England exercise restraint in scrum workout against rivals Wales

George Kruis insists England resisted the urge for a 'smash-up' with Wales during yesterday's unprecedented training session in Bristol in order to gain an insight into their set piece strength.
WE'LL MEET AGAIN: England's George Kruis, in action against Wales at Twickenham in the Six nations in 2016. Picture: David Davies/PAWE'LL MEET AGAIN: England's George Kruis, in action against Wales at Twickenham in the Six nations in 2016. Picture: David Davies/PA
WE'LL MEET AGAIN: England's George Kruis, in action against Wales at Twickenham in the Six nations in 2016. Picture: David Davies/PA

The RBS Six Nations rivals locked horns at Clifton College, completing 12 scrums and 16 line-outs over 40 minutes under the scrutiny of referee Nigel Owens, to hone their set-pieces ahead of their upcoming autumn series.

It had been dubbed the ‘Battle of Bristol’ by England prop Harry Williams and while that description proved inaccurate – the session passed without incident – Eddie Jones’s pack were given a valuable work-out.

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“There was definitely intent there. I’d say we were professional enough to control ourselves and understand it was a training tool rather than a smash-up on the Monday of a Test week,” said Kruis.

“We went in there trying to get a squeeze on and as much out of it as we could. We wanted to win every scrum and wanted the intent, but it also gave ourselves the opportunity to trial a few things and see where we’re at.

“It was under Test match intensity, but was a good tool for us. It definitely lets us know where we’re at as a pack and has shown us things that maybe we need to work on for this week.

“Because it’s happened nice and early in the week, it’s given us time to fix up and tweak anything that we need to.”

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England scrum coach Neil Hatley agreed with Kruis about the valuable nature of the workout with their Six Nations rivals.

“It was good, very worthwhile. It was good to get live competition early in the week and we gained a lot from it,” said Hatley.

“We want to make training as competitive as possible so the unfamiliarity of it made this session different. Obviously it was against players we don’t come up against week-in, week-out.

“There was a little bit of an edge, but there was nothing serious. Both sides took a lot from it.

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“Without sounding too calculating, it was a training aid to help us prepare for Argentina so there was good edge to it.”

When asked which nation gained the upper hand, Hatley replied: “We’ll look at the video and take it from there.

“We got what we wanted to out of it, putting into practise things that we’d been looking at during our training camp in Portugal last week. It sets us up nicely to play Argentina, who are a good set-piece team, so in that respect it was handy.”

England open their autumn series against Argentina on Saturday before Australia and Samoa visit Twickenham, knowing that come the end of November their record under Jones could stand at 22 wins from 23 Tests.

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“It’s tough sometimes training against yourselves because you know the calls, you know what they’re going to do,” added Kruis.

Wales didn’t know what we were going to bring, it was reffed by a top quality referee, which puts pressure on to your delivery and everything that comes with it. Argentina are a huge set-piece team and they had a good go at us down in Argentina in the summer, especially at the scrum, so there will be a huge focus on that.

“They’re a proud and physical team and we need to get our heads around that and come out with the same, if not more, aggression.”

In an unexpected turn of events, England have yet to rule Elliot Daly out of the series opener against the Pumas.

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Daly injured his knee on Champions Cup duty for Wasps and was expected to miss the Tests against Argentina and Australia and potentially return for the climax to the autumn against Samoa, but he could yet be involved from the start.

England are in the middle of a wing injury crisis having lost Jack Nowell and Jonny May to the treatment room, making Daly’s availability should he be passed fit welcome news for Jones.

Scotland skills coach Mike Blair admits the loss of Ross Ford is a major blow, but is confident they have replacement hookers in form.

Ford, Scotland’s most-capped player, suffered a pectoral injury in training last week and is expected to be out for around four months following surgery.

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Glasgow’s Fraser Brown is also unavailable for the autumn Tests against Samoa, New Zealand and Australia, and Neil Cochrane was among three Edinburgh players called up by Gregor Townsend on Monday, along with recently-deposed captain Magnus Bradbury and prop Rory Sutherland.

Blair said: “Part of the system is that we have guys coming in ready to take their place when they are injured – this will give other players an opportunity.”