Fund independent journalism with £5 per month |
|
|
| | | | If Farrell hops across Channel RFU must realise the world has moved on | | Inflexible eligibility rules for England need to be relaxed with more empathy shown towards best players and loyal servants | | | Owen Farrell’s likely departure has given the English game the most abrupt of January wake-up calls. Photograph: Joe Giddens/PA | | | | New year, new start. Or, in the case of Owen Farrell and English rugby, the most extreme of potential makeovers. If the erstwhile England captain links up with Racing 92 in Paris, as seems increasingly on the cards, it will be the most hotly debated Anglo-French marriage since Henry XIII’s 18-year-old sister, Mary, married Louis XII, the 52-year-old King of France, in 1514. This latter liaison, as it happens, lasted only three months before Louis died as a consequence of either gout or (allegedly) his exertions in the bedchamber. And they say modern rugby is bad for you. Here’s hoping the 32-year-old Farrell, should he relocate across the Channel, is able to enjoy a less fraught experience and rediscovers the missing joie de vivre that has already led him to step aside from the national squad. | | | Read more | | | Whether he stays or goes, though, the Saracens fly-half has given the English game the most abrupt of January wake-up calls. Is this really the shape of things to come: the Premiership unable to compete with the wealthiest Top 14 clubs, even north London’s most cherished crown jewels vulnerable to Gallic raiders? Nor are we just talking about the Top 14. The weekend sighting of Courtney Lawes at the ProD2 side Provence – who have already signed his former British & Irish Lions teammate George North – offered a further glimpse of the way the oval-ball wind is increasingly blowing. Should they join the migration south, Farrell and Lawes will find themselves among numerous other old friends. Already it is possible to pick an entire XV of England-qualified players who have been employed in France within the past 12 months: Henry Arundell, Jack Nowell, Christian Wade, Joe Marchant, Joe Simmonds, Dan Robson, Sam Simmonds, Zach Mercer (now at Gloucester), Jack and Tom Willis, David Ribbans, Junior Kpoku, Harry Williams, Kieran Brookes and Jack Singleton. Had Luke Cowan-Dickie completed his proposed move to Montpellier the matchday squad options would be even stronger. None of the above names, though, compare with the potential luring of Farrell. Not unlike Harry Kane’s move from Tottenham Hotspur to Bayern Munich, it also serves to illustrate that sporting fulfilment for England’s warrior kings no longer begins and ends at Dover. The big difference, of course, is that Kane remains free to pull on the three lions in the Euros this summer. Joining Bayern does not necessitate saying bye-bye to his international place. For Farrell, in contrast, going abroad is a whole different ball game. As things stand he has made himself unavailable for England, citing his desire to prioritise his and his family’s mental wellbeing. But hang on. Let’s say he goes to France, begins to feel rejuvenated in his summer deckchair and is keen to join a 2025 Lions squad due to be coached by his father, Andy. What then? In theory, he could be still selected for the Lions via the Top 14 and play a series-winning role ahead of England’s starting 10 in that season’s Six Nations. | | | | Farrell has spent his entire career playing for Saracens but appears to be heading for France. Photograph: Joe Giddens/PA | | | What a cloud of giant hornets that scenario would unleash around the Rugby Football Union, particularly if England are underperforming. Already the union’s leading executives are under mounting pressure following their failure to persuade the hugely exciting Arundell – and maybe now Farrell as well – to re-sign in England. On the one hand it is every professional’s prerogative to go where they feel is best for them and their family. Equally it is not a great look for Twickenham’s mandarins when two of the leading talents in England appear keener to pull on the ciel et blanc jersey of Racing. Does a red rose on the chest not have the same inexorable pull? For now, either way, the official RFU line remains stern: anyone wishing to represent England has to be based in England, barring exceptional circumstances. Clearly there is a desire to avoid a hollowed-out Premiership and to retain as much shiny, happy English talent as possible. All of which is understandable. The snag is that the world has moved on. Look at cricket where the top English players barely play red – or white – ball games for their counties any more. What about the serial World Cup winners South Africa, the bulk of whose squad is now based overseas? And with RFU central funds already stretched, surely some middle ground could be found to suit all parties? Either offer senior squad members the option of a one-off sabbatical abroad at some stage in their careers or permit the national team two ‘wildcard picks’ per tournament, if needed, for non-Premiership based players aged 30 and above. At a stroke the RFU would be showing empathy towards its best players, rewarding its most loyal servants, helping to reduce Premiership wage bills and assisting a grateful national coach. Instead, there is only inflexibility. When someone like Farrell, who has lived in St Albans since he was a teenager, fancies a little taste of life outside an increasingly claustrophobic bubble, where is the humanity in effectively forcing him to abandon his country as well? If it is a question of pour encourager les autres to quote Voltaire (that veteran marquee signing of French literature) just tell the next generation they will enjoy the same leeway once they’ve won 100 caps, simplement. Or just recall what unfolded after Jonny Wilkinson decided to swap Newcastle for the south of France in 2009. Wilkinson helped Toulon win three European titles and earned his last 21 England caps while based beside the Mediterranean. And his captain for seven of those ex-pat Tests? None other than Steve Borthwick. If the RFU wishes to signal its support for a world-weary Farrell and soften his impending exile, there is a decent precedent. JPR: