Friday, 30 September 2011

Boks seal quarter-final spot

South Africa remained unbeaten in Pool D and move on to the World Cup quarter-finals after beating Samoa 13-5 at North Harbour Stadium on Friday.

Samoa knew going in that it would be a tough ask to make it into the quarter-finals, but no one ever doubted they would fight until the final whistle.

There was a smidge of ''what might have been'' attached to the result though for the islanders as had Mahonri Schwalger grounded a score, who knows what might of happened in the final stages.  As it was the reigning champions had enough in the tank to stave off their opponents.

The Springboks came out with intent and quickly set about using their star player of the tournament thus far, Danie Rossouw, to make the metres.  Nothing came of their foray after Morne Steyn sliced a drop-goal attempt, but the marker was laid that they weren't going to lose the physical.

South Africa tried for the opening points again moments later when Frans Steyn had a 60-metre penalty shot after good breakdown work from Heinrich Brüssow.  That struck the crossbar in what turned out to only be delaying the inevitable as the Bok power soon shone through.  They attacked down the left via Schalk Burger, who used his backline, which allowed Bryan Habana to cross in the corner.  Morne Steyn's conversion made it 7-0 on ten minutes.

Samoa needed to up the ante and subsequently played to their strengths, with carrying from George Stowers and Seilala Mapusua making ground.  That passage certainly let the Boks know they were not going to have it all their own way in Albany as slowly but surely Samoa gained momentum, being willed on by their passionate supporters.  It was also apparent South Africa were not going to enjoy a similar score of their triumphs in 2007 and 2003.

That was not to say the Boks were struggling to make their presence felt, and with Frans Steyn sending over a 65-metre penalty on 25 minutes, they knew territory was not going to be a problem.  That three was promptly doubled by namesake Morne two minutes later too as Samoa were penalised at scrum-time.  13-0 it was with barely half-an-hour played as Samoa's hopes looked to be getting even slimmer.  Wales' fate was also almost known.

North Harbour Stadium was treated to a pulsating finish to the half when Kahn Fotuali'i broke down the right wing before handing on to Mapusua, but the ex-Exiles centre's Hail Mary pass failed to find its man, sending the teams in at 13-0 in favour of the Springboks.

It was a bumper 29,734 crowd on Friday that while packed into an open stadium, did not lack in atmosphere with the vocal Bok fans met by the islanders.  And the former were soon to be silenced by a mass of noise from those waving blue and red as a lovely dummy and run from Tusi Pisi unlocked the defence.  His offload to Mapusua was then recycled for Stowers to crash in.  Pisi missed the kick that would have brought them within one score.

South Africa could have blamed that swing in momentum on the fact they had lost duo Habana and Rossouw, who later returned, to injuries minutes earlier.  However, that is doing a disservice to Samoa who were turning up the heat on their rivals during the opening 20 minutes of the second stanza.  The Boks needed to some fresh legs and Peter de Villiers oblidged, throwing on forwards Gurthrö Steenkamp and Willem Alberts for the last quarter.

It did little disarm the Samoan assault though as they kept on coming, mixing power up front with stepping wider out until Schwalger came within touching distance of the line before fumbling.  Was that to be the moment that would haunt his outfit in the morning?

That it proved to be as an ill-tempered finish that saw Paul Williams sent-off for pushing Brüssow in the face and then John Smit shown yellow after a deliberate slap-down, ultimately ended Samoa's 2011.  South Africa are now set to face the Wallabies.

Man of the match:  Although on the losing side, Tusi Pisi again showed that he had a big future leading Samoa.  The fly-half was light on his feet throughout and marshalled well, finding holes on more than one occasion.  Mentions too for Bok props Tendai Mtawarira and Jannie du Plessis at scrum-time and also flanker Schalk Burger, who was a genuine nuisance to Maurie Fa'asavalu and George Stowers.  David Lemi was also very impressive.

Moment of the match:  Had captain Mahonri Schwalger managed to hold onto the ball when reaching out on 66 minutes, maybe the Samoans were on the verge of something historic.  But it was not meant to be as even with John Smit going to the sin-bin soon after, South Africa held on to top the Pool and set up a probable last-eight clash with Australia.

Villain of the match:  It was played hard but fair until Paul Williams pushed/punched Heinrich Brüssow after being held at a breakdown.  Williams will be upset with how he ended the tournament as the frustration got the better of him.

