Billy Vunipola banned from start of England’s Rugby World Cup campaign

Billy Vunipola has joined Owen Farrell in being banned for the start of the Rugby World Cup after receiving a three-game suspension for his red card against Ireland.

Vunipola was sent to the sin bin for a dangerous tackle on Andrew Porter in Saturday’s 29-10 defeat in Dublin, but the offence was upgraded to a red by the bunker review system.

An independent disciplinary hearing reduced the entry-level ban of six games to three because of mitigating factors and the Saracens No 8 could shave an additional match off the total if he attends tackle school.

It means he will miss Saturday’s final warm-up fixture against Fiji at Twickenham and the pivotal World Cup opener against Argentina on 9 September.

The decision comes the morning after Farrell was given a four-match ban for his dangerous tackle on Wales flanker Taine Basham and is another grave setback for Steve Borthwick.

England’s head coach must now plan for Argentina without his captain as well as the only specialist No 8 in the squad. Vunipola will be available for the clash with Japan in Nice on 17 September when he completes tackle school but Farrell will not be back until the final group games against Chile and Samoa.

At the video hearing held on Tuesday night, Vunipola admitted that his shoulder-led tackle that struck Porter on the head was a red-card offence, triggering an automatic six-game suspension. However, the hearing saw mitigation in his clean previous record, his immediate remorse and apology and the lack of aggravating factors, thereby resulting in a three-match reduction.

Tackle school - officially named, the coaching intervention programme - is allowed to be taken just once in each player’s career and is intended to modify the specific techniques and technical issues that lead to illegal hits.