2 November 14, 2021The Sunday Times 2GS
Rugby Union
As ever, you looked for that
England explosion, the burial of the
inferior team. You looked lor the lead-
ers to inspire. But it did not come. The
second half because a morass, a con-
certo for whistle for the referee, loyal
booming support and action which
retreated well away from true class or
even continuity.
There was a warming play when
32 15
ENGLAND AUSTRALIA
There is no such thing as a bad
victory over a southern hemisphere
giant but this Australia, in the absence
of some of their marquee players,
were abysmal.
For a team and a country who are
meant to show us the great attacking
details of life in the great outdoors,
they were barely watchable.
England had far more skill and far
more ambition and had they man-
aged to take some chances they would
have put Australia away by a street or
even a small village.
But maddeningly, England kept
wasting chances, kept lacking the
extra conviction. This meant that
Australia were always only just
behind them, and England lacked the
ambition and possibly the courage to
go flat out to give their opponents the
backside-kicking that they so thor-
oughly deserved.
England were well served early on
by Farrell, and Ben Youngs and Smith
added shape to proceedings. Court-
ney Lawes and Jonny Hill were excel-
lent throughout, and the two flank-
ers, Sam Underhill and Tom Curry,
looked almost near the form that they
showed when England crushed New
Zealand in the World Cup semi-final.
Jamie George, before he had to
leave the field, was explosive and
young Bevan Rodd held on well up
front — with the proviso that real Aus-
tralian scrummagers are long extinct
But long before the end and
throughout the second half, it was
incredibly difficult to spot what
England were trying to do. They
seemed to give up on launching Manu
Tuilagi, they lost rhythm and there
was the odd occasion as Australia
staged breakaways through Hunter
Paisami and Tom Wright, when a try
to take Australia into the lead was by
no means impossible. Even though it
was entirely unthinkable.
England have now beaten Australia
eight times in succession, a tremen-
dous run or an utter humiliation,
depending on where you live. The
Wallabies were without core men,
both tight-head props, and the
prompting of Quade Cooper. On this
evidence, their depth is akin to that of
a particularly parsimonious and
stingy pizza topping
And it is all very well to say that
England themselves blooded many
young players, but this was a full inter-
national, and so no excuses. It is also
odd to hear the England camp
bemoaning their bad luck with Covid,
as if they are the only people afflicted.
Given the light show and the wel-
coming support in those early stages,
it was not surprising that England
came out in startling fashion, finding
OPPORTUNITY TO INFLICT
DRUBBING GOES BEGGING
T
here was a wonderful prel-
ude to this match with the
stadium darkened for a pre-
match light show, England
were greeted by a roaring
crowd and they set off at a
terrific pace, as the fans wel-
comed Marcus Smith to the
international arena proper, and
England put the Australians under
pressure by playing pacey and convin-
cing rugby.
There were more roaring and stir-
ring deeds right at the end when
speedy Sam Simmonds poached a
loose ball, set off upfield at a rate of
knots and then who should come
thundering into the picture other
than Jamie Blamire? The reserve
hooker at Newcastle Falcons did not
look an inch out of place as he ran all
the way to score. Now that was almost
worth the price of the ticket alone.
But frankly, it had to be. So little of
real vintage happened in between and
the graft of England’s performance
and the graft of the match itself in
terms of quality, went plunging down
on a diagonal, never to be restored
again and there were times in the last
quarter where the diagonal had
plunged straight through to the cellar.
STEPHEN
JONES
Rugby Correspondent
at Twickenham
the gears immediately, and dominat-
ing possession in the first half and also
territory by 65 per cent and 67 per
cent respectively.
And therefore, for them to be lead-
ing only 16-12 at half-time was a full-
blown travesty. They started with
such confidence, with the two flank-
ers surging all over, young Smith and
older Youngs conjuring well and
George bursting into open field on
two occasions.
When he was put through by the
superb Lawes, he was stopped only by
a high shot by Tom Wright that may
well have cost England a try but which
cost Australia a player — with a yellow
card to the sin bin.
