England Six Nations: Owen Farrell to play fly-half for Saracens Saracens boss Mark McCall has promised Owen Farrell time at fly-half ahead of England's Six Nations campaign.
The 21-year-old came off the bench to play at outside centre in Sunday's narrow 17-16 win over Northampton Saints, scoring two penalties.
Veteran number 10 Charlie Hodgson also kicked two penalties as he retained his position at fly-half.
Farrell or Flood for fly-half? Farrell Flood 21
Age 27
12
Caps 53
v Scotland, February 2012
Debut v Argentina, November 2006
109 (eight conversions, 30 penalties, one drop goal)
Points 275 - (four tries, 39 conversions, 58 penalties, one drop goal)
42
Premiership games 99
366 (three tries, 24 conv, 100 pen, one drop goal)
Points 860 (23 tries, 122 conv, 165 pen, two drop goals)
"Owen will play some rugby at 10 over the next two or three weeks," McCall told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"He'll get plenty of rugby there to make sure he's in good form for England when the Six Nations begins."
England head coach Stuart Lancaster favoured Leicester's Toby Flood as his starting number 10 for the defeats by Australia and South Africa this autumn.
But Farrell was handed the fly-half berth for the historic 38-21 victory over New Zealand, kicking 17 points.
And the 12-cap back has until 2 February to persuade Lancaster he should start England's Six Nations opener against Scotland - the same fixture in which he made his international debut last year.
"Owen is very aware of the plan we have over the next three weeks - and has been since he came back from England's autumn internationals - about when he will play 10 and when he won't," said McCall. "He is very happy with that plan."
Farrell's six points from the boot against Saints proved vital to the result, with Saracens leading by 11 points in the early stages but holding on to go second in the Premiership.
"You've got to look back across the whole 80 minutes and if you haven't reflected your dominance on the scoreboard that's obviously a problem," said director of rugby McCall. "And the game was tight because of that.
"But there are signs of us developing nicely. The players are confident, our game is in good order and it's another very good win."
Comments Sign in with your BBC iD, or Register to comment and rate comments All posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.
Saracens boss Mark McCall has promised Owen Farrell time at fly-half ahead of England's Six Nations campaign.
The 21-year-old came off the bench to play at outside centre in Sunday's narrow 17-16 win over Northampton Saints, scoring two penalties.
Veteran number 10 Charlie Hodgson also kicked two penalties as he retained his position at fly-half.
Farrell or Flood for fly-half? Farrell Flood 21
Age 27
12
Caps 53
v Scotland, February 2012
Debut v Argentina, November 2006
109 (eight conversions, 30 penalties, one drop goal)
Points 275 - (four tries, 39 conversions, 58 penalties, one drop goal)
42
Premiership games 99
366 (three tries, 24 conv, 100 pen, one drop goal)
Points 860 (23 tries, 122 conv, 165 pen, two drop goals)
"Owen will play some rugby at 10 over the next two or three weeks," McCall told BBC Radio 5 Live.
"He'll get plenty of rugby there to make sure he's in good form for England when the Six Nations begins."
England head coach Stuart Lancaster favoured Leicester's Toby Flood as his starting number 10 for the defeats by Australia and South Africa this autumn.
But Farrell was handed the fly-half berth for the historic 38-21 victory over New Zealand, kicking 17 points.
And the 12-cap back has until 2 February to persuade Lancaster he should start England's Six Nations opener against Scotland - the same fixture in which he made his international debut last year.
"Owen is very aware of the plan we have over the next three weeks - and has been since he came back from England's autumn internationals - about when he will play 10 and when he won't," said McCall. "He is very happy with that plan."
Farrell's six points from the boot against Saints proved vital to the result, with Saracens leading by 11 points in the early stages but holding on to go second in the Premiership.
"You've got to look back across the whole 80 minutes and if you haven't reflected your dominance on the scoreboard that's obviously a problem," said director of rugby McCall. "And the game was tight because of that.
"But there are signs of us developing nicely. The players are confident, our game is in good order and it's another very good win."
Comments Sign in with your BBC iD, or Register to comment and rate comments All posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules.
Farrell | Flood | | 21 | Age 27 12 Caps 53 v Scotland, February 2012 Debut v Argentina, November 2006 109 (eight conversions, 30 penalties, one drop goal) Points 275 - (four tries, 39 conversions, 58 penalties, one drop goal) 42 Premiership games 99 366 (three tries, 24 conv, 100 pen, one drop goal) Points 860 (23 tries, 122 conv, 165 pen, two drop goals) "Owen will play some rugby at 10 over the next two or three weeks," McCall told BBC Radio 5 Live. "He'll get plenty of rugby there to make sure he's in good form for England when the Six Nations begins." England head coach Stuart Lancaster favoured Leicester's Toby Flood as his starting number 10 for the defeats by Australia and South Africa this autumn. But Farrell was handed the fly-half berth for the historic 38-21 victory over New Zealand, kicking 17 points. And the 12-cap back has until 2 February to persuade Lancaster he should start England's Six Nations opener against Scotland - the same fixture in which he made his international debut last year. "Owen is very aware of the plan we have over the next three weeks - and has been since he came back from England's autumn internationals - about when he will play 10 and when he won't," said McCall. "He is very happy with that plan." Farrell's six points from the boot against Saints proved vital to the result, with Saracens leading by 11 points in the early stages but holding on to go second in the Premiership. "You've got to look back across the whole 80 minutes and if you haven't reflected your dominance on the scoreboard that's obviously a problem," said director of rugby McCall. "And the game was tight because of that. "But there are signs of us developing nicely. The players are confident, our game is in good order and it's another very good win." Sign in with your BBC iD, or Register to comment and rate comments All posts are reactively-moderated and must obey the house rules. |
---|