{"id":293551,"date":"2023-10-07T23:01:11","date_gmt":"2023-10-07T23:01:11","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/?p=293551"},"modified":"2023-10-07T23:01:11","modified_gmt":"2023-10-07T23:01:11","slug":"england-leave-steve-borthwick-with-more-questions-than-answers","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/tellmysport.com\/rugby-union\/england-leave-steve-borthwick-with-more-questions-than-answers\/","title":{"rendered":"England leave Steve Borthwick with more questions than answers"},"content":{"rendered":"
England’s final Pool D game was supposed to be a dress rehearsal for the quarter-final against Fiji. Steve Borthwick would have wanted his team \u2014 and the midfield combination of George Ford and Owen Farrell \u2014 to gel.<\/p>\n
But for me, the opposite happened. England were fortunate to win and it has left them with more questions than answers.<\/p>\n
I\u2019m sure many fans will be thinking England\u2019s approach needs to change completely. But I don\u2019t think that will happen. I\u2019d bring Danny Care in to start against Fiji but I think England will continue with Ford and Farrell.<\/p>\n
The second-half yellow card for Tumua Manu killed Samoa. It allowed England to get out of jail through Care\u2019s late try. It\u2019s not a good sign for England they struggled against Samoa. That\u2019s because Fiji play a similar way to their fellow Pacific Islanders.<\/p>\n
But they are a far better side than Samoa with more attacking threats \u2014 as was shown by their win at Twickenham in the August warm-up matches. They will also be more clinical than Samoa if England give them the same opportunities.<\/p>\n
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England’s final Pool D game was supposed to be a dress rehearsal for the quarter-final against Fiji but it turned out to leave Steve Borthwick with more questions<\/p>\n
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The second-half yellow card for Tumua Manu killed Samoa as it allowed England to get out of jail through Care\u2019s late try<\/p>\n
The fact Borthwick replaced Ford with Marcus Smith in the 51st minute showed me he didn\u2019t think his partnership with Farrell was working.\u00a0<\/p>\n
When Ford went off, Farrell went to 10, Smith came on at full-back and Freddie Steward moved to the wing with Joe Marchant coming inside to centre. As far as back-line reshuffles go, it was pretty drastic and I\u2019m not sure it made a significant difference!<\/p>\n
Ford and Farrell started off OK actually. They used Manu Tuilagi as a decoy runner with Farrell coming out the back.\u00a0<\/p>\n
I thought Farrell was a bit rusty and that was no surprise really given he\u2019d only played once against Chile since his ban. It wasn\u2019t just Farrell though, I thought most of the team looked a bit flat \u2014 especially in the first half \u2014 off the back of their down week.<\/p>\n
I thought Farrell and England\u2019s display was summed up by his penalty being ruled out because he\u2019d run out of time on the shot clock. That is unforgivable.<\/p>\n
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The fact Borthwick replaced Ford with Marcus Smith in the 51st minute showed me he didn\u2019t think his partnership with Farrell was working<\/p>\n
It was clear Farrell had no idea the clock was ticking down and it was partly down to the fact he spent so long giving the referee some chat. It was the right decision for Borthwick to make changes when he replaced Ford.<\/p>\n
The fact England came away with a win is to Borthwick\u2019s credit as he had the courage to make a big call.<\/p>\n
But the big question is what he does against Fiji. Keep Ford and Farrell together? Or move Farrell to 10? Or even start Smith as playmaker and keep Farrell at 12?<\/p>\n
Even though I didn\u2019t think the Ford-Farrell axis had the opportunity to work against Samoa, my hunch is Borthwick will persevere with them at 10 and 12.<\/p>\n