The scorers:

For South Africa:
Try:  Habana
Con:  M Steyn
Pens:  F Steyn, M Steyn

For Samoa:
Try:  Stowers

Red card:  Paul Williams, 67 mins (Samoa, punching)
Yellow card:  John Smit, 70 mins (SA, killing the ball)

Samoa:  15 Paul Williams, 14 David Lemi, 13 Seilala Mapusua, 12 Eliota Fuimaono-Sapolu, 11 Alesana Tuilagi, 10 Tusi Pisi, 9 Kahn Fotuali'i, 8 George Stowers, 7 Maurie Faasavalu, 6 Taiasina Tuifua, 5 Kane Thompson, 4 Daniel Leo, 3 Census Johnston, 2 Mahonri Schwalger (c), 1 Sakaria Taulafo.
Replacements:  16 Ole Avei, 17 Anthony Perenise, 18 Logovi'i Mulipola, 19 Ofisa Treviranus, 20 Filipo Lavea Levi, 21 Junior Poluleuligaga, 22 George Pisi.

South Africa:  15 Pat Lambie, 14 JP Pietersen, 13 Jaque Fourie, 12 Frans Steyn, 11 Bryan Habana, 10 Morné Steyn, 9 Fourie Du Preez, 8 Pierre Spies, 7 Schalk Burger, 6 Heinrich Brüssow, 5 Victor Matfield (c), 4 Danie Rossouw, 3 Jannie Du Plessis, 2 Bismarck Du Plessis, 1 Tendai Mtawarira.
Replacements:  16 John Smit, 17 Gurthrö Steenkamp, 18 CJ van der Linde, 19 Willem Alberts, 20 Francois Louw, 21 Francois Hougaard, 22 Jean De Villiers.

Referee:  Nigel Owens

Wednesday, 28 September 2011

Georgia send Romania home winless

Romania depart the 2011 Rugby World Cup without a win to their name after going down to Georgia 25-9 in Palmerston North on Wednesday.

It was a well-deserved victory by the Georgians, who stay on to play Argentina on Sunday with a win under their belt.

Scrappy for the most part, both sides threw everything but the kitchen sink at one another however sprung a major leak with handling errors the order of the evening.

The scrums were to be the weapon of choice for the two teams, with the Romanians winning the battle up front with some powerful work from their forwards who really stamped their authority in that particular department ... but nowhere else.

The Oaks' line-outs, however, were a shambles with skew throw-ins and their catchers doing everything but catch while the backs failed to spark anything with ball in hand.

It wasn't pretty, it wasn't expected to be, but the stop-start spectacle wasn't helped either by the trigger-happy refereeing of Dave Pearson who blew the game to smithereens -- awarding 14 penalties in the first half alone.

Romania started the match the better of the two teams, pushing the Georgians off their feet in the first scrum but failed to turn pressure into points after fly-half Danut Dumbrava missed a simple shot at goal.

Georgia pivot Merab Kvirikashvili showed his opposite number how it should be done after sending over the opening points of the match with a straight-forward penalty.

Dumbrava found his range in the ninth minute, but had to watch Kvirikashvili slot two more penalties before getting a chance in the 33rd minute to add another of his own.

With both sides rarely threatening the tryline, they took their opportunities at points when presented to them and Kvirikashvili was happy to raise the flags once more with the final penalty of the first half to take his team into the half-time sheds 12-6 ahead.

The second half started in the same fashion as the first half ended -- with more penalties.  Yet both goal-kickers made a mess of their attempts after the break.

Then the unbelievable happened:  Georgia managed to string 11 phases together as the Lelos marched towards their opposition tryline before Mamuka Gorgodze powered over for a brilliant team try.

Kvirikashvili added the conversion from bang in front and all of a sudden Georgia were in a commanding 19-6 lead.  I say commanding, because the Oaks hardly came within a sniff of scoring a five-pointer up until this point of the match.

In fact, Georgia's tryline was never in sight of Romania for the remainder of a tight tussle and when Kvirikashvili raised the flags with his fifth successful penalty, it was game over for Romeo Gontineac's side.

When Romania did work their way inside the Georgians' territory, they took the strange decision to kick for points whilst 16 points (22-6) down.

