Bullish Borthwick tells England to target Six Nations triumph in Paris

A picture


Steve Borthwick is plotting an ­English raid on Paris and has called on his side to set their sights on clinching a first Six Nations title in six years in the French capital on Super Saturday.England have not won the title since the Covid-hit championship in 2020 and last managed the grand slam in 2016 when Eddie Jones’s side clinched a fifth straight victory at the Stade de France.Borthwick was in bullish mood after announcing a settled 36-man squad for the tournament, naming a pair of uncapped props in the 19-year-old Billy Sela and Emmanuel Iyogun amid injury problems in the front row, while Exeter’s 22-year-old flanker Greg Fisilau will hope to make his debut.The head coach also ­welcomes back George Furbank, who has struggled with calf and arm injuries recently and has not played for England since November 2024.A clutch of players including Fin Smith, Ollie Lawrence, Fin Baxter, Tom Roebuck and Ben Curry will head to next week’s warm weather training camp in Girona for rehabilitation but it remains to be seen whether they will be fit to face Wales at Twickenham for England’s opener on 7 February.

Trips to Murrayfield and Rome follow, either side of the visit of Ireland to Twickenham, but despite England’s poor record in the tournament of late, Borthwick has told his players to put themselves on course for the title in Paris on the final weekend, calling on supporters to cross the Channel in their droves.Saracens have announced Mark McCall will step down as director of rugby at the end of the season, with Brendan Venter to return for the 2026-27 campaign.Following 15 seasons in the job, McCall will remain as technical adviser and join the board.The South African Venter will return to a position he first held in 2009, having then recruited McCall as first-team coach, before switching to a part-time role as technical adviser, with Saracens going on to success domestically and in Europe.McCall said: "I am immensely proud of what we have achieved at Saracens and grateful for the opportunity to have led the rugby programme for so long.

"I feel the time is right for change, while still remaining deeply involved in the club I care so much about.I am really looking forward to supporting Brendan and contributing in a way that helps Saracens continue to move forward."Saracens said the changes will provide a "sense of continuity and collaboration" as the club moves into its "next chapter".Venter said: "I am incredibly proud to once again lead the rugby programme.Mark's continued involvement was key to me accepting the appointment.

" PA Media“We met a couple of weeks ago and we talked about the Six Nations Championship.We know it’s tight, we know there’s lots of good teams in it,” said Borthwick.“We also know the last seven Six Nations Championships have gone down to the last round of fixtures and we talked about that as a team.“On 14 March in Paris, we want to be in a position entering that game where we can achieve what we’re all aiming to achieve.That’s what we want.

We want England fans flooding across the Channel to Paris to come and watch the team in a massive encounter in the final round with the opportunity to achieve what we want,We also know that the only way you get there is by ensuring each of you take each step one at a time and get our preparation right for the start of the tournament,”Borthwick has also called on his players to relish the added expectation that comes with a winning run that dates back to last February,“The first thing I’d like to say about that is I think it is brilliant that people are talking in that way about this England team,” he added,“They can see the development of the team and they can see the talent that’s in the team and they can see the potential that’s in it.

I think we’re nowhere near ­maxing out the potential.“We have players in there with huge amounts of talent, and whilst we’re still reasonably low on experience at Test level, as they get used to Test rugby their growth is going to be enormous.I’m really pleased at how the players are embracing how we want to play, and taking the game on.I want them to attack this tournament, come in with a mindset to play brave and attack.”Forwards: Ollie Chessum (Leicester , 30 caps), Arthur Clark (Gloucester, 1 cap), Alex Coles (Northampton, 14 caps), Luke Cowan-Dickie (Sale, 53 caps), Chandler Cunningham-South (Harlequins, 20 caps), Tom Curry (Sale, 65 caps), Theo Dan (Saracens, 20 caps), Trevor Davison (Northampton, 3 caps), Ben Earl (Saracens, 46 caps), Greg Fisilau (Exeter, uncapped), Ellis Genge (Bristol, 75 caps), Jamie George (Saracens, 105 caps), Joe Heyes (Leicester, 17 caps), Maro Itoje (Saracens, 97 caps) – captain, Emmanuel Iyogun (Northampton, uncapped), Guy Pepper (Bath, 7 caps), Henry Pollock (Northampton, 5 caps), Bevan Rodd (Sale, 10 caps), Vilikesa Sela (Bath, uncapped), Sam Underhill (Bath, 45 caps)Backs: Henry Arundell (Bath, 11 caps), Seb Atkinson (Gloucester, 2 caps)Elliot Daly (Saracens, 74 caps), Fraser Dingwall (Northampton, 7 caps), Immanuel Feyi-Waboso (Exeter, 13 caps), George Ford (Sale, 105 caps), Tommy Freeman (Northampton, 22 caps), George Furbank (Northampton, 14 caps), Alex Mitchell (Northampton, 27 caps), Cadan Murley (Harlequins, 4 caps) , Max Ojomoh (Bath, 2 caps), Henry Slade (Exeter, 74 caps), Marcus Smith (Harlequins, 46 caps), Ben Spencer (Bath, 14 caps), Freddie Steward (Leicester, 41 caps), Jack van Poortvliet (Leicester, 21 caps)Sela’s inclusion in a training squad for the first time comes after injuries to Will Stuart and Asher Opoku-Fordjour.

