Tuesday, 8 February 2011

Six Nations Championship 2011: Martin Johnson determined to push England on ... - Telegraph.co.uk

{ Martin Johnson deteremined to push England on to new heights after victory over Wales No complacency: Martin Johnson says there are "lots and lots" of improvements England can make despite beating Wales in Cardiff Photo: AP

And that is why there will be little praise on offer when they all gather on Monday morning at their Surrey training base, despite their first win at the Millennium Stadium in eight years. Johnson is all too familiar with the boom and bust trend of recent times, decent wins being followed by a lull: from the euphoria of beating Australia to a ho-hum afternoon against Samoa in November.

“You can only get better if you’re tough on yourself,” Johnson said. “What’s the alternative... pats on the back? At least we’ve got a good platform from which to be tough. It was a big, emotional time in Cardiff. But we’ve got to perform whatever the build-up is, set out own standards.

“Our match won’t be the big focus this weekend. The expectations will be different. It’s important we get the mindset right. Look at the All Blacks. Even their worst performance is still pretty good. Their standards are high. Our performance has got to be better against Italy than it was against Wales. We handled the lead-in to Wales very well. Now we’ve got to handle this very well. It’ll be a test for us this week.”

A self-critical tone is crucial if England are to make best use of what was a notable championship victory, only their third in seven years away from home against all opponents bar Italy. Any sense that they can now coast through the tournament with three successive matches at Twickenham before heading to Dublin in mid-March for a tilt at a Grand Slam is as fanciful as expecting bankers to give up bonuses. Johnson intends to weed out any self-delusion the moment the group gets together.

“If only it were all as simple as that,” he said when the Grand Slam scenario was outlined. “Our fans are pretty sensible when it comes to that. Being favourites just isn’t on our radar.”

England were far from being polished or emphatic in all that they did. They are still one-dimensional in midfield and also prone to bouts of daftness in giving away penalties. James Haskell, Chris Ashton and Shontayne Hape were guilty of lapses at different times.

“Those silly things you can regret for a very long time if the score goes against you,” Johnson said. “There’s lots and lots to get better at. If you looked at the local papers it’s all doom and gloom down in Wales and things will be said about us. We all know the truth is somewhere in between.”

There is little doubt, though, that England have matured. They worked themselves into a commanding position at 23-9 yet allowed Wales to come back at them and were grateful for Jonny Wilkinson’s penalty five minutes from time to ease jitters. Yet England did hold firm and grafted their way through the sticky patch. That resolve and hard-nosed awareness have not been present for a long time. A year ago England might have lost that game. Johnson himself conceded that point.

“Yes, certainly there would be more of a chance to lose it,” he said. “But after what this squad has been through in the summer and autumn – well, it’s why you play the game, to get better.”

True, but there is no guarantee that more time together necessarily leads to improvement. One player, though, who has grown in stature over the past 12 months is fly-half Toby Flood. Friday was his eighth start in successive games since he took over the reins from his former Newcastle team-mate, Jonny Wilkinson, for the game against France last season.

“We’ve seen Toby’s maturity, especially day-to-day on the training field,” Johnson said. “He was fantastic in the autumn. If you’re bright enough and hard-working enough to make the best of your experiences, then that’s what happens.”

There were other figures of substance in England ranks, notably debutant flanker Tom Wood and lock Tom Palmer. Wood was terrific, a real prospect even if only drafted in the first place because of injuries to others. He looks entirely comfortable at this level, unfazed by everything around him, even overcoming a bout of illness to go the distance.

“You’ve got a lot to deal with – the bright lights, the male voice choir, the band and even the goat,” Johnson said, revealing England had been pushed off their warm-up patch by the band.

“But Tom just got on with what he had to do, being accurate and that’s his little part done. A match is made up of lots of little fundamentals. If you win the majority of those battles, that’s what wins you games.”

England have a clean bill of health bar bumps and bruises. They name their side on Thursday.




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