So Jonny Wilkinson is back for England to take on Samoa. You will excuse me for not being particularly excited because I cannot recall him doing anything particularly special since kicking the winning drop goal in the 2003 Rugby Wiorld Cup Final. In fact, he has spent most of the last four years on the injured list.

Even if Wilkinson were back to his best, not even the 'Man of Destiny' could save this English forward pack. Coach Brian Ashton seems stuck in the tactics of 2003, not realising that he does not have players like Martin Johnson, Neil Back or Jason Leonard to execute them. In fact, the ease at which the South African pack imposed their will on the English suggests new tactics are desperately needed, as this team cannot win in trench warfare amongst the forwards.

England’s problems are not just up front. For political reasons rather than form, Ashton has brought Rugby League convert Andy Farrell to the World Cup and left the dynamic Charlie Hodgson at home. After injuries to Wilkinson and his understudy Olly Barkley, Ashton was forced to name utility back Mike Catt at fly-half despite the fact that lately he has played most of his rugby at centre.

'There is a great deal of pressure for coaches to select big-money Rugby League converts, which may explain Andy Farrell’s inclusion at the expense of Charlie Hodgson'


The gamble did not pay off. With his forwards retreating faster than Saddam’s army, Catt sparked nothing in the English back line and made talented players like Josh Lewsey and Jason Robinson outside him look decidedly average. The true test of a fly half is not how well they play behind a dominant pack, but how well they play when their pack is going backwards, and that is a test Catt failed.

The blame cannot be placed entirely at the feet of coach Ashton. There is a great deal of pressure for coaches to select big-money Rugby League converts, which may explain Farrell’s inclusion at the expense of Hodgson. In fact, the non-selection of recent convert Clinton Schifcoske caused some friction in the Australian camp.

Aside from Robinson, Rugby League converts have never really worked out in the 15-man game. For New Zealand and Australia, Brad Thorn and Matt Rogers are back playing League, while Wendell Sailor is serving a two-year suspension for cocaine use. Only Lote Tuqiri remains in Union after making the switch, so buying Rugby League players with big money hardly seems a successful enterprise.

England still have a very good chance of making the quarter-finals at this tournament, but when they are dumped out by the Wallabies it will be hard for Ashton to claim even a moral victory. In fact the entire England management seem intent on doing everything they can to not win this World Cup. When they succeed in failing, heads will roll - but by then it will be far too late, and the stunning success of 2003 will be nothing more than a distant memory.

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