Kerevi defends Jones after Care âtoxicâ comments
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Published
Autumn Nations Series: England v Australia
Venue: Allianz Stadium, Twickenham Date: Saturday, 9 November Kick-off: 15:10 GMT
Coverage: Listen to live commentary on BBC Radio 5 Sports Extra and BBC Sounds, follow live text commentary on the BBC Sport website and app.
Australia centre Samu Kerevi says that the controversy over former England coach Eddie Jonesâ management style may be down to cultural differences between sets of players.
Jones, who coached England to three Six Nations titles and a Rugby World Cup final between 2016 and 2022, was criticised by former England scrum-half Danny Care over the weekend.
In book excerpts serialised by the Times,, external Care described Jones overseeing a âtoxic environmentâ, in which the Australian would belittle and berate players and staff.
âI wouldnât say terrifying,â said 31-year-old Kerevi of working under Jones.
âItâs how you take it. I grew up in a different culture to what it is now in rugby.
âIâve got a good relationship with Eddie. I think he puts pressure, not just on the players, but the staff.
âI think thatâs what Danny Careâs talking about, but again, itâs how you receive it. Whether you thrive under it.â
Kerevi was part of an Australia side which failed to make it out of the pool stages of the 2023 Rugby World Cup during Jonesâ second stint in charge of his native country. He was also coached by 64-year-old Jones at Japanese club Tokyo Sungoliath.
Jones continued his consultancy work with the side throughout his time with England.
Care himself says that Jonesâ methods worked, in the short-term at least.
âI stand by the fact â and I say it in the book â that Eddie is still the best coach that I have ever worked with,â he told Rugby Union Weekly.
âHe gave me some of the greatest memories of my rugby career â that came at a price.
âMaybe it had to be that way to get the success that we had. Maybe you have to go through some really tough times, and be that driven, and there be that much pressure, to get that.
âBut I donât think that can last forever, there is a timeline in that and it came to a period where it was too much for us as players and you saw a bit of a downward spiral.â
Jones won his first 17 games in charge of England, but was sacked in December 2022 after only five victories from 12 matches in his final year in charge.
He ended with a 73% win percentage, better than Rugby World Cup-winning coach Sir Clive Woodward.
âPlayers just arenât pushed hard enough to become their best,â Jones added at the time. âNot because of where they come from, but because of the environment theyâre in.
âIn England, there is the comfortability of the clubs; they can survive at the clubs just being a player and theyâre not pushed to go to the next level.â
Care also claimed that Saracens playmaker Alex Goode, who won only four caps under Jones, was exiled from the England set-up after a disagreement with the coach.
âWe saw Alex Goode, European player of the year, come in and have a slight disagreement between him, the physios and Eddie, a slight miscommunication and he was never seen again,â added Care.
âIt was crazy. And the players see that.
âEddie was so unbelievably powerful, he could define your career â you could get one cap, say the wrong thing and never be seen again.â
Jones is now head coach of Japan, who play England on 24 November.