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The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Gerard Meagher

Tuilagi and Slade miss Australia tour to give England major selection headaches

Manu Tuilagi is out of England’s tour to Australia in order to ensure he is fit for next season.
Manu Tuilagi is out of England’s tour to Australia in order to ensure he is fit for next season. Photograph: Paul Childs/Action Images/Reuters

Manu Tuilagi will miss England’s summer tour of Australia after undergoing a knee operation, leaving Eddie Jones with a major selection headache for the three-match series against the Wallabies.

Tuilagi’s latest setback comes after he missed the Six Nations with a hamstring injury and, with Henry Slade revealing he has undergone shoulder surgery, Jones has a huge void to fill in the centres.

Tuilagi made his second comeback of the season at the start of April and was named in the squad for last week’s mini training camp in London. On naming that squad on 17 May, Jones said Tuilagi was “looking very fit and enthusiastic … He really wants to make an imprint on this Australian tour.” Three days later, however, Tuilagi was withdrawn at half-time during Sale’s victory at Wasps with tightness in his knee and, while he attended the England camp, it is thought he did not play a full part in the training sessions.

It is the latest in a series of setbacks for Tuilagi, who also suffered a hamstring injury in the first 10 minutes of England’s autumn victory over South Africa. Jones wants to deploy a midfield of Marcus Smith and Owen Farrell as his 10-12 partnership with Tuilagi outside them but they have managed 68 minutes together and Tuilagi was lining up on the wing.

Jones has acknowledged that in Tuilagi’s absence he has no like-for-like alternative who offers the same threat and, with Slade also set to miss the tour, Jones’s options at outside-centre are limited. Slade’s loss is a considerable blow given he has started all England’s matches this season but as far as Jones’s options go, Joe Marchant has been in impressive form for Harlequins. The head coach is also understood to see the Northampton youngster Tommy Freeman as an option at outside-centre.

England and Sale adopted a more collaborative approach over Tuilagi’s fitness with the Sharks borrowing a GPS unit from the national setup. Nonetheless, questions were raised when Tuilagi, having made two appearances for Sale after his injury in November, was called back into the England squad during the Six Nations. He was named in the side to face Wales but had to withdraw after aggravating the hamstring.

Tuilagi has made 14 appearances for club and country this season and aside from the 2019 World Cup campaign, when England worked wonders to keep him fit and firing throughout, he has played for the national side 13 times since Jones took over. The hope remains that after surgery and recuperating over the summer, Tuilagi will be available for next year’s World Cup.

Sale said: “The club, in close consultation with England, have decided that a summer of rest and a full pre-season is the best course of action to ensure Manu is fit and available for Sale Sharks and England during a crucial year for both club and country.”

Meanwhile, three South African teams will play in next season’s Champions Cup for the first time while two will take part in the Challenge Cup, organisers have confirmed. The Bulls, the Sharks and the Stormers qualify from the United Rugby Championship into the elite European competition while the Lions and the Cheetahs will join the second-tier tournament. The move was seen as the next logical step after the South African provinces joined the URC.

In Auckland, a special general meeting of New Zealand Rugby, whose finances have been buffeted by the Covid-19 pandemic, has voted in favour of a private equity investment from the US firm Silver Lake, the final step in the approval process for the groundbreaking agreement. The NZ$200m (£105m) deal, approved in a vote by a majority of the country’s provincial unions, values NZR’s commercial assets at NZ$3.5bn and will see Silver Lake take 5.71%-8.58% of a new entity, NZR CommercialCo.

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