Winger Elliot Daly says England's plans to attack Ireland in the Six Nations are the “clearest” they have been in years.
England's attacking side have struggled in their opening three games, but Daly said he wants to entertain against Ireland and create a buzz around Twickenham.
Steve Borthwick's side returned to their home base in London to welcome the defending champions after their winning start was halted by defeat against Scotland.
“We're very clear on how we want to attack,” Daly, 31, told BBC Sport.
“I think it’s become clearer than it has been in years.
“We're going into the last two games against Ireland and France to get exactly what we want, which is to get the ball in our hands, score tries and put teams behind.”
England have scored two tries in each game so far, with only underperforming France and bottom-of-the-table Italy having scored fewer tries in this competition.
Despite wins over the Azzurri in Rome and Wales at Twickenham, but a defeat at Murrayfield, the Daily reported that the hosts had more possession and produced a “proper England performance” against Ireland on 9 March. He said he is thinking of creating one.
“We conceded 21 turnovers against Scotland, which you don't often win in international rugby,” Daly added. “That’s something we’ll look at this week and the coming weeks and hopefully we can do that against Ireland.
“The excitement at Twickenham in the last game against Wales was fantastic so I think we’re looking forward to that.
“It was louder than we’ve seen in the last three or four years, so hopefully we can do that too and they can get behind us again.”
“I'm looking forward to putting on a show for our home fans with a typical England performance of never giving up and giving everything on the pitch.
“As soon as you do that, the crowd will be behind you.”
Ireland are aiming for a second successive Grand Slam title after opening-round wins over France, Italy and Wales, but the Daily says England's new blitz defense could help tip the balance in their favour. Says.
“Our defense is great and we put pressure on the team,” added the Saracens winger.
“I think that was the biggest mistake Scotland have ever made in a game, so it's definitely going well. Everyone agrees with that and we're working at full throttle.”
“We need to coordinate better, but I thought we defended pretty well in our phase plays. We made one mistake in the scrum, but other than that I thought we actually defended pretty well throughout the game.”
“We really want to stay connected to each other to stay out of line.
“Ireland are a quality team, when you get to international level everything is close and you have to ride that to get results.
“Whether it's the kicking game, the offense or the defense. They're very good at the breakdown as well, so we're going to have to be good there.”