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Borthwick rips up script with move to hybrids that could lead to Pollock on wing

1 day ago
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Steve Borthwick is considering playing his fast-rising back-row Henry Pollock on the wing at some stage this autumn as he seeks fresh impetus in all areas before the looming November Tests,The England head coach says he wants his side to hit the ground running against Australia on Saturday and may also start Ben Earl at centre this season,England’s team to face the Wallabies has already had a significant makeover with Tommy Freeman starting in midfield and no place for either Marcus Smith or Ollie Lawrence in the matchday 23,Six British & Irish Lions players, including Pollock, have been named on the bench with Bath’s 22-year-old flanker Guy Pepper, the Leicester prop Joe Heyes and the Sale wing Tom Roebuck all starting,Part of Borthwick’s rationale is his desire to stick with combinations which went well on tour in Argentina but he is also looking for different ways to maximise the skill sets of dynamic, hybrid players such as Pollock, Pepper and Earl.

“Guy Pepper’s been training in the back line and we’ve been looking at Henry Pollock on the wing,” Borthwick said.“His pace is the match of a lot of wingers.That kind of versatility is really important to us.I’m not saying we’re training all those combinations for this Saturday but these are the things we have which allow us to go 6-2 [on the bench].“We’re training [our] readiness to adapt to things.

Henry Pollock is a back-row forward, but it’s one of the combinations I’m looking at for the future,I think there will be a time where I’ll consider starting Ben Earl at centre, especially with all the quality back‑row forwards we’ve got,”It reflects further Borthwick’s desire to uncork England’s full attacking potential, glimpsed in patches this year but not always consistently realised against top‑level opposition despite a seven‑game unbeaten run for his side,It may well be, with George Ford picked at fly-half, that England will also aim to kick high and often but the head coach also insists he wants his side to create problems with ball in hand,England (v Australia): Freddie Steward (Leicester, 38 caps); Tom Roebuck (Sale, 6 caps), Tommy Freeman (Northampton, 20 caps), Fraser Dingwall (Northampton, 4 caps), Immanuel Feyi-Waboso (Exeter, 9 caps); George Ford (Sale, 102 caps), Alex Mitchell (Northampton, 23 caps); Fin Baxter (Harlequins, 14 caps), Jamie George (Saracens, 102 caps), Joe Heyes (Leicester, 14 caps), Maro Itoje (Saracens, 93 caps, captain), Ollie Chessum (Leicester, 28 caps), Guy Pepper (Bath, 3 caps), Sam Underhill (Bath, 42 caps), Ben Earl (Saracens, 42 caps)Replacements: Luke Cowan-Dickie (Sale, 49 caps), Ellis Genge (Bristol, 71 caps), Will Stuart (Bath, 50 caps), Alex Coles (Northampton, 10 caps), Tom Curry (Sale, 61 caps), Henry Pollock (Northampton, 1 cap), Ben Spencer (Bath, 10 caps), Fin Smith (Northampton , 11 caps).

“I want them to play in a way that is fast and aggressive with the ball,” Borthwick said.“It suits the strengths we have.The second challenge is how hard this team runs and the physical intensity it brings.That is really important to us.It’s not a team that has huge size, it’s a team that can run.

I’m now seeing a team that is better conditioned and a team that can run harder,”Borthwick did concede that there were “some disappointed players” and several “really narrow calls”, not least at No 10 where Ford has leapfrogged two Lions fly-halves,Lawrence has just returned from long-term injury while prominent Lions such as Tom Curry have only recently returned to full fitness and may also be being managed with the All Blacks Test in mind,Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionThere is also the reality that England do not want to fade in the final stages of games, as happened when Australia stole a dramatic last-gasp win in London a year ago,With limited training time available – “They have had four months together, we’ve got four sessions,” Borthwick said – it also makes some sense to pick an all-Northampton midfield pairing and not to overcomplicate the England gameplan.

The head coach is also hoping some of the work done in tougher times last year will come to fruition this autumn.“Somebody talked to me about coaching the other day, and said: ‘Sometimes you’re like the gardener.What you’ve got to do is plant the seeds, and then you’ve got to take care of them.’ Sometimes it can take a long time for things to really come through and reap all the rewards.”Australia will clearly have other ideas and in training England have employed the aerial skills of their young prodigy Noah Caluori to replicate the challenge of the high-flying Wallaby Joseph Suaalii.

“Suaalii’s kick-off work last year was very good and it has been a focus for us,” Borthwick said.“Stopping him winning the ball is a challenging thing to do and Noah has been challenging the team in the air.Australia have a contestable kicking game and will send up lots of box-kicks.We will be expecting that this weekend.”Borthwick, though, sounds as upbeat about his own team’s development as at any point in his tenure.

