England's Six Nations preparations hit as skills coach Jason Ryles stays put in Australia

Jason Ryles, the England skills coach looks on in the warm prior to the Quilter International match between England and Georgia at Twickenham Stadium on November 14, 2020 in London, England.
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England’s preparations for the Six Nations have suffered a further blow after the Rugby Football Union confirmed that skills coach Jason Ryles will remain in Australia for the tournament.

The highly rated Ryles joined England’s coaching team for last year’s Autumn Nations Cup had been due to move here permanently from Australia. However, Ryles and his young family have decided against the move because of concerns over Covid-19.

While the United Kingdom has has the fifth highest death toll in the world with 88,747 deaths, Australia has suffered just 909 deaths and has enforced some of the strictest restrictions with 47 leading tennis players isolating in their Melbourne hotels before the Australian Open. The air corridor between the UK and Australia closed at 4am on Monday morning.

The RFU would not confirm whether they will seek a replacement for Ryles just two weeks out from the start of the tournament, but it is understood they are considering all options. In a statement, the RFU also did not guarantee that Ryles would link back with England’s set up for the tour to North America.

“Due to the current Covid-19 lockdown, coach Jason Ryles and his family have chosen not to re-locate to England this month as they had originally planned,” the statement read. “It is hoped Jason will rejoin the coaching team for England’s summer fixtures.”

Ryles’ absence comes after last week’s announcement that head coach Eddie Jones will be limited to selecting a squad of 28 players, which is likely to remain in place throughout the tournament barring injury replacements. Despite his fondness for calling up bolters, Jones is expected to stick with tried and trusted options when he announces his squad on Friday. With no scope for chopping and changing his squad, he needs proven performers rather than rich potential. England’s squad will meet at St George’s Park, the training base for the England football team, next week before their opening fixture against Scotland at Twickenham on February 6.

The loss of Ryles will be felt acutely. While his impact as a skills coach was only starting to be felt during the Autumn Nations Cup in which England often flattered to deceive as an attacking force, Ryles was enormously popular among leading players including Owen Farrell, George Ford and Billy Vunipola.

With his pedigree as a State of Origin player and coaching the all-conquering Melbourne Storm team, Ryles commanded instant respect. As Ford said after his week in camp, “Jason has had a massive impact already for first receivers, ball players, playmakers but also in our general attacking on the edges, how we can execute better and play a bit straighter to preserve the space on the outside.”

Should he not be replaced then Simon Amor, the attack coach, will shoulder more of the burden of getting the backline firing after a hit-and-miss autumn campaign.

Six Nations Q&A
Six Nations Q&A