Replacement full-back Florin Vlaicu was successful with his penalty nontheless, but Georgia weren't done and nailed the final nail into Romania's coffin with a three-pointer by Malkhaz Urjukashvili four minutes from full-time.

Man of the match:  In a tight game where penalties ruled the roost, we have to go for Georgia's number ten Merab Kvirikashvili who contributed 17 points with the boot.

Moment of the match:  Um, erm ... hmmm ... ah yes -- Mamuka Gorgodze's try for the Lelos!

Villain of the match:  No punches, pushes or even a horrible word about anyone's second cousin whispered in the ear.

The scorers:

For Georgia:
Try:  Gorgodze
Con:  Kvirikashvili
Pens:  Kvirikashvili 5, Urjukashvili

For Romania:
Pens:  Dumbrava 2, Vlaicu

Georgia:  15 Lasha Khmaladze, 14 Revaz Gigauri, 13 David Kacharava, 12 Tedo Zibzibadze, 11 Alexander Todua, 10 Merab Kvirikashvili, 9 Irakli Abuseridze (c), 8 Dimitri Basilaia, 7 Mamuka Gorgodze, 6 Giorgi Chkhaidze, 5 Vakhtang Maisuradze, 4 Ilia Zedginidze, 3 David Zirakashvili, 2 Jaba Bregvadze, 1 David Khinchagishvili.
Replacements:  16 Goderdzi Shvelidze, 17 Vasil Kakovin, 18 Levan Datunashvili, 19 Givi Berishvili, 20 Bidzina Samkharadze, 21 Irakli Chkhikvadze, 22 Malkhaz Urjukashvili.

Romania:  15 Iulian Dumitras, 14 Stefan Ciuntu, 13 Csaba Gal, 12 Tiberius Dimofte, 11 Madalin Lemnaru, 10 Danut Dumbrava, 9 Florin Surugiu, 8 Daniel Carpo, 7 Ovidiu Tonita, 6 Mihai Macovei, 5 Cristian Petre, 4 Valentin Ursache, 3 Paulica Ion, 2 Marius Tincu (c), 1 Mihaita Lazar.
Replacements:  16 Bogdan Suman, 17 Silviu Florea, 18 Valentin Poparlan, 19 Daniel Ianus, 20 Valentin Calafeteanu, 21 Constantin Gheara, 22 Florin Vlaicu.

Referee:  Dave Pearson (England)

Tuesday, 27 September 2011

Irish showdown for bonus-point Italy

Italy secured a four-try 27-10 win over the USA at Trafalgar Park on Tuesday in a result that means Pool C will go right down to the wire on Sunday.

The five-point success sees the Azzurri go level on points with the Wallabies -- who play Russia on Saturday -- and just three behind Ireland.

It wasn't pretty from the Italians but they will not be losing sleep over that as it was a case of mission accomplished before they go down to Dunedin.

Captain and number eight Sergio Parisse opened the scoring after being handed a lovely offload from lock Cornelius van Zyl while further scores from Luciano Orquera, Martin Castrogiovanni and a penalty try saw them pick up a maximum haul.

The Eagles looked to have been offering stiff competition when Chris Wyles claimed ten points via a try, conversion and penalty inside the first half-hour, but the power of Italy eventually told as the States ended the 2011 Rugby World Cup with a solitary win.

On the back of Parisse's slick score, Tommaso Benvenuti almost got over on the right wing but failed to hang on after good defensive scrambling.  And it was then the turn of the Eagles, who levelled after good initial line-breaking work from Paul Emerick seeing Wyles go in for a converted score.

Bergamasco and Wyles traded penalties in the next 10 minutes for the teams to remain locked together.  But Orquera sliced through from close range for a 15-10 lead in the 30th minute after some adept mauling and pick-and-go work from his forwards.

Castrogiovanni was held up over the line not long before the break, but the bearded prop wasn't to be denied on the stroke of half-time.  He ensured Italy's sustained pressure on the Eagles' line was rewarded by powering over to give his team a ten-point (20-10) half-time lead.

Italy couldn't make their considerable possession and territory advantage count as time slipped away after the break and the pressure mounted for the all-important fourth try.

America's blindside flanker Louis Stanfill was sin-binned for one scrummaging infringement too many, and still the Eagles held firm.

It couldn't last.  One scrum too many went down, and referee George Clancy ran under the posts to signal the penalty try in the 66th minute that relieved the tension in Italy's camp.