A Welsh icon The death of JPR Williams at the age of 74 is another sobering reminder of the passing years. His former team-mate Gerald Davies spoke evocatively about him on Radio 4’s Today programme and Sir Ian McGeechan described his ex-Lions colleague as the best full-back the game has ever seen. JPR was a central figure in Welsh rugby’s greatest era but, more than that, he epitomised everything a rugby-loving Welshman aspired to be: tough, brave, resourceful, proactive, unyielding. There was absolutely no danger of him opting to play for England, even when he was based in London, playing for London Welsh and studying to be an orthopaedic surgeon at St Mary’s Hospital. | | | | JPR Williams is carried off the Cardiff Arms Park pitch by Welsh fans after Wales’s 27-3 victory over England in the 1979 Five Nations. Photograph: Colorsport/Shutterstock | | | Times change, though, and Test rugby eligibility is less tribal than it once was. The latest case study is the young Exeter Chiefs winger Manny Feyi-Waboso, another medical student who grew up in Wales, has a Welsh accent and represented Wales at age-grade level. Having shot to prominence in the Gallagher Premiership this season, he is now firmly on England’s radar having attended Clifton College in Bristol and enrolled on a long-term degree course at Exeter University. It is the latter commitment – Cardiff University declined to accept him – that may yet shape his rugby future and push him towards wearing a white jersey rather than a red one. Given he was playing National One rugby on loan at Taunton Titans just nine months ago, Feyi-Waboso has enjoyed a meteoric rise but he now has a massive decision to make. No-one else can make it for him and only he knows where his heart and soul truly reside. If he chooses England, though, there will inevitably be Welsh fans of a certain generation who struggle with the idea. Things were a lot more straightforward in JPR’s heyday. RIP. One to watch Almost everyone who watched the Bath v Gloucester match on Sunday came away shaking their heads. So-called “kick tennis” is one thing but the prolonged passage of play in which the majority of players stood in the middle of the field while the ball sailed back and forth over their heads should prompt the game’s administrators to look again at the “loophole” law now being exploited by an increasing number of sides. When a long kick is sent up, the law book says players standing in front of the kicker are not allowed to interfere with play or move forwards towards the ball and must stay behind an imaginary line 10 metres from where the ball is caught or lands. Until, that is, the catcher has run five metres, at which point they are free to rejoin the fray. Coaches have realised they can deliberately deploy a row of stationary “offside” players in a horizontal line across the field, reducing the available space and giving the ball-carrying team little option but to boot the ball backwards once more. What to do? Maybe every chaser should have to be behind the kicker from the outset, with players required to make a greater effort to retreat from “offside” positions. Failing that, a catcher could be able to call a “mark” anywhere in his own half, reducing the incentive to kick away possession. Alternatively, the lawmakers may have to become more imaginative. What about an experimental law which prevents individual players from kicking the ball more than once from inside their own half during the same passage of play? Or extra points being on offer for tries originating inside a team’s own 22? Kicking remains a fundamental aspect of rugby union but it is possible to have too much of a good thing. | | | | Manny Feyi-Waboso must decide where his international future lies. Photograph: David Davies/PA | | | Still want more? Mark McCall insists Saracens will fight to keep Owen Farrell amid speculation over his future, writes Michael Aylwin. Steve Borthwick faces a challenge to steer England forward with the growing number of players lured to the riches of France for club rugby, according to Michael Aylwin. Nottingham have launched a crowdfunding appeal to stay afloat after severe flooding, reports Daniel Gallan. Memory lane Ireland’s Brian O’Driscoll is mobbed by fans after a 37-16 victory over Scotland in the 2004 Six Nations. The win secured a first Triple Crown for Ireland in 19 years. | | | | | | Subscribe To subscribe to the Breakdown, just visit this page and follow the instructions. And sign up for The Recap, the best of our sports writing from the past seven days. | |
| John Crace | Guardian columnist |
| |
| Well, 2023 didn’t exactly go to plan, did it? Here in the UK, prime minister Rishi Sunak had promised us a government of stability and competence after the rollercoaster ride of Boris Johnson and Liz Truss. Remember Liz? These days she seems like a long forgotten comedy act. Instead, Sunak took us even further through the looking-glass into the Conservative psychodrama. Overseas, the picture has been no better. In the US, Donald Trump is now many people’s favourite to become president again. In Ukraine, the war has dragged on with no end in sight. Then there is the war in the Middle East and not forgetting the climate crisis … But a new year brings new hope. We have to believe in change. That something better is possible. The Guardian will continue to cover events from all over the world and our reporting now feels especially important. But running a news gathering organisation doesn’t come cheap. So this year, I am asking you – if you can afford it – to give money. By supporting the Guardian from just £2 per month, we will be able to continue our mission to pursue the truth in all corners of the world. With your help, we can make our journalism free to everyone. We couldn’t do this without you. Unlike our politicians, when we say we are in this together we mean it. Happy new year! | Support us |
|
|
| |
|
Manage your emails | Unsubscribe | Trouble viewing? | You are receiving this email because you are a subscriber to The Breakdown. Guardian News & Media Limited - a member of Guardian Media Group PLC. Registered Office: Kings Place, 90 York Way, London, N1 9GU. Registered in England No. 908396 |
|
|
|
| |