Eddie Jones claimed England were so dominant in their 24-12 victory over Ireland that they could have declared at half-time.

England surged up to second in the Guinness Six Nations table after George Ford, Elliot Daly and Luke Cowan-Dickie ran in tries in a one-sided demolition at Twickenham that saw the hosts lead 17-0 at half-time.

It was a performance that had shades of the World Cup knockout wins against Australia and New Zealand last autumn and Jones warned Wales and Italy that his team have additional gears for the final two rounds.

“We played with a lot of control. We read the conditions well, read the referee well and at half-time if it was a cricket game, we could have declared,” Jones said.

“We’ve been building up. I got the preparation wrong for the France game and apologised for that.

“We were good against Scotland – really good against Scotland in difficult conditions – and we took another step up here. We will take another step up when we play Wales on Saturday week.

“There’s a lot more to come. We played tough in the first 40 minutes, probably took our foot off a little bit in the second half but Ireland were always going to get some ball.

“They were always going to get some refereeing calls and we had to defend pretty well, which we did.

“We were disappointed to give that try away at the end but we will need to be better against Wales.”

Jones was criticised for a number of team selections, including giving Jonathan Joseph his first start on the wing, picking Elliot Daly at full-back and naming five locks in the 23.

Former England head coach Sir Clive Woodward was the most vocal critic and Jones said: “I don’t need vindication.

“I pick the team that I think is right for the week but the media are so clever. You’re all clever so I’ve just got to suck it all up, enjoy what you say, try to learn from you, and maybe I can pick a better team next week.”

Andy Farrell plans to undergo a period of self-analysis following his first defeat as Ireland head coach.

The visitors paid a heavy price for their sloppy start and costly errors as the chance for a second Triple Crown in three years quickly slipped away.

“I wouldn’t say we were off the pace – I think they started pretty well. No excuses though because they’ve started pretty well against us before and we should have been ready for that,” said Farrell.

“We were coming here to try and win a Triple Crown and they were trying to fight to stay in the championship.

“We can assess all the bits, all the technicalities and the ramifications of accumulative errors etc, or refereeing decisions or whatever, but the reality is that they came out of the blocks hard, got on the front foot and we took a few sucker-punches.

“I need to look at myself. Were they up for it more than us? Us, going for a Triple Crown? That’s my responsibility to make sure that that shouldn’t happen, so I’ve got to look at myself first and foremost.”