Man of the match:  USA centre Paul Emerick was impressive every time he touched the ball while Sergio Parisse was his usual destructive self.  However, for his scrummaging and try-scoring effort we go with Martin Castrogiovanni.  His clash with Cian Healy should be epic.

Moment of the match:  Italy needed that bonus-point try and when it came on 66 minutes -- via a penalty try -- one could see the relief all around.  Job done, mission accomplished.

Villain of the match:  Another clean game at World Cup 2011.

The scorers:

For Italy:
Tries:  Parisse, Orquera, Castrogiovanni, Penalty
Con:  Bergamasco 2
Pen:  Bergamasco

For USA:
Tries:  Wyles
Con:  Wyles
Pen:  Wyles

Italy:  15 Luke McLean, 14 Tommaso Benvenuti, 13 Gonzalo Canale, 12 Gonzalo Garcia, 11 Mirco Bergamasco, 10 Luciano Orquera, 9 Fabio Semenzato, 8 Sergio Parisse (c), 7 Mauro Bergamasco, 6 Alessandro Zanni, 5 Cornelius van Zyl, 4 Quintin Geldenhuys, 3 Martin Castrogiovanni, 2 Leonardo Ghiraldini, 1 Salvatore Perugini.
Replacements:  16 Fabio Ongaro, 17 Andrea Lo Cicero, 18 Marco Bortolami, 19 Paul Derbyshire, 20 Edoardo Gori, 21 Riccardo Bocchino, 22 Giulio Toniolatti.

USA:  15 Chris Wyles, 14 Takudzwa Ngwenya, 13 Paul Emerick, 12 Andrew Suniula, 11 James Paterson, 10 Roland Suniula, 9 Mike Petri, 8 Nic Johnson, 7 Todd Clever (c), 6 Louis Stanfill, 5 Hayden Smith, 4 John van der Giessen, 3 Matekitonga Moeakiola, 2 Chris Biller, 1 Mike MacDonald.
Replacements:  16 Phil Thiel, 17 Shawn Pittman, 18 Scott LaValla, 19 Pat Danahy, 20 Tim Usasz, 21 Nese Malifa, 22 Blaine Scully.

Referee:  George Clancy (IRE)

Japan held by gutsy Canada

Japan were denied their first Rugby World Cup victory in 20 years as they were held 23 points apiece against Canada at McLean Park on Tuesday.

The game in Napier created the same sharing of the points that occurred in the 2007 tournament in what was an entertaining spectacle for the fans.

Japan led a scrappy contest 23-15 with just five minutes remaining, but could not hang on for its first tournament win since 1991 as Canada fly-half Ander Monro crossed for a try and then knocked over a levelling penalty soon after.

Hooker Shota Horie and wing Kosuke Endo scored first-half tries for Japan, who started well.

Canada's first two scores came from bleached blondes, centre DTH van der Merwe, who gave his team an early lead, and winger Phil MacKenzie, who ultimately got Canada back in the match.

Canada's chances were dealt a blow when full-back and kicker James Pritchard left the field at half-time, but Monro salvaged the draw.

The Canadians have six points and are in third place in Pool A from a draw and an opening win over Tonga, and now have a match remaining against New Zealand on Sunday.

Japan finished the tournament with two points from three losses and a draw.

Rivals on the sidelines in sunny conditions in front of 14,335 fans at McLean Park, Kirwan and Canada coach Keiran Crowley had both been members of the New Zealand squad which won the inaugural World Cup in 1987.

Crowley's team was dominant early.  Van der Merwe was sent bursting through on a 40-yard run after a neat pass from midfield partner Ryan Smith, and only a brilliant ankle tap from Japan full-back Shaun Webb prevented a try under the posts.

Van der Merwe was not to be denied, however, and shook off a soft tackle for a converted try moments later in the seventh minute.

Canada's lead lasted two minutes as Japan won close-range scrum and Horie barreled over in the corner.

As the game started getting scrappy, Pritchard was felled by a huge hit going for a loose ball.  He lay motionless for about a minute before being helped to his feet to go off for treatment as Conor Trainor came on as a blood replacement.

With Japan starting to get on top, fly-half James Arlidge slotted over an easy penalty to make it 10-7.  Canada had a chance to level straight after and, with Pritchard off the field, Monro struck the left post with his penalty attempt.

