Tom Curry admits England have been “fighting with one hand behind our back” throughout Saturday’s defeat to Scotland however insists the staff is able to mount a response towards Eire.
England’s watch for a primary win at Murrayfield since 2020 continued as they have been overwhelmed 31-20, a consequence that introduced their 12-Check successful run to an finish.
The harm had finally been carried out throughout a primary half during which Henry Arundell collected two yellow playing cards as Scotland constructed a 24-10 lead on the break.
“Maybe that first 25-30 minutes let us down,” Curry instructed Sky Sports activities Information. “It’s easy to say because you can always say something like that but that was probably coming out of the blocks and we didn’t want to necessarily put ourselves in that position, especially away against a good team.
“You are combating with one hand behind your again, actually. However credit score to Scotland, they placed on a extremely good efficiency, they have been correct and scientific.
“Coming in this week you just be better, you have to do it. It’s an individual responsibility, get yourself right and then you attack together.”
Curry mentioned the staff had embraced the frustration on the following Sunday, absorbing the after-effects and in flip utilising as a lot to assist look ahead.
“It’s been good. Sometimes you have to sit in it for a bit and feel what’s happened,” he added.
“We did that on Sunday. We had a good afternoon, physically and mentally you get yourself right, and then come the meeting you’re ready to listen and that’s the important thing.”
England wing Arundell is to face a disciplinary listening to on Tuesday following his purple card on the weekend.
The 23-year-old was sin-binned for not releasing his opponent earlier than then receiving one other yellow card for taking Kyle Steyn out within the air.
“He’s been very level headed, he’s a very measured bloke,” mentioned Curry of Arundell. “He’s been in the middle, I try to give him my experiences of it.
“It is annoying, he’ll be alright. It is certainly one of Steve [Borthwick’s] many strengths, the emotional facet of it.
“He was great with me, and just knowing you’re already feeling down so it’s helping out.”
England face Eire at Twickenham on Saturday with Andy Farrell’s facet coming off a nervy 20-13 victory over Italy.
It beckons as a special take a look at to that of Murrayfield, Curry welcoming the prospect to harness a house crowd ambiance in his facet’s favour.
“You probably don’t have the Scottish shouting at you,” Curry joked. “You get a sense of a more organised structured attack.
“In the end we preserve dialling into what we need to do. That is whenever you really feel your finest, whenever you’re imposing your gameplan on folks or what you are doing they need to react to.
“That’s the goal in sport, no matter who you’re playing against.”
Curry himself has featured off the bench in England’s final two matches towards Scotland and Wales, however is unfazed by his function as he prioritises a return to successful methods for Borthwick’s males.
“The little boy in yourself says you want to start, the man in you says you’re happy for the team. We’re grown adults so you obviously listen to the man,” he mentioned.
“It’s been a brilliant experience and you have to put yourself in a position where you’re ready for anything, when you get to that it doesn’t matter where you are in the team, once you’re on the pitch you’re on the pitch.
“You play what’s in entrance of you.”
Farrell criticises ‘keyboard warriors’
Ireland head coach Andy Farrell denied suggestions that some sections of home fans celebrated when Sam Prendergast was replaced against Italy.
It comes amid debate over Ireland’s fly-half contest, with Munster’s Jack Crowley taking over from Prendergast in the 56th minute.
Prendergast, who made his Test debut aged 21 in the autumn of 2024, had missed two conversions that prompted notable groans among the Ireland crowd. Farrell faces a decision at No 10 for the England game.
Farrell mentioned: “I might be talking out of school here but what’s gone on over the last year, especially with the keyboard warriors, I think people need to ask themselves sometimes, ‘are we Irish? Do we want people to do well or not?’
“As a result of it may be robust for these children. I’ve seen it toing and froing with each of them, and each of them are robust characters.
“It takes a lot to break kids like that. But I’ve seen it affect people. So the keyboard warriors on Twitter, or whatever you call it now, need to cop on and try and help these kids.
“It is damaging. We have to again them.”
Ireland’s win over Italy came in the wake of their 36-14 round-one defeat to France in Paris, Farrell acknowledging his injury-hit side’s underdog status.
“You would say we’ve nothing to lose, however we do,” he said. “We need to win. We need to play higher. We need to be taught from a big-game expertise away from residence.
“Paris is a tough ask and Twickenham is a similar type of task so we need to grow through that experience and see what we can do with it.
“I’ve little question persons are going to write down us off.”
What’s subsequent?
England will try and bounce again after they host Eire at Allianz Stadium, Twickenham on February 21 at 2.10pm, adopted by Wales vs Scotland at 4.40pm.