England lock George Kruis insists Georgia punch-up was beneficial

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‘We learn from these things, it puts us under pressure, it’s a contact sport’: England lock George Kruis insists Georgia punch-up was beneficial

  • England and Georgia came through training session without any further fighting
  • On Wednesday Sportsmail revealed the training match descended into brawls
  • Lock George Kruis believes the public showdown was beneficial for the squad
  • Ben Youngs added his voice to growing discontent about World League reforms 

Chris Foy for the Daily Mail

England and Georgia managed to avoid any further fighting on Thursday after their training-ground brawls 24 hours earlier.

As revealed by Sportsmail, players from both sides traded punches in mass fights when the packs locked horns in live scrums at St Edward’s School in Oxford on Wednesday. 

Tempers were under control on the second day when the teams simulated match conditions in a 15 v 15 session and also staged line-out drills.

England and Georgia avoided any further fighting after Wednesday's on-field brawling

England and Georgia avoided any further fighting after Wednesday's on-field brawling

England and Georgia avoided any further fighting after Wednesday’s on-field brawling

George Kruis said the confrontation was beneficial but said there were 'just hugs' on Thursday

George Kruis said the confrontation was beneficial but said there were 'just hugs' on Thursday

George Kruis said the confrontation was beneficial but said there were ‘just hugs’ on Thursday

Georgia head coach Milton Haig told Sportsmail: ‘It was awesome — there was a lot more control than yesterday! Everyone had got it out of their system. 

‘We had a period where both teams were suited up in tackle suits. It got quite physical and it was bloody good. Eddie and all their coaches were stoked about how it went.’

England lock George Kruis believes Eddie Jones’s side will benefit from Wednesday’s confrontations.

‘We learn from these things. It puts us under pressure. It’s a contact sport,’ he told the BBC. ‘You are put in the heat of the moment and then come away from it with a clear head.

‘It has been great for us. It gives us a chance to go against an opposition we don’t play too much. Chuck some curve balls in and figure it out.’ Asked if any more punches were thrown on Thursday, Kruis quipped: ‘Just hugs!’

England forwards coach Steve Borthwick attempted to down-play the brawls as ‘pushing and shoving’ — which certainly wasn’t the extent of it. 

Kruis believes training with Georgia put England under pressure and will serve them well

Kruis believes training with Georgia put England under pressure and will serve them well

Kruis believes training with Georgia put England under pressure and will serve them well

He added: ‘The guys scrummed hard against each other. It was a good session and today was a good session as well.’ 

Meanwhile, Ben Youngs added another English voice to a global player outcry over a new World League concept, with latest reports suggesting an increase in Tests each year and no place for most tier-two nations.

The scrum-half said: ‘What do I want as a player? I want to be looked after, in terms of my welfare, and I don’t want to be caught between club and country, but also, you want the game to be as big as it can, in a global sense.’

There are claims that World Rugby’s plan would involve up to five Tests on consecutive weekends each autumn.

Youngs added: ‘A year or two ago, they were looking to bring the Six Nations down by one week and it wasn’t passed because of welfare. So it would seem strange if they allowed five (Tests in five weeks).’

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