England's search for a back-three solution has led to an 11-15-14 combination of Immanuel Feyi-Waboso, Henry Arundell and Cadan Murley being touted as explosively quick. Meanwhile, a trio of Tommy Freeman, Freddie Steward and Tom Roebuck would be hard to better in the air, while Marcus Smith and Elliot Daly offer playmaking smarts in the backfield.
Former England wing Ugo Monye believes that Borthwick will have to pick between Feyi-Waboso and Arundell on the wings, with either side of Steward at full-back. "If Elliot Daly was fit and up to speed, I would pick him at 15," he told Rugby Union Weekly.
However, Matt Dawson doesn't believe Marcus Smith should be in the back-three conversation, preferring his creative talents as a game-changing fly-half replacement rather than at full-back. "I don't think Marcus is a full-back at the highest level," he wrote in his BBC Sport column. "I struggle to see the benefit of playing him there."
Former scrum-half Danny Care notes that the back-to-back grind of the autumn internationals is testing England's strength in depth in the backfield, and that they may have to opt for three backs on the eight-man bench rather than the two they have carried in wins over Australia and Fiji.
Ultimately, the search for a winning formula against New Zealand will require some creative problem-solving from Borthwick.
Former England wing Ugo Monye believes that Borthwick will have to pick between Feyi-Waboso and Arundell on the wings, with either side of Steward at full-back. "If Elliot Daly was fit and up to speed, I would pick him at 15," he told Rugby Union Weekly.
However, Matt Dawson doesn't believe Marcus Smith should be in the back-three conversation, preferring his creative talents as a game-changing fly-half replacement rather than at full-back. "I don't think Marcus is a full-back at the highest level," he wrote in his BBC Sport column. "I struggle to see the benefit of playing him there."
Former scrum-half Danny Care notes that the back-to-back grind of the autumn internationals is testing England's strength in depth in the backfield, and that they may have to opt for three backs on the eight-man bench rather than the two they have carried in wins over Australia and Fiji.
Ultimately, the search for a winning formula against New Zealand will require some creative problem-solving from Borthwick.