As is often the case with the truculent Australian, it has been impossible to escape his name in the build-up to this weekend’s clash between his employers new and old; talk of the Eddie era seeming to bounce out of the whispering walls and ornate corners of the Pennyhill Park training base he used to patrol.
Indeed, after his enforced withdrawal, it feels like the only person yet to pass comment on Jones’s eccentricities and efficacy is the man himself – a relative rarity for someone who takes great pleasure in nailing the narrative. There was a degree of dodging from the Japan Rugby Football Union this week, with a virtual press conference all that was offered with their head coach even before his illness. The music will be faced today for certain: “He’ll be [at Twickenham] with bells on,” assistant Neal Hatley promised.
If it was inevitable that the former England coach would be a topic of discussion as he takes on his former side at Twickenham for the first time since his sacking, his centrality as an issue was only heightened by a less-than-flattering portrayal in Danny Care’s recently-published autobiography. Care’s description of a despotic and dictatorial coach did not necessarily contain much information that hadn’t been rumoured or ruminated on privately before, but the detail of an environment seemingly endured rather than enjoyed was still striking.
Questions remain over how the Rugby Football Union let such a culture persist if Care's comments are to be taken as true. While plenty of other players have given testimony on how Jones's approach managed to get the best out of them, some clearly were made to feel rotten. It makes his legacy within the England environment peculiar, some of the current crop owing their careers to early opportunities given to them; others rather glad that a figure they could never get on the right side of was moved on.
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