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04-Feb-2018<br />

Six Nations: Eddie Jones vows to make England the fittest team on the planet<br />

YAHOO! SPORT (UK)<br />

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England open their NatWest Six Nations campaign against Italy with head coach Eddie<br />

Jones demanding that his players become the fittest team on the planet.<br />

Jones believes that England - who are chasing an unprecedented third successive Six<br />

Nations title - can become 20 per cent fitter by the 2019 World Cup. He is banking on a<br />

conditioning programme called tactical periodisation, a favourite of Manchester United<br />

manager Jose Mourinho.<br />

“We are certainly capable of doing it,” Jones said. “I have got no doubt that we will be 20 per<br />

cent fitter by the World Cup. Our aim is to become the fittest team at the World Cup.”<br />

READ MORE: Gossip - Tottenham ‘agree to sell Kane’ and more<br />

After a gruelling training camp in Portugal, England’s players were pictured on Friday<br />

performing hill sprints with weighted vests just two days before they start their defence of<br />

the Six Nations title .<br />

Fly-half George Ford says that his training sessions are now more challenging than the<br />

games themselves.<br />

“In my personal experience in the autumn the games were tough but in comparison to<br />

training it was nowhere near as hard,” Ford told The Sunday Telegraph . “It is incredible how<br />

good Eddie and the strength and conditioning staff are at pushing the boundaries and<br />

challenging us as players. It is horrible and hard at the time but it is enjoyable because you<br />

know it is making you better as a team and a player.”<br />

Proof of England’s increased fitness under Jones can be seen by their performances in the<br />

final 20 minutes of matches. In 2017, England won the final quarter of all 10 of their Test<br />

matches conceding just three tries and completing five shutouts.<br />

Another key marker Jones has set himself for the 2019 World Cup is developing seven or<br />

eight “world-class” players. In 2016 after completing an unbeaten year, Jones declared no<br />

players met that criteria. Last year, he said two players had moved into that category. Now<br />

Jones seems more confident and he hopes this Six Nations campaign will provide him with<br />

more contenders.<br />

“Developing world-class players is ongoing,” Jones said. “There are a number of our players<br />

moving in the right direction – Maro, Mako, Owen and Anthony Watson are all guys racing<br />

towards that, and this is a great opportunity to put their foot forward.<br />

“We want to get our set piece more consistent and our defence more ruthless. That creates<br />

attacking opportunities. We’re not too complicated. We play England-style rugby and we’re<br />

proud to play it.”<br />

Itoje, Vunipola, Farrell and Watson were all starters during the Lions series, but Jones adds<br />

another player to that bracket: Leicester tighthead Dan Cole. “I think Dan Cole by the end of<br />

the Six Nations will be the premier tighthead in Europe,” Jones said. “His body’s changed<br />

and his scrum position is improving all the time and he’s at a great age – prime age at 31,<br />

32 – to be the best tighthead in the world. He has to accept that, work hard, keep improving<br />

his game, and you are going to see him really flourish.”<br />

Just as important is developing a strong leadership group that can react and adapt to<br />

changing events. England appeared to be found wanting last year when Italy unleashed<br />

their no-ruck tactic labelled “The Fox”.<br />

Several players asked referee Romain Poite to clarify the laws and Brendan Venter, the<br />

architect of The Fox, told The Daily Telegraph last week that England never got to grips with<br />

it. Jones, however, absolved his players of any blame.<br />

“There wasn’t a lot of confusion,” Jones said. “If a player asks the referee a question and the<br />

referee doesn’t answer politely, the confusion is with the referee, not the player. I watched<br />

the game again on Tuesday night and I thought we reacted brilliantly.<br />

“In 2003, England had great leadership within their team. That’s what we’re striving to<br />

develop; a great leadership group of eight or nine players, surrounded by three or four<br />

lieutenants that basically run the team. When situations are put in front of them, they work it<br />

out and get on with it quickly.”

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