Our experts pick their England squad to face Japan and New Zealand
Steve Borthwick will has a blend of youth and experience to select from - Getty Images/David Rogers
The England squad that will face Japan and New Zealand this summer will be finalised by Steve Borthwick on Monday, after this weekend’s Premiership final.
Telegraph Sport’s experts pick the players they would like to see make the plane as part of a 36-man travelling party.
Do you agree or disagree with our writers? Let us know in the comments below.
‘Barbeary, Randall and Ewels unfortunate’
Props: Joe Marler, Fin Baxter, Bevan Rodd, Dan Cole, Trevor Davison, Will Stuart
Hookers: Jamie George, Theo Dan, Curtis Langdon
Locks: Maro Itoje, George Martin, Alex Coles, Rusi Tuima
Back row: Sam Underhill, Ben Earl, Chandler Cunningham-South, Ted Hill, Tom Willis, Tom Curry, Ethan Roots
Scrum-halves: Alex Mitchell, Jack van Poortvliet, Ben Spencer
Fly-halves: George Ford, Marcus Smith, Fin Smith
Centres: Ollie Lawrence, Henry Slade, Luke Northmore, Fraser Dingwall
Back three: Tommy Freeman, Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, Tom Roebuck, Ollie Sleightholme, George Furbank, Freddie Steward
Writing all these names out together emphasises England’s need to build depth and be bold because Steve Borthwick has veterans and newbies without too much in between. My tougher calls are probably Bevan Rood over Beno Obano, Tom Willis over Alfie Barbeary and Alex Dombrandt, Jack van Poortvliet over Harry Randall and Freddie Steward over Max Malins. Charlie Ewels is unfortunate, too.
Jack van Poortvliet is ready to return to the England fold - Getty Images/Alex Davidson
I would also have liked to take Greg Fisilau, Raffi Quirke, Max Ojomoh and Joe Carpenter and it is heartening that Borthwick has taken a closer look at those players in camp. As for Tom Curry, I am not sure how much more there is to be gained by giving him the entire summer off, and he nips in ahead of his brother. A split of 20 forwards and 16 backs is helped by the versatility of Marcus Smith, Luke Northmore and Tommy Freeman. That way, I get to bring Rusi Tuima as well, who could be a bit of a wildcard.
‘Question marks over George’s form’
Props: Joe Marler, Beno Obano, Fin Baxter, Dan Cole, Will Stuart, Trevor Davison
Hookers: Theo Dan, Curtis Langdon, Jamie George
Locks: George Martin, Maro Itoje, Alex Coles, Rusi Tuima
Back row: Tom Curry, Sam Underhill, Ben Earl, Ethan Roots, Chandler Cunningham-South, Alfie Barbeary, Tom Willis
Scrum-halves: Alex Mitchell, Jack van Poortvliet, Ben Spencer
Fly-halves: George Ford, Marcus Smith, Fin Smith
Centres: Ollie Lawrence, Henry Slade, Fraser Dingwall, Luke Northmore
Back three: Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, Tommy Freeman, Ollie Sleightholme, Tom Roebuck, George Furbank, Freddie Steward
The hookers pick themselves, although there are question marks over the form of George. The scrummaging prowess of Marler, Obano and Baxter means that Rodd narrowly misses out and, with the same logic, Davison is included on the tighthead. With Ollie Chessum injured, Tuima comes into the lock conversation while Barbeary and Willis are two new(ish) faces on the back row, to give England a bit more oomph from No 8. And, as I wrote this week, I would bring Tom Curry straight back – sadly, in place of his brother – given that he has not played all season.
Alfie Barbeary has done enough to earn his chance with England - Getty Images/Patrick Khachfe
Behind the pack, the three scrum-halves selected are the league’s form trio; the same can be said of the fly-halves, the easiest pick of the bunch. England’s centre depth is a concern but Dingwall has been in terrific nick for Saints while Northmore has the potential to be Test class. If the Quins centre can recapture some of that 2022 form, before injury struck, he is well worth his place in the squad. The two full-backs pick themselves but, without Elliot Daly on the wing, an opportunity arises for the Premiership’s man of the moment, Sleightholme. The Saint competing with team-mate Freeman and Feyi-Waboso for two wing spots is box office. Roebuck’s aerial prowess should not be discounted, either.
‘Where are the tightheads?’
