England
Jonny Wilkinson invited to join Eddie Jones' England coaching team
PA Sport
January 16, 2016
English fly-half Jonny Wilkinson nails a drop kick goal during the Rugby World Cup final
English fly-half Jonny Wilkinson nails a drop kick goal during the Rugby World Cup final© ODD ANDERSEN/AFP/Getty Images

Eddie Jones has invited Jonny Wilkinson to join his coaching team after meeting with England's World Cup winning fly-half at a supermarket.

The pair were adversaries in 2003 when Jones oversaw the Australia side defeated in the Sydney final, but last Saturday they exchanged views on how best to revive England's fortunes after years of under-achievement.

Wilkinson has been performing a part-time coaching role at Toulon and by the end of the conversation that took place near England's Surrey training base, he had been offered a position alongside Jones' assistants Steve Borthwick and Paul Gustard.

"We would like to get Jonny involved, but he's quite a private person. We are having chats about it," Jones said. "I saw him down at Waitrose shopping with a beanie over his head. I had coffee with him."

When asked what advice Wilkinson gave him, Jones said: "Get them kicking more".

Apart from Wilkinson's technical expertise, Jones believes the retired 36-year-old would also set an example through a work ethic that sees him continue to practise kicking for several hours a week.

"After we had coffee he went and did a kicking session and he doesn't play anymore. Why was he one of the best in the world? Because he did that. That's the difference," Jones said.

"No-one tells him to do that because he is retired, but he still wants to be a good kicker does Jonny Wilkinson. How many of these players do that now? That is the key going forward.

"Our job as coaches is to create that environment where players are encouraged to do that -- we can't tell them to do it.

"Anywhere in the world the good players tend to rise up and there should be a gap between the really good players and the average players.

"A good player has that little bit extra, and we are talking about two or three per cent extra. He does that little bit of extra analysis, stretches, goes for a swim and takes a bag of balls to kick.

"I want that attitude and I want to see how desperate they are to become a better player."

Jones, who replaced Stuart Lancaster after England were knocked out of their own World Cup at the group stage, is unlikely to appoint a skills coach for fear of over-burdening players with too much information.

"I need to assess whether we need one. One of the things I heard about the World Cup, and I got it from a number of sources, is that there wasn't great clarity in the way the players were coached," Jones said.

"There were a fair few coaches so there were a lot of different messages. That's something I'm conscious about at the moment."

© PA Sport

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