Eddie Jones oversees coaching clinic at Twickenham ahead of Varsity clash between Oxford and Cambridge

  • Eddie Jones hosts skills clinic with four schools at Twickenham 
  • Jones has guided England to 13 consecutive Test victories since taking over 
  • England have equalled Sir Clive Woodward's 2003 outfit with 14 straight wins 

Having guided England to 13 Test victories under his watch, Red Rose head coach Eddie Jones was at Twickenham on Thursday coaching the next generation of talent.

Prior to the Varsity clash between Oxford and Cambridge at England HQ, Jones oversaw a skills session with four lucky schools who won a nationwide competition to train with the decorated coach. 

Students from Baxter College, Passmores Academy, Sawston Village College and Sunbury Manor got to train with the England coach before watching Cambridge triumph for the first time in seven years at Twickenham.

Eddie Jones was back at Twickenham on Thursday to oversee a coaching clinic 

Four lucky schools won a nationwide competition to train with the Red Rose head coach 

Jones, who has guided England to 13 consecutive Test victories, goes through a passing drill 

Jones has blazed a trail with England since he took over as head coach following last year's ill-fated World Cup campaign, which cost Stuart Lancaster and his coaching ticket their jobs. 

The 56-year-old oversaw England's first Six Nations Grand Slam since 2003 before guiding his squad to a 3-0 whitewash of Australia in last summer's three-Test series down under. 

Captain Dylan Hartley and Co have had a memorable year, winning 13 straight games 

The good times have continued under Jones with England completing an unbeaten autumn series, which included victories over Fiji, South Africa, Argentina and Australia. 

Despite matching a 13-year record of 14 consecutive wins, Jones insists that his young and talented squad can improve further ahead of next year's eagerly-anticipated Six Nations championship. 

'We can't get too ahead of ourselves,' said Jones earlier this month. 

Saracens fly-half Owen Farrell has played an integral role in England's resurgence in 2016 

'We're only the No 2 team in the world and we want to be No 1. We've got a long way to go before we achieve that.

'And we're hell-bent on achieving that. We've got the talent here. It's just whether we get the desire and cohesion right. That's what we're aiming to do.'  

Flanker Chris Robshaw makes a burst through the Wallabies defence during last month's tie 

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