George Ford moves to fly half for Leeds Carnegie

Leeds Carnegie Head Coach Diccon Edwards has selected England U20 star George Ford at fly half for this second game for the club after arriving on loan from Leicester Tigers.

Ford takes the place of his older brother Joe, who is amongst the replacements, with Jordan Davies, who is on loan from Sale Sharks, starting at inside centre.

They are the only two changes to the starting line up for Leeds as they travel to Moseley this Saturday following their last gasp win over London Scottish last weekend.

There are two more changes on the bench with Gareth Denman coming in for Sam Lockwood and Alex Rieder replacing the injured Dominic Barrow.

The team in full is:

15. Tommy Bell
14. Michael Stephenson
13. Iain Thornley
12. Jordan Davies
11. Pete Lucock
10. George Ford
9. Will Cliff
1. Mike MacDonald
2. Phil Nilsen
3. Kane Palma-Newport
4. Tom Denton
5. Sean Hohneck
6. Ryan Burrows
7. Chris Walker
8. Jacob Rowan (c)
16. Scott Freer
17. Gareth Denman
18. Mo Mustafa
19. Richard Beck
20. Alex Rieder
21. Robbie Shaw
22. Joe Ford

RFU Podcast: Stuart Lancaster, Ben Morgan, George Ford

Interim head coach Stuart LancasterIn an exclusive interview with the England Interim Head Coach we hear Lancaster’s thoughts on suspending Danny Care from the RBS 6 Nations squad, building a winning mentality and the excitement of the countdown to Scotland v England on February 4.

Scarlets’ No.8 Morgan is one of the players pushing for a place in the squad after confirming his availability for England.

The Bristol-born forward talks to us about his decision and hopes for the future.

We also catch up with Ford, the IRB Young Player of the Year for 2011, after the England U20 star’s loan move to Leeds Carnegie from Leicester Tigers.

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George Ford named IRB Young Player of the Year

imageEngland U20 and Leicester Tigers fly half George Ford has been named IRB Young Player of the Year for 2011, beating New Zealand duo Sam Cane and Luke Whitelock to the coveted prize.

Voted for by team head coaches and match officials, as well as international and local media, Ford is the first Englishman to claim the award, although London Wasps and England scrum half Joe Simpson and Sale Sharks forward Carl Fearns were both nominated in 2008 and 2009 respectively.

At just 18-years-old, Ford was the youngest player at the Junior World Championship in Italy in June and the young Tiger breaks a spell of five years without a northern hemisphere winner – Frenchman Lionel Beauxis was the last in 2006, while Welsh back Gavin Henson remains the only other Briton to have won the prize, back in 2001.

Ford said: “It’s a massive honour especially when you consider the calibre of player who have won it in the past as well as the others (Cane and Whitelock) nominated. I couldn’t believe it when I found out to be honest, but I’ve got to be quick to point out that rugby is not an individual sport. All of the lads were awesome throughout the whole campaign and I’d like to think that I’m picking the award up on behalf of them.”

In a season that resulted in nine wins and just the one reverse, Ford scored 76 points in England’s RBS 6 Nations Grand Slam triumph and another 54 in the IRB Junior World Championship, but he says that completing the Slam in Ireland’s back yard is the memory he’ll treasure most.

“Winning the Grand Slam in Ireland was a massive highlight,” he said. “To remain unbeaten against the calibre of sides we played against took some doing, but we performed well each time we took to the field. Getting to the final of the Junior World Championship was also a great achievement, and it’s just a shame that we fell just short against a strong New Zealand side.”

Previous winners of the award include the likes of Luke McAlister, Isaia Toeava, Jerome Kaino and Tatafu Polota-Nau, so while Ford is in good company, the Oldham born No. 10 insists that he’s just concentrating on his own blossoming career for now.

He added: “I really am just taking it each game as it comes, my focus is on Leicester at the moment and will switch to England during the U20 6 Nations, but there are a fair few established names that have won the award in the past and it’s a massive honour to be part of them now.”

England U20 Head Coach Rob Hunter said: "This is a massive achievement for George and fantastic recognition for him, his family and his club. He was the youngest player in our squad last season, and his success reflects well on the rest of the U20 players and the effort they all put in last season.”
“George’s influence on the pitch and off it was enormous; he works extremely hard to maintain his high levels of performance and is a pleasure to work with as a coach. He’s a key player and we’re looking forward to having him back in the U20s for the 6 Nations and the Junior World Championship”
“This award for George is also a great advert for player development in England. He has come up through the age grades and is playing Aviva Premiership rugby with Leicester Tigers, a great testament to George, and the development work going on in the Clubs”

England U18 name side to face France

John Fletcher: U18 coach

England Under 18 return to action on Sunday against the only side to have dented their impressive 14-match winning run. England, coached by John Fletcher and Peter Walton, haven’t been beaten in an international at this level since an 11-3 defeat against Australia in Brisbane in 2007.

But France – visitors to Newbury this weekend – edged past them in a training game last season and will threaten all over the field, according to former Newcastle Falcons boss Fletcher.

Fly half George Ford (Rishworth & Leicester Tigers) leads the side at Monks Lane and Fletcher makes seven changes to the team that beat Australian Schools 30-28 at Sale in December.

Injured Dulwich College and Harlequins lock Sam Twomey (knee) and Harrow and London Wasps flanker Billy Vunipola are replaced by George Merrick (Whitgift & Harlequins) and Will Skuse (Bryanston & Bath Rugby) respectively, while props Luke Cowan-Dickie (Truro Coll & Exeter Chiefs) and Anthony Brennan (Twyford CofE & London Wasps) make their first starts.

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Fly half Ford, 16, shortlisted for BBC award

George Ford

George Ford

England Under 18 star George Ford has been shortlisted for the BBC Young Sports Personality of the Year Award.

The fly half became the youngest player ever to take part in a professional club match when he appeared for Leicester Tigers at the age of 16 years and 237 days in an LV= Cup game at Leeds Carnegie this month.

He first appeared for England’s Under 18 side at the age of 15 and is expected to join up with the national squad again next month before they face Australian Schools on December 13.

The BBC’s shortlist of 10 includes athletes of the calibre of World Championship winning diver Tom Daley, Junior US Open tennis champion Heather Watson, solo round the world yachtsman Mike Perham and Paralympics swimming champion Eleanor Simmons.

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