Canada got repeatedly caught out by Japan's speedy breaks as the first half drew to a close.  Moments before the interval, Japan wasted a scoring chance when unmarked Endo received a dreadful pass that went behind him.  But the big winger was set-up under the posts for a converted try moments later to give Japan a 10-point lead.

With Pritchard out of the game, Crowley's team got a boost when MacKenzie drifted past three poor tackles for his second try of the tournament.

Monro missed the conversion but landed a penalty before Arlidge booted Japan to a 23-15 lead with two coolly struck kicks.

Kirwan, meanwhile, set a Rugby World Cup record by being involved in his 23rd match as a coach or player.  Kirwan played 11 matches for the All Blacks and the Canada match was his 12th as a head coach.  Jason Leonard played 22 matches for England.

Man of the match:  He was a threat all day with ball in-hand and fully deserves this award.  Well done outside centre DTH van der Merwe.  Mentions too for Japan centre Ryan Nicholas and blindside Sione Vatuvei, who were both deadly in attach and defence all day.

Moment of the match:  With four minutes to go, Ander Morno needed to convert his own try to set up what would have been a one-point deficit for his side to claw back.  As it was, he pushed his kick wide and his penalty shot a few minutes later could only draw his side level.

Villain of the match:  No dirty play to speak of.

The scorers:

For Canada:
Tries:  Van der Merwe, Mackenzie, Monro
Con:  Pritchard
Pen:  Monro 2

For Japan:
Tries:  Horie, Endo
Con:  Arlidge 2
Pen:  Arlidge 2

Canada:  15 James Pritchard, 14 Matt Evans, 13 DTH van der Merwe, 12 Ryan Smith, 11 Phil Mackenzie, 10 Ander Monro, 9 Ed Fairhurst, 8 Aaron Carpenter, 7 Chauncey O'Toole, 6 Adam Kleeberger, 5 Jamie Cudmore, 4 Jebb Sinclair, 3 Jason Marshall, 2 Pat Riordan (c), 1 Hubert Buydens.
Replacements:  16 Ryan Hamilton, 17 Scott Franklin, 18 Tyler Hotson, 19 Jeremy Kyne, 20 Sean White, 21 Nathan Hirayama, 22 Conor Trainor.

Japan:  15 Shaun Webb, 14 Kosuke Endo, 13 Alisi Tupuailai, 12 Ryan Nicholas, 11 Hirotoki Onozawa, 10 James Arlidge, 9 Fumiaki Tanaka, 8 Takashi Kikutani (c), 7 Michael Leitch, 6 Sione Talikavili Vatuvei, 5 Toshizumi Kitagawa, 4 Luke Thompson, 3 Nozomu Fujita, 2 Shota Horie, 1 Hisateru Hirashima.
Replacements:  16 Yusuke Aoki, 17 Kensuke Hatakeyama, 18 Hitoshi Ono, 19 Toetuu Taufa, 20 Atsushi Hiwasa, 21 Murray Williams, 22 Bryce Robins.

Referee:  Jonathan Kaplan (RSA)
Assistant referees:  Bryce Lawrence (NZL), Matt Goddard (AUS)

Monday, 26 September 2011

Wales canter past Namibia

Wales recovered from an indifferent second quarter to dispose of Namibia 81-7 in their Pool D encounter in New Plymouth.

The writing was on the wall when the Welsh notched up three tries inside the first twenty minutes, but the Namibians stood firm and it took another opening of the floodgates in the final quarter to see Wales really run away with it.

The early stages where marred by numerous handling errors from the Namibians, who put pressure on themselves as they failed to execute the basics.

Stephen Jones, playing in a Welsh record 101st Test, opened the scoring with a penalty before Scott Williams charged over for the first of his three tries in the seventh minute.

The score was set up by Leigh Halfpenny who came off his left wing to enter the line at pace, passing outside to Williams who outstripped the defence.

It was another mistake from the Namibians whilst on attack that gifted Wales their second try.  An errand pass on their opposition's 22m line, allowed Wales to counter-attack and Aled Brew was the man to round off the move.

Some clever work from Ryan Jones, taking a quick tap-penalty from 10m out, put number eight Toby Faletau over in the 17th minute.  But with Wales in a commanding 22-0, Namibia sprung to life.

