English Rugby
Lancaster defends Botha selection
ESPNscrum Staff
June 1, 2011
England Saxons lock Mouritz Botha is confronted by Jordan Crane, England Saxons training session, Franklin's Gardens, Northampton, England, June 1, 2011
Mouritz Botha comes face-to-face with Jordan Crane during Saxons training © Getty Images
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Stuart Lancaster, the England Saxons coach and Rugby Football Union (RFU) head of elite player development, has denied that the national side's identity has been compromised by the selection of overseas players.

Lancaster has called up Saracens lock Mouritz Botha for the Saxons' Churchill Cup campaign, with the South African the latest in a line of players to qualify for English representative sides on residency grounds.

The 29-year-old played for Bedford Athletic and Championship club Bedford Blues before landing a move to Saracens in 2009.

England's Six Nations-winning squad featured New Zealand-born trio Riki Flutey, Shontayne Hape and Dylan Hartley plus Hendre Fourie, whose first language is Afrikaans.

Matt Stevens, born in South Africa and capped 32 times by England, has also been included in the Saxons squad as he makes his way back to international rugby following a drugs ban.

"England want to put the best side out and I don't think there are any concerns we are losing our Englishness," Lancaster said. "I don't think it is an active recruitment policy. If the likes of Hendre Fourie and Mouritz Botha come through the development programmes in England and put their hands up then ultimately they can be considered for selection.

"Mouritz has come in on form. He played very well for Saracens. "When you look at his track record as a player, he has gone from Bedford Athletic seven or eight years ago and come through ultimately to play for Saracens.

"He has been in this country for a long time and played an awful lot of development rugby in England, a bit like Hendre Fourie did. There is no problem in that from my regard."

Leicester No.8 Thomas Waldrom, who hails from Lower Hutt in Wellington, and the Tigers' Samoan-born centre Manu Tuilagi are both in consideration for places in Martin Johnson's World Cup squad.

Lancaster's current role - and future role if he is appointed as RFU performance director - is to oversee the production of English talent towards the 2015 and 2019 World Cups.

"There are a lot of English players who are getting through and getting their opportunities," he said. "With the likes of Graham Kitchener and Dave Attwood alongside [Botha], we have three good second-rows there. We have Jamie Gibson and James Gaskell in the back-row as well. We are going to ask some young players like Rory Clegg, Billy Twelvetrees and Henry Trinder to step up into leadership roles and we believe they are ready to do that."

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