A slippery subject, rugby culture, and easily misrepresented in its narrowest sense. Across great swathes of the sporting landscape, the English variety is still a slave to cliché - swanky schools, hyphenated surnames, ritual debaggings at the beer-drenched bar and lewd songs about sexual peccadilloes - while the Australian version, which used to be framed in the image of Eales, Campese and the Ella brothers, now has the Eddie Jones imbroglio as its public face.
And in the wider sense? Here, we find ourselves on firmer ground. The deepest-rooted, most stable union cultures are undoubtedly to be found in South Africa and New Zealand. And guess what? Between them, these countries have triumphed in seven of the 10 World Cups to date, including all of the last five.
Sir Clive, Martin the Miserable, Jonny Whatsisname and their fellow Red Rosers did not seem like outliers back in 2003. Quite the opposite. England travelled to that tournament as the number one side in the sport and despite trying to prove that they weren't quite as good as everyone assumed, they lived up to the ranking. There was even talk of a paradigm shift, not least from senior Twickenham executives who spent the immediate aftermath of the final working out how much money might be generated off the back of it.
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Sleightholme shows he has pace to burn
OLLIE Sleightholme recently clocked his fastest sprint time and is racing to cement his spot as an England starter.
McGoverne says playing for Chiefs is her priority
EXETER fly-half Olivia McGoverne has opted for club over country which will rule her out of contention for New Zealandâs World Cup bid in 2025.
Trinity aim to get the culture right
HIGH-FLYING Trinity have made a remarkable turnaround this season after narrowly avoiding relegation last term, heading into this weekend unbeaten and are now eyeing up promotion from Level 7.
YOUNG GUNS
Louie Gulley experienced the environment of England U20sâ World Championship triumph up close this summerand now has a burning desire to become an age-grade star. The 19-year-old Exeter Chiefs hooker was part of Mark Mapletoftâs squad but didnât manage to make an appearance during the tournament.
The Cherry & Whites lay down marker over Lucs
CAMBORNE maintained their lead at the top of the table with a bonus-point win against their nearest challengers in a pulsating game.
A brace from Botterill is key to victory for Esher
A highly entertaining and enthralling contest between two sides fighting at the foot of the table was eventually won by Esher after the lead had changed no less than seven times throughout an absorbing afternoon.
Chiefs in hunt for new investment
TONY Rowe has confirmed the search for new investors into Exeter Chiefs has begun as he looks to safeguard the longterm future of the Premiership club.
McParland keen to shine for England A
NORTHAMPTON scrum-half Archie McParland feels he has returned a better player following a nasty injury that denied him a World Cup winners medal and is now ready to fly into a new opportunity with England A.
Undercard get chance to show their A-game
ENGLANDâS A team today get their first major work-out after being resurrected earlier this year when Australiaâs undercard provide the opposition at The Stoop.
England look like a clueless rabble
I WATCHED with a growing sense of bewilderment as England yet again took to the field against Australia looking to all intents and purpose as if they had just been introduced to each other on the coach into Twickenham.