Turinui is fresh back from a trek to Argentina with New South Wales during which the
Turinui is fresh back from a trek to Argentina with New South Wales, during which the team bus broke down in the middle of the Andes and the players found themselves surrounded by rattlesnakes. The one mild surprise concerns the inclusion of Morgan Turinui, who has beaten the more celebrated Mat Rogers to the vacancy at outside centre. Stephen Larkham and Stirling Mortlock, contrasting figures in a world-class Wallaby midfield, were certain to miss the Twickenham date after suffering fractures during last weekend’s victory over Scotland in Glasgow, but the failure of Clyde Rathbone, who put a hat-trick of tries past England in the summer, to recover from a groin injury amounts to a sharp toe-poke in the tender parts.Wendell Sailor, the former rugby league international, plays in Rathbone’s stead, while Elton Flatley replaces Larkham at outside-half. Yes, we have some injuries, but injuries simply open up opportunities for other players.”Those injuries are far from good, whatever Jones might say on the subject.
We’ll take the physicality of the English, and we’ll be as brutal with them as they’ll try to be with us. This is the end of our season, just as England toured at the end of theirs in June, but we’re not fatigued and we’re not looking for excuses. They try to win the game through their forwards, and then release their backs.”Some people seem to be accusing us of shying away from the physical aspect of rugby, that our cleverness is a sign of us backing away from the confrontation We’re not shying away from anything. “The English team we put some points on in Brisbane last June was very much the remnant of the World Cup-winning side,” he said. “Since then, they have put a new coach and captain in place, and have a slightly different philosophy – the Robinson philosophy They’re pretty confrontational.
Jones admitted to being impressed by the scale of England’s triumph over South Africa last weekend, but could not quite bring himself to glory in it. His only comment thus far – “I think Eddie’s a good bloke” – may well be the most conciliatory ever to pass his lips.There was not much in the way of conciliation in return. As Woodward’s successor, Andy Robinson, has no interest in playing a game in which defeat is virtually guaranteed, he is giving the personality politics a wide berth. Very clever.Jones invariably wins these little pre-match contests at a canter; over the three years he spent tangling with the former New South Wales hooker, Sir Clive Woodward celebrated many more victories on the pitch than on the verbal front. Getting people in front of the ball-carrier, cleaning out people wide of the ruck, having your ball-carrier shielded from defenders – you can’t do any of those things.” Clever. “While England seem to be focusing their attention on just one of these areas, we’re hoping the referee” – Paul Honiss, the New Zealand official renowned for his dislike of power-scrummaging – “will be diligent in enforcing the laws in all areas. The more things change, the more Eddie Jones stays the same.