Africa's minnows began to dominate at the breakdown, forcing the Welsh into conceding penalties as they struggled to adjust to the increased tempo from the men in blue.

A change in the front row, with prop Raoul Larson coming on for Johnny Redelinghuys at the end of the first quarter, gave Namibia renewed impetus in the scrums and in the loose.

Such was the effort of the Namibians, that they managed to keep the Welsh at bay for the remainder of the first half.

Williams added his second shortly after the break and three minutes later Gethin Jenkins scored a try to remember as the prop went on a 40m run, brushing off defender after defender before diving over for the score.

However, the Namibians refused to go down quietly and got on the scoreboard in fantastic fashion.

Lock Nico Esterhuyse intercepted the ball on halfway and burst through before offloading to his second-row partner Heinz Koll who gave a lovely little show of the ball on the inside only to sprint around the outside and dive over in the corner.

The scrums were a problem area throughout the night and in the 59th minute, referee Steve Walsh eventually lost his patience and sent Larson to the sin-bin.

Down to 14 men and with a flood of Welsh substitutes making their way to the field, the Namibian resistance was at last crushed for good.

Replacement winger George North made his presence known with a flurry of strong runs, and the youngster was rewarded for his efforts with two tries.

As was the case four days earlier against South Africa, Namibia had nothing left in the tank in the closing stages and near on all the Welsh backs got their name on the score sheet in the final throngs as they ran in seven tries in the final twenty minutes.

Man of the match:  The Namibian flankers Jacques Burger and Tinus Du Plessis were massive throughout despite having their backs up against it for 80 minutes.

Moment of the match:  Wales had all the running and as a result Heinz Koll's breakaway try brought a smile to the face and was a well-deserved reward for the Namibians.  A special mention to Stephen Jones who set a new record of appearances for Wales with a near-flawless kicking display.

Villain of the match:  Raoul Larson was carded after persistent infringements at scrum-time but in truth it could have been any member of either front rows to get sent to the bin.  It was a hard fought, but clean game.

The scorers:

For Wales:
Tries:  S Williams 3, Brew, Faletau, Jenkins, North 2, Davies, L Williams, Byrne, Wyn Jones
Cons:  S Jones 6, Preistland 3
Pens:  S Jones

For Namibia:
Tries:  Koll
Cons:  Kotze

Yellow cards:  Larson (Namibia)

Wales:  15 Lee Byrne, 14 Leigh Halfpenny, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Scott Williams, 11 Aled Brew, 10 Stephen Jones, 9 Tavis Knoyle, 8 Toby Faletau, 7 Sam Warburton (c), 6 Ryan Jones, 5 Alun Wyn Jones, 4 Bradley Davies, 3 Craig Mitchell, 2 Lloyd Burns, 1 Gethin Jenkins.
Replacements:  16 Ken Owens, 17 Ryan Bevington, 18 Luke Charteris, 19 Andy Powell, 20 Lloyd Williams, 21 Rhys Preistland, 22 George North.

Namibia:  15 Chrysander Botha, 14 Danie Van Wyk, 13 Piet Van Zyl, 12 Darryl De La Harpe, 11 Danie Dames, 10 Theuns Kotze, 9 Eugene Jantjies, 8 Jacques Nieuwenhuis, 7 Jacques Burger (c), 6 Tinus Du Plessis, 5 Nico Esterhuyse, 4 Heinz Koll, 3 Jané Du Toit, 2 Hugo Horn, 1 Johnnie Redelinghuys.
Replacements:  16 Bertus O'Callaghan, 17 Raoul Larson, 18 Wacca Kazombiaze, 19 Rohan Kitshoff, 20 Ryan De La Harpe, 21 TC Losper, 22 David Philander.

Referee:  Steve Walsh

Sunday, 25 September 2011

Amorosino the hero for Argentina

A superb late try from replacement Lucas Amorosino saw Argentina beat Scotland 13-12 on Sunday, putting one foot into the World Cup quarter-finals.

It was a gripping game at Wellington Regional Stadium as the Pumas came from behind to claim a priceless victory in the Pool B shake-up.

Argentina, who lost their opener to England but went on to beat Romania 43-8, now play Georgia in their final match while the Scots must conquer the unbeaten English to ensure a knockout spot.

