Rugby World Cup
Chris Robshaw is still the man to lead England, says Harlequins boss Conor O'Shea
PA Sport
October 8, 2015
Opportunities up for grabs in England squad

Chris Robshaw can win the fight to continue as England captain, according to Harlequins boss Conor O'Shea.

Robshaw's club boss has backed the embattled flanker to knuckle down at Quins after his World Cup disaster -- then prove all over again why he should lead England.

Robshaw will captain England in Saturday's dead rubber against Uruguay in Manchester before Stuart Lancaster's side then exit their home World Cup at the pool stages.

Head coach Lancaster and skipper Robshaw will both then be battling for their futures, but Quins rugby director O'Shea backed his back-rower to hold on to the leadership role with England.

England looking to go out on a high
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"I would always want him to be my captain," ESPN columnist O'Shea told the Press Association, when asked if Robshaw should remain England captain.

"We took the captaincy off him at Quins to help him deal with the pressures and now it's clear what those pressures are.

"I wanted him as mentally fresh as he could be, I wanted him relaxed for what we knew would be the toughest period of his life.

"Did anybody pay any attention to the reasons why I made that decision? No. It's why it was done.

"What does Chris need to do now? I'm sure there will be loads of scrutiny, opinion, loads of 'change 15 players' blah, blah, blah.

"But he just needs to play well for Quins, he needs to be successful and then everything will look after itself.

"That's what got him to where he was and that's what will keep him where he is. His ambition will do the same for him all over again."

© David Rogers/Getty Images

England have become the worst-performing hosts in World Cup history by failing to reach the quarterfinals.

Slade out to prove point
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Lancaster's squad will disperse after the weekend's walkover against part-timers Uruguay, and will be available to start the Aviva Premiership season a week later.

O'Shea said Robshaw is unlikely to feature on the opening weekend however, as he comes to terms with England's unmitigated World Cup disaster. The Harlequins boss revealed he has told Robshaw to stop apologising for England's early exit. 

"We're incredibly proud of what those boys have achieved," said O'Shea. "They came up short -- but better to be that man than the man hurling abuse at the pitch.

"I talked to him yesterday, and I said 'you've apologised enough, get on with it, be proud of what you've done, and don't listen to people, because you're an incredible leader and an incredible rugby player'." 

© PA Sport

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