England turn to Georgia for scrummaging practice

England turn to Georgia for scrummaging practice

England head coach Eddie Jones has invited Georgia to take part in two days of live scrummaging in London this week. In a repeat of their joint session with Wales last November, Jones has extended the invitation to Georgia's head coach Milton Haig to fly in for back-to-back training sessions.

Despite being ranked as a tier-two nation, Georgia are renowned as one of the foremost scrummaging teams on the planet with an estimated 50 props playing professional club rugby in France. Eddie Jones paid tribute to the Georgian pack labelling them as “the biggest, ugliest, strongest scrum pack in the world” he continued to say “We want to win the Six Nations but we’re also using this as a trial for the World Cup, so it’s a great opportunity for us to get some really quality scrum practice in,” Jones said. “We want to have the best scrum in the world and they’re the biggest, ugliest, strongest scrum pack in the world. Why wouldn’t we want to scrummage against them? 

“It’s fantastic. We’re good friends with their two coaches, Milton Haig and Richard Graham – a Kiwi and an Aussie. They were keen on the idea and it suits us perfectly.”  It was Jones who made the suggestion to Haig when he came in to observe the England camp during the autumn internationals. There will be two sessions on Tuesday and Wednesday afternoon at the Latymer Upper School Playing Fields in west London.   

There was an equal attraction for Haig, who laughed when told of Jones’ description of his pack. “I don’t think the boys will be happy that they are ugly but they are definitely one of the biggest and strongest,” Haig told The Daily Telegraph.

“That’s not a secret for anybody. There will be no surprises. I am sure Neal Hatley [the England scrum coach] will be rubbing his hands together in terms of what he can get from having us over. We hope that both parties will walk away from it as a productive exercise and that is something we can do again in the future.  “The reality is that they wouldn’t be the second best team in the world without a good scrum. They have got one of the best scrums around, there’s no doubt about that. We obviously rate ours and so do they. That’s why we are doing it.”  Haig insisted upon taking his whole squad to London and so there will also be joint attack and defence sessions. Yet he is under no illusions about where the attraction lies for England and estimates they will partake in 12-14 scrums per session."


Full story via Telegraph.co.uk

 

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