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HE WON'T SINCK

England boss Eddie Jones begs for mercy for Kyle Sinckler after the prop’s explosion in Cardiff in defeat to Wales

Goaded in the week as England's 'emotional time-bomb' by the Wales boss Warren Gatland, Sinckler then self-destructed in Cardiff's cauldron

KYLE SINCKLER went from the good... to the bad... to the ugly... just as Warren Gatland predicted.

Goaded in the week as England's "emotional time bomb" by the Wales boss, Sinckler self-destructed in Cardiff's cauldron.

 Kyle Sinckler was wound-up by Wales skipper Alun Wyn Jones
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Kyle Sinckler was wound-up by Wales skipper Alun Wyn Jones
 Sinckler lost his cool in the Cardiff cauldron
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Sinckler lost his cool in the Cardiff cauldron

As the heat got too much for him the 25-year-old tyro was hooked by Eddie Jones and booed off the pitch like a pantomime villain by 70,000 delirious Dragons fans.

Now Jones has begged for mercy for his fiery front-rower who he refuses to be seen as a scapegoat two minutes of terror as he rushes to finally protect him.

Jones said: "I think trying to single him out and try to make a villain of him will do him a disservice.

"He’s a very good young player, a young prop, he’s got under 20 caps and playing in one of the most difficult positions on the field, and he’ll come through as a great Test player for England.

 Angry Sinckler had to be calmed down when he was hooked off
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Angry Sinckler had to be calmed down when he was hooked off

"I think every player you’ve got to look after, but I would ask you not to go after him.

"I think it’s part of English sport. It’s a bust or boom mentality. You’re either bust or boom. I can’t control that.

"It’s just how it is and we’ve got to be good enough to see the truth and the reality of it, and get on with our job of keeping improving."

Give the boy a chance. He’s a good young player and he’s doing his best, and like everyone we all make mistakes, but he’ll be alright.

Eddie Jones

Let's rewind the clock before Sinckler's 120 seconds of madness and look at the good.

Up until the 48th minute when Sinckler and Alun Wyn Jones grabbed each other by the shirt - after Manu Tuilagi throttled Liam Williams by the throat - the noisy neighbours were getting on so well.

Sinckler had earlier won his side a scrum penalty and was an absolute menace in the tackle area having smashed through 21 hits.

Jamie George and Tom Curry who played the full 80, only managed six more than him.

 Sinckler had been playing a blinder before he lost it
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Sinckler had been playing a blinder before he lost it

No one in Wales came close to any of them - such was the pressure the Red Rose were under.

Then came the bad - a snide and cynical late hit on Gareth Anscombe in the 54th minute handed Wales a penalty, which they happily booted down the pitch to gain easy territory.

Then the ugly - another penalty, this time for grabbing AWJ around the neck in a maul and Anscombe kicks for goal and sends Sinckler packing - as Jones hauls him off for Harry Williams.

England will dress it up as team discipline, but Sinckler's errors had them sliding backwards, and fast.

 Sinckler had started the game with an absolute bang
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Sinckler had started the game with an absolute bang

At 9-10 that was the turning point and England were without a player who when at his best, gives them so much energy and power that feeds through this pack and back division.

His personal implosion was symbolic of England's collective surrendering as Cory Hill finally battered down the try line after 35 phases and Josh Adams won it after Tom Curry's opener and Owen Farrell's points from the boot.

As Jones demands leniency for his live-wire prop, lets just a remember a few things.

 Eddie Jones got taught a lesson by Warren Gatland at last
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Eddie Jones got taught a lesson by Warren Gatland at last

Jones had his pants completely pulled down by Gatland on the pitch, and off it, as he was handed a masterclass in the dark arts by his biggest rival.

That shocked and stunned the Aussie boss, who isn't used to not getting it all his own way and having the last laugh.

Just last year Jones tried to rattle the Dragons with the same tactic, and it worked, as he called out rookie no.10 Rhys Patchell and spoke about reporting skipper AWJ to World Rugby for intimidating refs.

 Gatland and Jones were all smiles at the end, though
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Gatland and Jones were all smiles at the end, though

Taking a swipe at their playmaker, Jones said: "He’s a young guy, he’s inexperienced and is their third-choice 10.

"He’ll be under some heat. I would imagine that when Alun Wyn Jones and the guys go down for breakfast, they’ll be looking at him thinking: 'Can this kid handle the pressure?' I hope he has the bottle.”

Yet Jones sees Gatland's taunts as disrespectful.

"I didn't know Warren had a degree in clinical psychology, so let me know I might go and see him as well," he said.

 Warren Gatland also said pundits talking England up made it easier for them as they made it three Six Nations win out of three
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Warren Gatland also said pundits talking England up made it easier for them as they made it three Six Nations win out of threeCredit: Getty Images - Getty

Gatland played Jones at his own game and beat him.  But Jones still hopes to have the last laugh.

With Italy and Scotland both at home, they have a dream run-in with the Championship still up for grabs and Ireland, who go to Wales, still in it.

With the Grand Slam gone, Jones added: "To me, the Championship is about the Championship.

"Grand Slams are like - you go to buy a car and you get tinted windows. It’s an added extra.

"We can’t get the added extras now, but we can still get the Championship."

Tom Curry's face covered in blood after collision with France player Damian Penaud in England's 44-8 victory at Twickenham
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