The 'five or six minutes' warning that has Elliot Daly clued in
Think painful memories of the 2019 Rugby World Cup final have England focused for this Saturday’s semi-final rematch with the Springboks in Paris?
Think again. It’s far more recent memories that have players such as Elliot Daly on edge with a view to improvement.
England were coasting last Sunday, 24-10 ahead in their quarter-final with less than 20 minutes left on the clock in Marseille when things went awry.
Two converted tries conceded in the space of four wounding minutes turned what should have been a comfortable conclusion versus Fiji into a fraught one and it needed an 86th-minute breakdown turnover penalty before the 30-24 success was finally confirmed.
That defensive double whammy took the Fijians just three minutes less to achieve than the seven minutes Samoa needed the previous weekend to score two converted first-half tries.
No wonder concentration is now a much-desired English wish against South Africa. “It’s massively important,” admitted Daly.
“We have probably shown how our defence is getting better each game. Against Fiji, we lacked that for five or six minutes and they scored two tries.
“We know we can’t do that in a semi-final. We know that we need to get better this week and hopefully we can stay on task in that regard.”
England will hope their defence is tightened by the recall of Freddie Steward in the No15 shirt, with Marcus Smith unavailable for selection following a setback with his return to play protocol after he got bashed around against Fiji.
“Freddie has been brilliant since he started playing for England,” assured Daly. “The confidence he has shown since the start of the World Cup campaign has been brilliant.
“He is a rock at the back under the high ball, he is really grasping the attack game now, he is making really good decisions on the edge which is putting me in space usually, which is nice.
“He is a quality player, we back him all the way. The relationship with us in the back three now (along with Jonny May) is brilliant. We can talk to each other on the field and make sure we are in the right positions and try to take advantage of any space.”
With host nation France eliminated by South Africa, England can count on having more support at Stade de France than initially expected as a load of tickets have changed hands since last Sunday’s quarter-final results. Daly rates the importance of this backing.
Spirits were high when England arrived for their final pre-Rugby World Cup semi-final training session in Paris on Friday, the joking Jamie George and Tom Curry leading the way. #RWC2023 #ENGvRSA #EnglandRugby pic.twitter.com/3A4BdNOwiw
— RugbyPass (@RugbyPass) October 20, 2023
“Massive, in my opinion,” he claimed. “Last weekend against Fiji it was amazing to look up and see how many white shirts were in the crowd. In all the games we have had so far, the support has been unmatched.
“Hopefully they can bring that Saturday. We do hear it. It is very loud in these stadiums and it really does spur us on. If we can keep going with that it will be brilliant for us.”
The last word goes to that hoary chestnut, whether 2019’s final loss has any bearing on this weekend’s clash? “It was disappointing four years ago but the feeling around this team is very different.
“I had a bit of time out from this squad and to come back in, there is a different feeling within this group. All of the planning of the last year, two years, has gone into this, to hopefully perform to our best at the weekend.”
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The weather was dreadful but the playing surface was great so there is no real excuse for such another poor standard of play from both sides. Dragons just the better team. But, what a shocking decision by the TMO not to award the Fifita try. This pretty much sums up Welsh rugby with poor teams and poor officials. The WRU have a lot of work to do and it needs to be done quickly to avoid rugby being lost to our future generations.
Go to commentsNo chance of Borthwick selecting any young talent. He announced his selection policy from the outset with naming a poor OF as Captain, retaining an equally poor Youngs and Vunipola brothers when there were many better EQP in the Premiership. SB revival of Leicester was based on SA muscle and a terrific Welsh flanker he has generally ignored young English talent.
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