Felipe Contepomi kicked two penalties and converted Amorosino's try for Argentina.  Scotland's points came from a Chris Paterson penalty, a Ruaridh Jackson penalty and drop-goal and a second drop-kick from Dan Parks.

Scotland can have only themselves to blame for the narrow loss, with some poor decision-making and gifting too many turnovers to an Argentina side whose midfield defence was marshalled impeccably by outside centre Marcelo Bosch.

The match, played in pouring rain, also featured a litany of handling mistakes and the set-piece was a complete lottery.

For the first hour, there were predictable phases of play that featured strings of badly chased box kicks, non-productive pick-and-go's and inaccurate aerial ping-pong.

Paterson and Contepomi both missed early penalties before the latter finally got Los Pumas on the board after nineteen turgid minutes of rugby union.

Scotland's best attacking moment of the first period was squandered when Al Strokosch passed too early in a clear three-on-two down the left wing.

A similar chance was wasted shortly after when John Barclay opted to drive back infield with numbers outside.

With Argentina offering up little in attack, it was Scotland that went into half-time in the lead through two penalties in three minutes from Paterson and Jackson, the latter a beauty from 47 metres.

Bosch horribly skewed a drop-goal early in the second-half as Argentina tried to turn on the pressure, but the Scots went closest to a try.

Winger Max Evans, a livewire for Scotland, did well to collect his chip into the Argentinian 22-metre area but was well tackled by Rodriguez before offloading to Barclay.

From the ensuing ruck, captain Rory Lawson eschewed an overlap on the openside to play the blind and found a wall of beefy Argentinian forwards who promptly stripped him of the ball.

Paterson had a clear chance to extend Scotland's lead with a drop-goal, but the country's most capped player snatched at his effort and it went wide.

An infringement at a ruck and it was Contepomi's turn, the Pumas captain's penalty effort also drifting wide.

Contepomi made no mistake in the 63rd minute, however, nailing his second penalty after the Scottish front-row collapsed to draw the scores level at 6-6.

That lasted for only a minute as Jackson slotted over a well-taken drop-goal, as Contepomi's fifth penalty attempt went wide off the upright.

In a nail-biting finish to the error-riddled match, replacement fly-half Parks kicked a drop with practically his first touch to stretch Scotland out to 12-6.

But then woeful defence coupled by a fine finish saw replacement Amorosino skip through four tackles, turning a fairly innocuous play into a try.  Contepomi showed nerves of steel to bag the conversion and take a 13-12 lead.

Parks' snatched left-footed drop-goal with a minute to play went wide, leaving Argentina in the driving seat for qualification.

Man of the match:  Sean Lamont and Max Evans were both busy for Scotland, but for playing through the pain barrier Felipe Contepomi gets the nod.  He also kicked the winning points.

Moment of the match:  It had to be Lucas Amorosino's dash of magic down the right-hand touchline.  He weaved in and out to beat a handful of desperate Scotland defenders

Villain of the match:  Whether it was the Pumas doctor or Juan Matrin Fernandez Lobbe himself who made he decision, but the number eight should not have continued with such a knee problem.  More sense is needed in such situations as he could well have done more damage.

The scorers:

For Argentina:
Try:  Amorosino
Con:  Contepomi
Pen:  Contepomi 2

For Scotland:
Pen:  Paterson, Jackson
Drop:  Jackson, Parks

Argentina:  15 Martín Rodríguez, 14 Gonzalo Camacho, 13 Marcelo Bosch, 12 Felipe Contepomi (c), 11 Horacio Agulla, 10 Santiago Fernández, 9 Nicolás Vergallo, 8 Juan Martin Fernandez Lobbe, 7 Juan Manuel Leguizamón, 6 Julio Farias Cabello, 5 Patricio Albacete, 4 Manuel Carizza, 3 Juan Figallo, 2 Mario Ledesma Arocena, 1 Rodrigo Roncero.
Replacements:  16 Agustín Creevy, 17 Martín Scelzo, 18 Mariano Galarza, 19 Genaro Fessia, 20 Alfredo Lalanne, 21 Lucas Gonzalez Amorosino, 22 Juan Jose Imhoff.

