live on ITV4

74
Wasps Rugby Discussion / RIP Phil Bennett
« on: June 12, 2022, 09:10:55 PM »

75
Wasps Rugby Discussion / All Saffa final in the URC
« on: June 11, 2022, 05:09:49 PM »
They going to regret allowing them in. The Welsh and Scottish sides are going to struggle to get an HC spot.

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