English coach Eddie Jones does not fear the sack despite admitting he would expect his job to be on the line if his below-strength team have a disastrous campaign in next month's internationals.
The Australian said that the four tests were essentially "sparring, practice rounds" ahead of the real business of winning the Rugby World Cup in Japan in a year's time.
"We don't need to win any of them," said Jones. "If we don't win any, I'm probably not going to be here, so we [do] need to win a few. If they [the Rugby Football Union] come and tap me on the shoulder tomorrow and told me I wasn't in the job, then so be it."
Jones has lost 320 caps from his frontline group, forcing him to select eight uncapped players in the 36-man squad that heads into camp in Portugal next Thursday to prepare for the opening fixture against South Africa at Twickenham on November3. Yet Jones insists that he is under no more pressure than normal, even though England have won only one of their last six tests, declaring that defeat against South Africa, New Zealand, Japan and Australia would not be a terminal jolt to World Cup hopes.
"My job is to maximise what I have. What I've learned about World Cups is that the only time you need to be at your best is at the World Cup. All the leading up to it is sparring, practice rounds, getting combinations right.