Oakboy wrote:Banquo wrote:Oakboy wrote:
I wasn't criticising that, merely pointing out that
most of his success has been gifted on a plate, especially in comparison with his predecessors. It took no special managerial gift to select most of the players so his innovations in selection/development are few and far between. Of course, he did commit a fair few playing minutes to Shields . . . .

Have you forgotten what Lancaster left behind?
No. Why do you ask?
Of Jones's final XV, how many had not been capped by Lancaster: Sinckler, Underhill, Curry? Is that some sort of case FOR Jones or against?
He left behind an unfit squad in disarray. Nothing was 'gifted on a plate'.
Selection is only pne part of it, but Daly, Itoje, Sinckler, Underhill and Curry; one third of the starting XV plus Wilson, Slade, and Spencer from the bench. In addition, some peripheral players under Burt have become regulars- George, Kruis, LCD for example.
From Lancaster's final key match, V Oz, only 9 of that squad were in the final in 2019. That's a lot of churn (its only 7 from the previous game v Wales).
I've been a vocal critic of Jones, but your representation of him does not stack up tbh. Snippets from his book do confirm what many of us have thought- that he isn't confident about (amongst other things) our players ability to think and act independently, and that players are constrained a little by fear; sadly, whilst he got us fitter, and trying to play faster or at least the ability to vary the tempo...he wasn't able to fix the inability to flex and execute new tactics on the hoof, not to freeze in the headlights a bit, both of which we saw in the final. Criticise him for this, but its a big cultural issue with our rugby, risk aversion.