“I think the expectations of each other have now risen,We can’t wait for this autumn series, to be back in front of our supporters and back together as a group,We can’t wait to rip into it,”
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Steve Coogan says Richard III film was ‘story I wanted to tell’ as he agrees to libel settlement

Steve Coogan has said his film about the discovery of the remains of Richard III was “the story I wanted to tell, and I am happy I did” after he and two production companies agreed to pay “substantial damages” to settle a high court libel claim over the film’s portrayal of a senior university administrator.Richard Taylor, deputy registrar at the University of Leicester at the time of the find, sued Coogan, his production company Baby Cow, and Pathe Productions for libel over his portrayal in the 2022 film The Lost King, which follows the amateur historian Philippa Langley and her search for the king’s skeleton.Taylor’s lawyers had asserted previously that he was portrayed in the film as “devious”, “weasel-like” and a “suited bean-counter”.Judge Lewis had ruled previously that the film portrayed Taylor as having “knowingly misrepresented facts to the media and the public” about the find, and as being “smug, unduly dismissive and patronising”, which had a defamatory meaning.The case was due to proceed to trial, but lawyers for Taylor read an agreed statement to the court on Monday saying the parties had settled the claim

2 days ago
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‘We were fitted with remote control penises’: Harry Enfield and Kathy Burke on Kevin and Perry Go Large

We’d done Kevin and Perry on Harry Enfield and Chums and thought it would be fun to make a Wayne’s World-y thing while we still had the impetus of the TV programme. I went on holiday and Dave Cummings, who’d written for Harry Enfield and Chums, did the first draft. I came back and took over. A month later, it was all happening. It was really quick

2 days ago
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From White Teeth to Swing Time: Zadie Smith’s best books - ranked!

How do you follow a smash hit like White Teeth, which, as everyone now knows, sold for a six-figure sum while the author was still at university, and turned Zadie Smith into a literary superstar and poster girl for multi­culturalism at 24? With a novel about a pot-smoking Chinese‑Jewish autograph hunter, the dangers of fame and the shallowness of pop culture, of course.The Autograph Man begins in full wisecracking throttle with three boys in the back of a car on their way to watch a wrestling match between Big Daddy and Giant Haystacks at the Royal Festival Hall. As 12-year-old Alex-Li Tandem gets Big Daddy’s autograph (the start of an obsession), his own daddy drops dead from a brain tumour. Unfortunately, the rest of the novel doesn’t quite live up to the prologue. The critical heavyweights of the time didn’t pull their punches: “A poky, pallid successor” (Michiko Kakutani, who had rapturously reviewed White Teeth, in the New York Times), “cartoonish” and full of “misplaced ironies and grinning complicities” (James Wood in the LRB)

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Ardal O’Hanlon: ‘I fell asleep on stage once – I could hear someone doing my material, got annoyed and woke up’

What’s the longest word you can make out of the letters A-R-D-A-L-O-H-A-N-L-O-N in 30 seconds?“Anal” springs to mind, because I was doing a show in Limerick in Ireland and the stage manager genuinely thought my name was Anal. He called me over the Tannoy [PA system]: “Could Anal please come to the stage door?” But there must be a bigger word than that. I’m usually good at Countdown. This is quite annoying. This is how I define myself – by my ability to conjure up words from random letters

4 days ago
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My cultural awakening: A Jim Carrey series made me embrace baldness – and shave my head on the spot

I was a mess of insecurities, trying to hide thinning hair, worried I was ageing too quickly. Then a scene in the TV show Kidding changed everythingGrowing up, I was obsessed with Jim Carrey. I was just entering my teens when The Mask came out, and I can still picture myself watching Ace Ventura: When Nature Calls on TV one weekend afternoon, absolutely howling at the silliness of it. His elastic facial expressions, the energy, the stunts – it was the perfect tenor of humour for a young boy.By the time I was in college, I had moved on to his more thoughtful films

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From Springsteen: Deliver Me from Nowhere to IT: Welcome to Derry – your complete entertainment guide to the week ahead

Jeremy Allen White channels the Boss in a hotly tipped new biopic, and Pennywise the clown returns to terrorise unsuspecting children in a spooky horror prequel seriesSpringsteen: Deliver Me from NowhereOut now The Bear’s Jeremy Allen White plays the Boss in this buzzed-about Bruce Springsteen biopic focusing on the period when he was making his 1982 album Nebraska (so, post-Born to Run but pre-Born in the USA), with Jeremy Strong playing critic turned producer Jon Landau.The MastermindOut now Kelly Reichardt returns with an art heist movie inspired by a real robbery in 1970s Massachusetts, in which two Gauguins, a Picasso and a Rembrandt were nicked. Here, it’s Arthur Dove paintings that catch the eye of Josh O’Connor’s art thief James Blaine Mooney.ParaNormanOut now An odd dearth of family films has left a gap in the market into which this rerelease of 2012’s animated adventure ParaNorman has decided to slip. Norman Babcock (Kodi Smit-McPhee) is the misfit 11-year-old who speaks with the dead, enabling a spooky adventure to unfold in time for Halloween

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EU carmakers ‘days away’ from halting work as chip war with China escalates

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Wall Street hits new highs as Nvidia becomes world’s first $5tn company – as it happened

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Apple hits $4tn market value as new iPhone models revitalize sales

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OpenAI completes conversion to for-profit business after lengthy legal saga

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Dingwall backed to plot course through the midfield maze for England

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South Africa beat England by 125 runs: Women’s Cricket World Cup semi-final – as it happened

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