Trevor Davison, who has three caps, is also included as is his Northampton teammate Iyogun with doubts over Baxter’s availability in the early part of the tournament.Such injury disruption to the front row threatens to blunt the impact of Borthwick’s “Pom Squad”, used with such impressive effect during the autumn internationals.Asked if he will have to tweak his strategy for replacements, Borthwick said: “Possibly.You deal with each of those situations on their own merits.We have also got plenty of depth in other positions and playing experience.

That decision, I have talked at length about what we need to do in how there are so many Test matches that are within a score of each other in that final part of the game.So that’ll be a decision around the experienced front-row forwards.”
societySee all
A picture

‘Manosphere’ influencers pushing testosterone tests are convincing healthy young men there is something wrong with them, study finds

“If you’re not waking up in the morning with a boner, there’s a large possibility that you have low testosterone levels,” an influencer on TikTok with more than 100,000 followers warns his viewers.Despite screening for low testosterone being medically unwarranted in most young men, this group is being aggressively targeted online by influencers and wellness companies promoting hormone tests and treatments as essential to being a “real man”, a study published in the journal Social Science and Medicine has found.Researchers analysed 46 high-impact posts about low testosterone and testing made by TikTok and Instagram accounts with a combined following of more than 6.8 million, to examine how masculinity and men’s health are being depicted and monetised online.The lead author of the study, Emma Grundtvig Gram, a public health researcher at the University of Copenhagen, said influencers promoting routine testosterone screening often framed normal variations in energy, mood, libido or ageing “as signs of pathology”

A picture

John Knight obituary

Disabled people might still be waiting for all UK trains to be accessible were it not for the success of a high-profile campaign led by John Knight, who has died of sepsis aged 67, after himself overcoming profound disabilities from birth and becoming a leading figure in the charity and public sectors.Knight was responsible for policy and campaigns at the disability charity Leonard Cheshire during passage of the Disability Discrimination Act 2005, which was to set a deadline for railway carriages to be accessible. Train companies were pressing for a date of 2035, to maximise the life of inaccessible rolling stock, but the campaign persuaded the House of Lords to back an amendment to the legislation with a time limit of 2020. The change was then accepted by the Labour government.At the climax of the All Aboard campaign, Knight arranged for a horse-drawn hearse to deliver to MPs and peers thousands of postcards on which disabled people had written what age they would need to live to in order to benefit from a 2035 deadline

A picture

Assisted dying bill backers say it is ‘near impossible’ it will pass House of Lords

MPs and peers who backed the assisted dying bill now believe it is “near impossible” for it to pass the House of Lords in time because of procedural obstacles used by opponents.Supporters of the bill, including its sponsor, Kim Leadbeater, have been in intense discussions with the government to find ways to move it to a vote in the Lords. With progress so slow, experts and MPs believe it is unlikely the legislation will even be put to a vote before the end of the session in May, after which it will automatically fall.MPs told the Guardian they were in “blind fury” about the apparent inevitability of the billing falling in the Lords despite passing the Commons. “It is our system at its absolute most dysfunctional,” one MP said

A picture

Residents in legal fight to halt demolition of Clockwork Orange estate

A legal challenge has been launched in an effort to halt the demolition of a 1960s Brutalist estate in south-east London that featured in Stanley Kubrick’s dystopian film A Clockwork Orange.The challenge against Bexley council and Peabody housing association, which will be carrying out the redevelopment, has been launched by the Lesnes estate resident Adam Turk.He and others living there believe the estate could be refurbished rather than demolished and rebuilt under plans for the construction of up to 1,950 homes, which the council approved on 23 December.Residents fear the redevelopment would cause environmental damage and undermine the UK’s legal obligation to reach net zero by 2050.The dispute highlights a wider tension between environmental protection and initiatives to demolish and rebuild estates

A picture

How screen time affects toddlers: ‘We’re losing a big part of being human’

In the UK, 98% of two-year-olds watch screens on a typical day, on average for more than two hours – and almost 40% of three- to five-year-olds use social media. Could this lead to alarming outcomes?At Stoke primary school in Coventry, there are many four-year-olds among those starting in reception class who can’t sit still, hold a pencil or speak more than a four-word sentence. Lucy Fox, the assistant headteacher and head of foundations, is in no doubt what is causing this: their early exposure to screens, and a lot of it. When the children experiment with materials and creativity, and make things in the classroom, she says, “We notice a lot of children will cut pieces of cardboard out and make a mobile phone or tablet, or an Xbox controller. That’s what they know

A picture

Four in five blind people struggle with gap at UK train stations, survey finds

Four in five blind and partially sighted people in the UK have struggled to cross the gap between trains and station platforms, according to a survey, with some falling and injuring themselves.Many blind and partially sighted people avoid taking train journeys owing to anxieties around whether they will be properly supported after having had inconsistent experiences, according to research from the Royal National Institute of Blind People (RNIB).It found that more than one-third (37%) of blind and partially sighted people felt unable to take all the train journeys they wanted and needed. The gap between the platform and trains was a “significant source of fear”, with some people being struck by a train or coming into contact with an electric rail, or trapped in train doors and dragged as the train departed, the RNIB found.This is partly because tactile wayfinding, which uses raised bumps and colours to help blind and visually impaired people navigate, is less common in British train stations than in many comparable countries such as European nations and Japan, with just one-fifth of blind and visually impaired people surveyed by the RNIB saying they had encountered it at a station