
England squeeked home against Argentina yesterday for their first win of the season but there was little for them to be proud of.
Argentina are a force to be reckoned with these days. Their recent record against England is very good but away from home and with a number of first choice players injured it was reasonable to expect an England win.
On the day the teams were very evenly matched and were only separated on the scoreboard by one event – England’s first try of the season. It was a game dominated by the forwards, as one would expect from these two nations, neither having much proficiency in the backlines. Of the two, it was Argentina who looked as though they could provide excitement behind the pack; their efforts were a little naive, but at least they tried.
In comparison to last week England, however, have taken a big step backwards. Discipline was shocking in the first half and basic errors were legion. The gameplan, such as it was, appeared to be a cross between 10-man rugby and tennis. Of strategic back play there was, once again, no sign.
Fans should be concerned that England may be operating in a reality distortion field. After the game Matt Banahan, England’s try scorer, appeared to be pleased with his team’s performance and felt that they were getting better with each game. Steve Borthwick, the captain, seemed equally upbeat. This is deeply troubling; England are deluding themselves. Thankfully, England manager Martin Johnson admitted afterwards that the performance was unacceptable so at least someone was watching the what was happening on the pitch.
England were severely depleted due to injury, even more so than last week, so miracles were not expected. What we hoped to see, but did not, was any attempt to play fast, adventurous, attacking rugby. Johnson’s unwillingness to keep the ball in hand in England’s half of the pitch is clear, and a mistake. It made the backs look stupid and, as a result of the ensuing aerial ping-pong, exposed a major weakness at fullback.
This strategy was further exposed by Wilkinson’s lack of form when kicking from hand – Argentina comfortably ‘won’ the punting battle – though, as last week, Jonny had a good game overall.
I’d love to know what kind of plan Johnson has asked Brian Smith, the backs coach, to implement. We’ve seen the kicking and we’ve seen plenty of miss passes, but where are the effective dummy runners? Wings coming in from the blind side? Fullback crash balls? Switches? Passes out of the tackle to a runner on the shoulder? Again, as last week, we just had backs crashing into their opposite numbers with little support. No creativity, no imagination.
Actually, we did see some attempts at creativity in open play. Aside from individual runs from Cueto, Monye and Wilkinson, it was England’s forwards who showed glimmers of imaginative passing. Indeed, it was flanker Lewis Moody who created the space for Banahan to score his try, after some great work from No. 8 Haskell.
Reading between the lines, it seems that Johnson is upset and frustrated with the lack of progress. So he should be. But let’s not forget that the buck now stops with him. He proved that, on the pitch, he can lift a team and lead them to greatness, but does he have the ability to do it from the sidelines? English rugby needs a period of managerial stability so there is no question that Johnson must continue for at least the next few years, but I’d like to think that some of the older and more experienced heads in the RFU will be offering guidance and support – privately, not through the media – to help him become a great manager. Otherwise we may be doomed to a long period of mediocrity.
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