England prove there is beauty in winning the Borthwick way | Andy Bull

Coach is booed before kick-off but team deliver a win against the odds and no one will want to play them

Well hell’s bells, behold Borthersball and tremble! It’s a game of caterpillar rucks, scrums, and up-and-unders in which clean breaks are for noses and overlaps are best left for fence panelling. This was, apparently, the same sport France and New Zealand were playing at the Stade de France on Friday night, in much the same way that a tabby cat is family with a tiger.

Not that it matters a damn given that England won against a team two spots above them in the rankings before the tournament and even though they were a man down for 77 minutes. When you put it like that this must rank, in a strange way, as one of their very best World Cup performances.

It was a very ugly kind of beautiful, which did not stop the tens of thousands of English fans pouring out into Marseille afterwards from enjoying every sweet, stodgy, second of it.

Their team have turned up for the biggest party in the sport in a work shirt, a sensible pair of shoes and with hours of chat about the best way to navigate around the roadworks on the way back. God, but you don’t want to get stuck in a corner with them. Which was exactly the mistake Argentina made.

On the evidence of this match, whatever their union is paying Michael Cheika it’s more than the head coach deserves. Argentina had the wit and creativity of a sack of wet cement. There was more life in the corpse the guards hurled over the cliffs on the Chateau d’If. At least the Count of Monte Cristo was only pretending to be dead when they did it.

Argentina actually played better against England – and scored exactly as many points while they were at it – when they had to play with 14 themselves in their pool stage game in 2019, which they lost 39-10 after Tomás Lavanini was sent off for a reckless tackle on Owen Farrell. Eight of this England team played in that match. Borthwick decided to bet on experience, and it paid off for him.

Their World Cup was less than three minutes old when it took a turn for the worse, which is some feat, given that the day started with the Rugby Football Union’s CEO, Bill Sweeney, giving Borthwick the same public backing he repeatedly offered Eddie Jones last year, and that Borthwick himself was booed by the crowd when his name was read out loud before kick-off. But they managed it when Tom Curry rushed in on Juan Cruz Mallía as he leapt to claim a kick and then collided heads with him as he landed. It was England’s third red card in four Tests, all for the very same offence, and meant that all of a sudden, England had Manu Tuilagi packing down on the openside.

  • Download the Guardian app from the iOS App Store on iPhone or the Google Play store on Android by searching for 'The Guardian'.
  • If you already have the Guardian app, make sure you’re on the most recent version.
  • In the Guardian app, tap the Menu button at the bottom right, then go to Settings (the gear icon), then Notifications.
  • Turn on sport notifications.

One red for a blow to the head may be unlucky, two is careless, but three, apparently, is an inspiration. England were prepared for the situation, they knew exactly what to do, and did it superbly too.

The match began to turn their way almost immediately when they repelled a series of short drives off the back of an attacking lineout when the score was still 3-3. You felt Argentina were sure to score. But no. The attack foundered on Courtney Lawes, England’s captain winning a crucial turnover right under the posts.

After that, George Ford took over. He snapped one, two, three drop goals, and England somehow went in with a 12-3 lead at half-time. The first two were hit from so deep in the pocket that the Argentinians couldn’t get anywhere near him.

It was an ice cool performance by Ford, who made a string of brilliant decisions under immense pressure while, to be blunt, England’s attack flapped about around him butchering every chance that came their way. At one point Jonny May managed to end a four-on two overlap by carrying the ball straight out of play. So thank goodness for Ford, who weighed the game, adapted and overcame.

It may just be that Ford has played so much of his Test rugby on the shoulder, and in the shadow, of his great mate Farrell, but this felt by far his most authoritative performance for England, and the first time he’s taken control of a big game all by himself.

He followed the three drop goals with five penalties in the second half, so that, by the end, England made winning look much easier than it must have been. Their World Cup is off and rumbling. There’s already a hint of 2007 about it, and the last World Cup in France, when an England team full of old hands managed to grind their way to the final after being beaten 36-0 by South Africa.

On this evidence, there are plenty of teams in the tournament who can beat England, but there’s not one who will enjoy the 80 minutes it will take them to do it, or come through it without an awful bruising.

Contributor

Andy Bull at the Stade de Marseille

The GuardianTramp

Related Content

Article image
‘Don’t write us off’: Borthwick buoyant after stunning win over Argentina
The England head coach, Steve Borthwick, has vowed to give supporters more nights to enjoy in France

Gerard Meagher at the Stade de Marseille

09, Sep, 2023 @11:11 PM

Article image
Queueing chaos sees hundreds of fans miss start of England v Argentina
Hundreds of supporters were forced to miss the start of England’s defiant victory over Argentina after being caught up in lengthy queues amid chaotic scenes in Marseille

Gerard Meagher at the Stade de Marseille

09, Sep, 2023 @10:12 PM

Article image
George Ford drives 14-man England to heroic World Cup win over Argentina
George Ford kicked 27 points as England overcame the early dismissal of Tom Curry to begin their campaign with a stunning 27-10 win over Argentina

Robert Kitson at the Stade de Marseille

09, Sep, 2023 @9:07 PM

Article image
‘Players should be incredibly proud’: Borthwick praises England after defeat
Steve Borthwick believes England’s World Cup heartbreak can be the making of his side after their agonising 16-15 semi-final defeat by South Africa

Gerard Meagher at the Stade de France

21, Oct, 2023 @11:17 PM

Article image
Marcus Smith’s attacking flair gives Borthwick and England new hope | Sean Ingle
Full-back and Henry Arundell on the wing show the side can be unpredictable and all the better for it in World Cup rout of Chile

Sean Ingle

23, Sep, 2023 @7:57 PM

Article image
Borthwick finds ‘another dimension’ in England’s triple fly-half threats
Steve Borthwick said he considers England’s triple fly-half threat of Owen Farrell, Marcus Smith and George Ford as an option at the Rugby World Cup

Gerard Meagher at the Stade Pierre Mauroy

23, Sep, 2023 @8:17 PM

Article image
Borthwick ditches ambiguity of Jones era to offer players World Cup clarity
England’s head coach is determined to be up front with his squad about their chances of making the final 33 in France

Gerard Meagher

01, Jul, 2023 @5:00 PM

Article image
Borthwick sees bronze medal as a springboard to England success
Steve Borthwick said he hoped England’s World Cup bronze medal could be a platform for future success after his side beat Argentina in the third-place playoff

Robert Kitson at Stade de France

27, Oct, 2023 @10:46 PM

Article image
Argentina deserve to be favourites in World Cup opener against England
The Pumas, who always save their best for World Cups in France, are the highest-ranked team in their half of the draw

Paul Eddison

03, Sep, 2023 @11:00 AM

Article image
Borthwick must introduce attacking ambition to lift England to next level
Risk-free rugby has taken England to third place at the World Cup but Steve Borthwick’s limited gameplan will not cut it against the elite teams

Robert Kitson at Stade de France

27, Oct, 2023 @9:45 PM