Later, George went surging again
with remarkable speed off the mark,
was executing his dive for the line and
with the ball less than a metre away
from the inviting grass he was stopped
by a brilliant tackle from behind from
Nic White, which dislodged the ball.
But earlier than that, England had
come out smoothly. Underhill and
Curry made the run-in in their first
convincing attack, Smith delayed the
pass just a little and the towering
Freddie Steward went knifing
through the gap and swerving to the
line. Pedigree.
England pulled clear at 10-3 but
having missed two or three chances
they also gave away some very silly
penalties, so by half-time the out-
gunned Australia had kicked four
through O’Connor against a conver-
sion and three penalties by Farrell for
that mere four-point lead.
It was no surprise as
England came out
in startling fashion,
finding the gears
and dominating
possession
- FREDDIE 8/
STEWARD
Club Leicester Age 20 Caps 4
All the focus was on Marcus Smith’s
first big Test; it was the
same for Steward and
this was a tryscoring
coming-of-age
performance. - MARCUS 7/
SMITH
Harlequins, 22, 4
Operated chiefly as a
second receiver,
giving him time to pick
holes in the defence,
which he did for
Steward’s try. - MARO 6/
ITOJE
Saracens, 27, 50
Led the team out on his
50th England cap and
marked the occasion by
doing well in the
unglamorous areas
of pitch.
s the
and
ng
ENGLAND
PLAYER
RATINGS
By Alex Lowe
- MANU 7/
TUILAGI
Sale, 30, 45
Named on the wing but effectively
played in his usual
midfield role. He ran an
effective decoy line for
Steward’s try in the
first half. - BEN 6/
YOUNGS
Leicester, 32, 111
While pretenders to the
throne line up, the Test
centurion remains first
choice — although
days like this give fuel
to his critics. - JONNY 7/
HILL
Exeter, 27, 10
Unusually he was the
more prominent of
England’s locks,
claiming the ball well in
the air, which was not
an easy task.
13. HENRY 7/
SLADE
Exeter, 28, 42
With England adapting
around Tuilagi, Slade
spent a lot of the game
in the back field
defending, using his
left boot to clear.- BEVAN 6/
RODD
Sale, 21, 1
Played 70 minutes on his debut and
mixed some bright
moments with the ball
in hand with some
tough times in the
scrum. - COURTNEY 7/
LAWES
Northampton, 32, 88
His ball-carrying threat
had Australia
concerned. His variation
and deft passes were
the hallmark of his
game.
12. OWEN 7/
FARRELL
Saracens, 30, 95
Frequently took control at inside
centre on the occasion
of his 100th Test,
dovetailing well with
Smith. His tactical
kicking was good.
2. JAMIE 6/
GEORGE
Saracens, 31, 61
Prominent in attack but hurt his
knee as he tried to score
from a maul and was
penalised at the next
scrum. Replaced at
half time.
7. SAM 6/
UNDERHILL
Bath, 25, 25
Eddie Jones had predicted a “high
volume” game for his
forwards and the Bath
flanker lived up to that,
taking blows but
battling hard.
11. JONNY 6/
MAY
Gloucester, 31, 68
This was not a game May was able
to influence; despite
England dominating
they were unable to
create opportunities
for the flying wing.
3. KYLE 7/
SINCKLER
Bristol, 30, 46
Man of the match in England’s
previous two wins
against the Wallabies,
he was prominent in
attack. Had authority
in scrum.
8. TOM 7/
CURRY
Sale, 23, 34
He carried the ball with
determination, showed
some decent footwork
and defended as
resolutely as ever. A
force in attack.
- BEVAN 6/
TOTAL
100/
Subs: M Malins (for Farrell, 68min), T Davison
(Youngs, 72), R Quirke (Rodd, 72), W Stuart
(Sinckler, 72), C Ewels (Hill, 74), J Simmonds
(Lawes, 75), A Dombrandt (Underhill, 56)
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