Opoku-Fordjour leads Englandâs new prop star generation
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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.
Exit, pursued by Asher.
Joe Marlerâs haka-baiting England departure was not short of drama. But the prop had long since slipped coach Steve Borthwick a stage direction to fill the vacancy he left behind.
In December 2023, Marler was interviewed on the touchlines of Harlequinsâ win against Sale.
âThere is a young tight-head that has come off the bench for Sale,â Marler told TNT Sport.
âAnd heâs â mmm⊠[tasty]
âI have got a big thing about young, up-and-coming front-rowers â [like] Fin Baxter for us. But this guy, number 18, I like the look of.â
Asher Opoku-Fordjour, the number 18 in question, was a 19-year-old making only his second Premiership appearance. At 18st and 6ft 1in, he is not big by modern proportions. The numbers alone did not demand attention.
But Marlerâs hunch was on the money. Opoku-Fordjour, now 20, was one to watch.
Less than a year on he has replaced Marler in Englandâs senior squad and is the figurehead for a new generation of England front-rowers.
Like Marler, Andy Titterrell was instantly impressed by Opoku-Fordjour.
âIn his first or second scrumming session, I canât remember who he was scrumming against but he gave him a few air miles in a training session,â former England and Lions hooker Titterrell tells BBC Sport of Opoku-Fordjourâs arrival into the England Under-20s set-up.
Titterrell, who oversees forwards for the age-grade side, turned to coach Alan Dickens.
âI said âwe have to have this kid involved at the weekendâ.â
Opoku-Fordjourâs power shows up in the wide, open spaces, as well as at set-piece close quarters.
He played his boyhood rugby as a wing and still has a startling turn of pace. For both England Under-20s and Saleâs senior side, his stampeding line breaks have become a familiar sight.
Sale boss Alex Sanderson summed it up earlier this year.
âHeâs a tight-head prop with fast twitch. You just donât get them,â he said, going on to compare their scarcity to âteddy bearâ, ahem, âmanureâ.
âAsh has raw athleticism, power and explosiveness,â agrees Titterrell. âYou have seen glimpses of that in his ball-carrying ability â particularly against Ireland Under-20s in the 2023 World Cup. He has that pace and power.â
Titterrell is not the only 2000s front-row face to be shaping Opoku-Fordjour.
Dorian West, part of the England 2003 Rugby World Cup squad that Titterrell missed out on, is Saleâs forward coach.
âYou think of tight-head props through the years, you think of Julian White, Darren Garforth and Phil Vickery, those sort of lads,â he tells BBC Sport. âThey are big men â they were massive.
âAsher is not quite the same as them at the minute. He is more of a toned athlete, but immensely strong and powerful.
âIt is looking really good for him with the shape and size he is now. He is a good professional and if he carries on developing and growing in the right way over the next few years, he is going to be some athlete.
âHe is nowhere near finished.â
Maybe because Opoku-Fordjour does not fit the old tight-head mould, he has also appeared on the opposite side of the scrum.
While he plays tight-head for Sale, he switched to loose-head for England Under-20s, where Gloucesterâs Afolabi Fasogbon and Bathâs Vilikesa Sela give England mammoth depth at three.
The trio were hugely impressive in the teamâs age-grade World Cup win in the summer, with set-piece dominance splintering France in the final.
They are not the only reasons to be cheerful.
Harlequinsâ 22-year-old Baxter made his Test debut in the summer. Team-mate Nathan Jibulu, 21, is poised to pressure central contract-holder Theo Dan, 23, at hooker.
Northamptonâs Tarek Haffar and Emmanuel Iyogun, both 23, are two more promising prop prospects.
In all, England hope they have a golden generation lined up behind Marler and Dan Cole, who are nearing the end of their careers, and Ellis Genge and Will Stuart, 29 and 28 respectively.
West believes that, once the transition is finished, Opoku-Fordjour would prefer to end up back at tight-head.
But in modern Test rugby, versatility can be the key that unlocks the next level and a place in a squad.
West and Titterrellâs day was different. Replacements were rarer. Specialists stayed put. And the set-piece was more chaotic.
Footage from their playing days provides amusement, rather than education, to their young charges.
âThe lads laugh now when they see the footage of the games we played in,â says West.
âBack then the referee did not have much involvement in the engagement at scrums â you got together and got on with it.
âThere was more impact, a lot more scrums ending up on the floor and there was a certain amount of brutality involved in that.
âEven so, the players now are so much bigger and probably stronger than we were in the past. It is totally different things they do nowadays.â
Differing styles, but identical destinations. Opoku-Fordjour and the rest are arriving fast on the international scene and, as in the scrum, will take some shifting once they are in place.
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