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England feeling the heat

Paul Fletcher | 10:59 UK time, Friday, 14 November 2008

once said that rugby league is a simple game played by simple people, before adding that rugby union was a complex game played by, well, you'll have to guess the last part.

England, however, seem to have spent the last few days disproving the first part of Daley's maxim.

The build-up to has been anything but straightforward - and hints at both the inadequacy of England's performances so far and the effects of the barrage of criticism to which they have been subjected. It will be on Saturday and England seem to be feeling the heat.

smith438.jpgThe fun and games - or, more accurately, the mind games - started on Wednesday when England coach Tony Smith made public his in order to comply with World Cup regulations.

Winger Ade Gardner and half-back Danny McGuire - both rested last weekend but widely expected to return - were not in the squad. Gardner had conducted a series of interviews on Tuesday during which he talked about how much he was looking forward to his forthcoming match-up with .

Both the announcement and some of the selections did not make sense. I phoned England media manager Andrew Whitelam in Australia but he said there was little he could tell me - except that the final 17 for the match might not necessarily all be in the preliminary 19. Ah.

So it all was some kind of ruse designed either to keep the Kiwis or his players guessing - or perhaps both.

It is behaviour that we are accustomed to seeing in England - but in football and not rugby league. Or perhaps the England rugby union team under Sir Clive Woodward. It is a point worth making that league in Australia, certainly in New South Wales and Queensland, has a profile similar to football in England. precisely because he can walk down the promenade at one of them without being recognised.

The players are not used to this white-hot scrutiny and it has caused problems in the past, with .

Since the announcement of the preliminary squad Smith and skipper Jamie Peacock have been keeping a very low profile while a closed-door policy has restricted access to most of the squad.

Kiwi coach Stephen Kearney spiced up Saturday's clash by .

"I think we have a responsibility to promote the game," said Kearney. Skipper Nathan Cayless added: "The more access you get to players, the more interest there will be in the game."

Smith is a straightforward coach. He picks his team and trusts them to get on with the job. He was born and raised in Australia and normally has an attitude to the press typical of sportspeople down under, where the dressing room is open.

Earlier in the week when questioned about his team's form he said that it was "only people outside the group that have any doubt". It was a telling comment, one that explains why he has shielded his players. He does not want them infected by the severe and, it has to be said, largely warranted criticism. The squad are also angry by , with prop Adrian Morley admitting that it "really does hurt".

A further degree of intrigue has been added by a story in the linking Smith with the coaching vacancy at , a club once coached by his .

A source in the England camp has been quoted as saying that this "smacks of disruption" and has only added to the siege mentality.

Whether Smith's smoke and mirrors tactics have energised or unsettled his players remains open to question. Second rower Ben Westwood admitted: "I don't quite know what is happening; he hasn't named the team yet."

But winger Mark Calderwood said: "There's been a real buzz around training this week."

Yet despite the off-the-field antics all that really matters is what happens at the Suncorp Stadium on Saturday.

Smith has said there are some areas his team need to "tidy up". England have conceded 20 tries in three games and you could drive a bus through the right side of their defence. They have failed to score in the second half of their last two games. They have an ageing back line that lacks penetration and there is no established combination at half-back. The kicking game remains a shambles.

For all that, and despite surrendering a 24-8 lead against the Kiwis last Saturday, England do have the ability to reach the final.

And in a week when the build-up ranged from the bizarre to the ridiculous there were words of comfort for Smith and his men from a most unexpected source.

Australians are hardly known for their words of pity and support for Poms but

They'd better be or their shoddy World Cup campaign will be swiftly terminated.

Comments

  • Comment number 1.

    BRIERS FOR BRITAIN!!! Lol!

  • Comment number 2.

    This comment was removed because the moderators found it broke the house rules. Explain.

  • Comment number 3.

    And yes i know its England not Britain, but if Fa'asavalu can play, then Briersy Can Too!

    On a more serious note, Burrow and McGuire at Half Backs, Higham at Hooker, Moz and Peacock at props. If all are on their game, we can win this and give the Aussies a good game in the final.

  • Comment number 4.

    Should be tough!

  • Comment number 5.

    When that journalist kept asking Adrian Morley how the sausages were at the Brisbane Broncos "sausage sizzle", he should have just replied with something like: "not bad, just a bit smaller and bendier than English ones"...

  • Comment number 6.

    Everyone expects Australia to face either ourselves or New Zealand in the final, everyone has forgotten about the Fijians.

    I met an Aussie bloke in Leeds over a year ago, before the GB/France game at Headingley and he said Fiji will suprise a few people at the WC - suprise, suprise...

    This WC is not the foregone conclusion people expect it to be. It has been met with widespread criticism for many reasons, mainly the format, England's poor form, Australian domination.

    If Australia do win, I think we can expect a rendition of the 'know-it-alls' - I told you saw, which hit the top spot in 1763. People who do not know the game, have a voice i'm sick of hearing.

    The organisers should be commended for an entertaining competition, which has surfaced above all scrutiny.

  • Comment number 7.

    As a life long Rugby League fan I am devastated at the poor performances of our team in the World Cup. I am a Saints supporter and am more than certain that the original team selection against PNG was the right one. The players selected are all world class and there must be something that we are not being told for these players to put in such an amateurish set of performances. They dont seem to have any fight in them, is that the coaches fault. Is he not getting them fired up for the games. After our game against New Zealand I hope that he was giving them such a rolocking that the paint was coming off the dressing room walls, hairdryer treatment needed.
    So come on lads lets see some backbone, commitment, and bulldog spirit for these last two games and lets get our hands on the trophy, just to shut the Aussies up once and for all.

  • Comment number 8.

    Saints-Barbara - Hairdryer treatment or not, I don't think your wish will come true. At the moment I'm just hoping that England reach the final.

    The truth is that however far England actually progress, the gulf in class between Super League and the NRL had been clear for all to see. I think this is most stark in defence. England's defence has been breached far too easily.

    I also very much take your point about showing some fight. Whatever happens on Saturday I want to see some real grunt from Tony Smith's team.

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