Props: Joe Marler, Fin Baxter, Bevan Rodd, Dan Cole, Trevor Davison, Will Stuart
Hookers: Jamie George, Theo Dan, Curtis Langdon
Locks: Maro Itoje, George Martin, Alex Coles
Back row: Sam Underhill, Ben Earl, Chandler Cunningham-South, Ted Hill, Tom Willis, Ben Curry, Alex Dombrandt
Scrum-halves: Alex Mitchell, Ben Spencer, Jack van Poortvliet
Fly-halves: George Ford, Marcus Smith, Fin Smith
Centres: Ollie Lawrence, Henry Slade, Fraser Dingwall
Back three: Tommy Freeman, Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, Tom Roebuck, George Furbank, Freddie Steward, Joe Carpenter, Ollie Sleighthome.
Where are the tightheads? That Dan Cole is going to be asked to tour again and lock the England scrum sheds light on the shortage of front row options for the England head coach. Archie Griffin declared for Wales this year while the likes of Asher Opoku-Fordjour and Billy Sela need more game time.
Dan Cole is being relied on as the bedrock of the England scrum - PA/David Davies
It is the one position of concern ahead of a tour that should see Borthwick seek to add depth to a squad that finished the Six Nations with a flourish. Joe Carpenter and Tom Roebuck finished their Premiership campaign on fire, so too has Ben Curry, while brother Tom has only just returned to action so would benefit from a summer at home.
‘Mercer is my wildcard’
Props: Joe Marler, Fin Baxter, Beno Obano, Dan Cole, Trevor Davison, Will Stuart
Hookers: Jamie George, Theo Dan, Curtis Langdon
Locks: Alex Coles, George Martin, Rusi Tuima, Nick Isiekwe
Back row: Chandler Cunningham-South, Ben Earl, Sam Underhill, Ben Curry, Ted Hill, Zach Mercer, Tom Pearson
Scrum-half: Alex Mitchell, Jack Van Poortvliet, Ben Spencer
Fly-half: Marcus Smith, George Ford, Fin Smith
Centres: Ollie Lawrence, Henry Slade, Fraser Dingwall, Luke Nothmore
Back three: George Furbank, Freddie Steward, Tommy Freeman, Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, Tom Roebuck, Ollie Sleightholme
First things first, there’s no Maro Itoje or Tom Curry. Itoje could only play one full game on the tour before breaking the player welfare limit while Curry has only played 30 minutes since the World Cup. Will their absence hurt England? Yes, but it is more important they have a summer to rest coming off a World Cup season going into a Lions year.
How much game time with Maro Itoje get? - Reuters/Hannah Mckay
There are so many positions where I flipped floppy indecisively like between Bevan Rodd and Beno Obano at loosehead or Tom Pearson and Ethan Roots, which emphasises the depth from which Steve Borthwick has to choose, although the second row options are a bit skinny in the absence of Itoje and the injured Ollie Chessum. My one wild card would be Zach Mercer, who has not been included in Borthwick’s initial squad for whatever reason. While England are far from short of back row options, he is such a unique player that I would love to see in a Test arena.
‘Obano outperformed Rodd in semi-final’
Props: Joe Marler, Fin Baxter, Beno Obano, Dan Cole, Trevor Davison, Will Stuart
Hookers: Jamie George, Theo Dan, Curtis Langdon
Locks: Maro Itoje, George Martin, Alex Coles, Rusi Tuima
Back row: Tom Curry, Sam Underhill, Ben Earl, Chandler Cunningham-South, Ted Hill, Tom Willis, Ethan Roots
Scrum-halves: Alex Mitchell, Jack van Poortvliet, Ben Spencer
Fly-halves: George Ford, Marcus Smith, Fin Smith
Centres: Ollie Lawrence, Henry Slade, Fraser Dingwall
Back three: Tommy Freeman, Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, Tom Roebuck, Ollie Sleightholme, George Furbank, Joe Carpenter, Freddie Steward
You will notice there are only three centres - that is because Freeman can cover at 13 (nine starts there for Northampton this season, including in the Champions Cup semi-final) and his size and speed in that channel need to be examined at Test level. Obano outperformed Bevan Rodd in the semi-final and makes the cut. Otherwise largely as expected, with Sale’s Carpenter the beneficiary of trusting Freeman to cover in midfield meaning the 20-year-old full-back makes the group.
Beno Obano has impressed for Bath of late - Getty Images/Bob Bradford
Luke Northmore could have been an option and had that been the case, then maybe Steward would have dropped out entirely, for two reasons; England know what they have there, and he’s no longer an automatic selection having not featured in the final three games of the Six Nations. The most intriguing players out of the above group? Baxter, Langdon, Tuima, Sleightholme. All in hot form, and all need a run-out. Hard to think of a more pleasing potential selection than Ted Hill, who grafts all game long.
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