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OWEN FARRELL will be available for the start of England’s Six Nations against Scotland on February 4 after receiving a four-match ban for a dangerous tackle.
Farrell faced a disciplinary hearing on Tuesday night after his shoulder made contact with the head of Jack Clement in the 75th minute of Saracens’ Premiership victory over Gloucester on Friday.
Although the four-match suspension would prevent him from running out at Twickenham in Steve Borthwick’s first match in charge, it will be reduced to three games if he completes World Rugby’s coaching intervention programme.
By doing so, the England captain will be able to resume playing after Saracens’ Premiership clash with Bristol on January 28.
However, if Farrell is picked in Borthwick’s squad for the Six Nations when it is announced on Monday, the panel will be forced to revise what constitutes the “meaningful” fixtures that make up the ban.
Saracens’ outings against Lyon, Edinburgh, Bristol and Leicester have been identified as the relevant games, with the Scotland clash omitted on the basis that England’s squad for the competition has yet to be picked.
Under normal circumstances, any player included in the Six Nations squad does not feature for their club the weekend before, so if Farrell is chosen by Borthwick on Monday the Bristol match theoretically no longer becomes relevant to the ban.
Farrell accepted the charge that his tackle on Clement was dangerous but argued that it was not a red card offence.
The disciplinary panel disagreed, however, and decided there was no mitigation as Farrell had clear line of sight and time to adjust his height as he attempted to make a dominant tackle.
The challenge was deemed reckless rather than intentional and mid-range in severity, resulting in a six-match ban. This was reduced by two weeks due to the apology made to Clement, a strong reference from Saracens boss Mark McCall and his conduct.
The fact he served a five-week ban for the same offence in 2020 meant he was unable to receive the full mitigation because of a 50 per cent reduction in the length of his ban.
Farrell is competing with Marcus Smith and George Ford for fly-half duties and is also England’s current captain, although Borthwick may appoint a new skipper.
