Courtney Lawes: England will be back to their confrontational best under Dylan Hartley

Glory days around the corner: Lawes and Hartley with the 2014 Calcutta Cup
David Rogers/Getty Images
Nick Purewal26 January 2016

England cannot wait to return to their "confrontational" best under new captain Dylan Hartley, according to Courtney Lawes.

Hartley's Northampton team-mate Lawes defended the hooker's appointment as England skipper, insisting the 29-year-old will "do the team proud" despite his chequered disciplinary past.

Hartley has racked up 54 weeks of career bans, missing the autumn's World Cup and the 2013 British and Irish Lions tour thanks to his many misdemeanours.

Lawes however praised new coach Eddie Jones' bold decision as a clear sign of England's uncompromising approach for the RBS 6 Nations.

"Making Dylan captain is definitely a statement of intent," said Lawes.

"It's a decision that shows we're going to be confrontational, and that's the way we want it.

"We're going back to our roots, our fundamentals of the game, for a big scrum and maul, and tough defence.

"We want to make sure that when teams play England they really know they're in a game."

Hartley's litany of transgressions took their greatest toll when his ban for headbutting Saracens' Jamie George led to his removal from England's World Cup squad.

The New Zealand-born front-rower has since admitted he feared he would never play Test rugby again - but new coach Jones is determined that England dispense with the niceties in a fresh start.

While Hartley's captaincy has been criticised in some quarters, Lawes insists he fully merits the Test armband - in fact believing his mistakes from the past can help improve his leadership.

"There's lots of different characters in the game who have made mistakes, not just once, not even just twice, who have made several mistakes," said Lawes.

"But as long as you can move on, get past it, grow as a player and a person, and a leader, as Dylan has done, then you're going to get rewarded at the end of the day, and that's what's happened here.

"It will be great for him going forward.

"I think anyone who was appointment as captain could have been viewed as controversial in some quarters really.

"I know Dylan will do the team proud and we'll all get behind him.

"Dylan's a fun guy, he looks after the boys, which is very important as a skipper.

"You've got to make sure all the guys around you are happy and on the same page, and that's certainly what he brings.

"He's got a world of experience, he knows when to ramp it up, tell the boys to get their acts together, or when to tell the boys to relax.

"It's no coincidence that we won the Premiership title at Northampton under Dylan's captaincy."

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