Six Nations: We need to reset England team - Eddie Jones after Ireland defeat

  • Published
Media caption,

Six Nations 2021: Ireland 32-18 England highlights

England coach Eddie Jones says he needs "to reset the team" after their Six Nations title defence ended in defeat by Ireland and a fifth-place finish.

England's campaign included losses to Scotland and Wales and a record 121 points conceded.

"It has been a tough one," said Jones of the tournament. "We haven't been at our best but we finished the tournament a lot better than we started."

"We need to reset the team and we will continue with that process."

Jones believes that this summer, when the British and Irish Lions are due to play South Africa and England expect to take a team featuring fringe squad members to North America, could be a watershed.

"We're going through a transition period in the team," he said. "This is almost a natural time for that to happen with two years before the World Cup.

Image caption,

England will finish fifth in the standings after only recording wins over Italy and France this year.

"Those things will happen. We've had a fairly settled team for the last four years and that's natural. But post the Lions maybe there will be changes to personnel."

England's performance was labelled 'pedestrian' and 'abject' by BBC Radio 5 Live pundits Matt Dawson and Jamie Heaslip.

"It was like an A team against a C team," said former Ireland number eight Heaslip.

"England were not in the game in any shape or form for 90% of the game," said former England captain Dawson.

Asked if he still believed he was getting through to his players after more than five years in charge, Jones was adamant.

"Ah yeah, most definitely, I don't think that's the issue. If I thought that was the issue I wouldn't be coaching the team," he said.

England's Six Nations finishes under Jones

2016

1st (Grand Slam)

2017

1st

2018

5th

2019

2nd

2020

1st

2021

5th

England were a distant second in Dublin, with Ireland running out 32-18 winners after the teams were level at 3-3 after the first quarter.

The visitors could not claw it back despite Bundee Aki's red card just after the hour.

England's porous defence has been exacerbated by poor discipline. England conceded another 14 penalties on Saturday, giving them a shocking total of 67 across their five games.

"It was a funny sort of game," said Jones. "We thought we started well, the first 20 minutes was nip and tuck and then we made maybe some decisions we wouldn't have made normally and allowed Ireland to get on the front foot.

"That's the disappointing thing, we started well and then, for some reason, we just fell off and I don't know why."

This Twitter post cannot be displayed in your browser. Please enable Javascript or try a different browser.View original content on Twitter
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
Skip twitter post by OptaJonny

Allow Twitter content?

This article contains content provided by Twitter. We ask for your permission before anything is loaded, as they may be using cookies and other technologies. You may want to read Twitter’s cookie policy, external and privacy policy, external before accepting. To view this content choose ‘accept and continue’.

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.
End of twitter post by OptaJonny
Media caption,

Six Nations 2021: England finished the tournament better than we started - Jones

What the pundits made of England's defeat

Former England captain Matt Dawson on BBC Radio 5 Live: Yet again we are talking about England's inability to play the right style of rugby against the opposition. They were not in the game in any way, shape or form. They were not in this game for 90% of it.

Former Ireland number eight Jamie Heaslip on BBC Radio 5 Live: It was not a good day for England. England tend to be ruthless with coaches - Eddie Jones could be under pressure.

England's highs and lows since 2019 World Cup

Related topics

Related internet links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.