Scotland:  15 Chris Paterson, 14 Max Evans, 13 Nick De Luca, 12 Graeme Morrison, 11 Sean Lamont, 10 Ruaridh Jackson, 9 Rory Lawson (c), 8 Kelly Brown, 7 John Barclay, 6 Al Strokosch, 5 Jim Hamilton, 4 Richie Gray, 3 Geoff Cross, 2 Ross Ford, 1 Allan Jacobsen.
Replacements:  16 Dougie Hall, 17 Alasdair Dickinson, 18 Nathan Hines, 19 Richie Vernon, 20 Mike Blair, 21 Dan Parks, 22 Simon Danielli.

Referee:  Wayne Barnes (England)
Assistant referees:  Nigel Owens (Wales), Chris Pollock (New Zealand)
Television match official:  Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)

Nine-try Ireland hammer Russia

Ireland strengthened their chances of topping Pool C after claiming a nine-try 62-12 win over Russia at Rotorua International Stadium on Sunday.

With only six players backing up from the 15-6 upset of Australia at Eden Park last weekend, they still maintained their three-point lead over the Wallabies in Pool C heading into the final games.

A mass of green among the 25,661 capacity at the Rotorua venue generated a homely feel for for Ireland.  And they steamed to a 43-0 lead eight minutes after half-time before taking off their key men and giving Russia the chance to get on the scoreboard with two late tries.

The Irish will lock up Pool C with victory over Six Nations rivals Italy in Dunedin next Sunday, with the Italians to first play the USA on Tuesday.

Fly-half Ronan O'Gara, the official man-of-the-match in his 115th Test, extended his Irish scoring record to 1,054 points with 15 points from six conversions and a penalty before he was replaced with 15 minutes remaining.

The Irish put the Russian defence to the test early with 14 phases on their try-line before they lost fly-half Konstantin Rachkov to the sin-bin for a deliberate knock down.

In the time Rachkov was off the field Ireland cashed in with two converted tries to Fergus McFadden off an O'Gara kick and outstanding openside flanker Sean O'Brien.

O'Gara was at the heart of the Irish attacks and his goal-kicking and general kicking was immaculate.

But when Rashov returned late in the first quarter the Irish scoring slowed and it took them until late in the half to rush on three tries in as many minutes.

New Zealand-born scrum-half Isaac Boss dived over and planted the ball next to the post and centre Keith Earls finished off a break from winger Andrew Trimble.

The Irish finished the half in storming fashion when Trimble toed through off Andrey Garbuzov's error to score for an emphatic 36-0 lead at the break.  O'Gara's sideline conversion attempt struck an upright costing him an unblemished kicking performance.

Earls sliced through for his second try eight minutes after the break and was taken straight off along with prop Cian Healy as Ireland looked ahead to their next big match with Italy.

Russia had their best moment in the match when full-back Vasily Artemyev scored a classy try, slicing through and then standing up Rob Kearney to score in the 51st minute.

The Russians had another 'victory' when winger Denis Simplikevich brushed off McFadden and Trimble to score the Bears' second try on the hour.  But Ireland powered on with the replacements' bench cleared and they added three more tries to Kearney, Shane Jennings and Tony Buckley.

Man of the match:  We have mentioned him time and time again but flanker Sean O'Brien continues to impress.  He was a tower of strength for the Irish and deserved his first-half try.

Moment of the match:  Russia scoring their second try through wing Denis Simplikevich.  It was a fine score that led to big celebrations, despite the result already being beyond doubt.

Villain of the match:  Letting his side down by putting himself in the sin-bin for a deliberate knock-down was not the wisest thing Konstantin Rachkov will ever do.  It cost his team.

The scorers:

For Ireland:
Tries:  McFadden, O'Brien, Boss, Earls 2, Trimble, Kearney, Jennings, Buckley
Con:  O'Gara 6, Sexton
Pen:  O'Gara

For Russia:
Try:  Artemyev, Simplikevich
Con:  Rachkov

Ireland:  15 Rob Kearney, 14 Fergus McFadden, 13 Keith Earls, 12 Paddy Wallace, 11 Andrew Trimble, 10 Ronan O'Gara, 9 Isaac Boss, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 Sean O'Brien, 6 Donnacha Ryan, 5 Leo Cullen (c), 4 Donncha O'Callaghan, 3 Tony Buckley, 2 Sean Cronin, 1 Cian Healy.
Replacements:  16 Rory Best, 17 Mike Ross, 18 Denis Leamy, 19 Shane Jennings, 20 Eoin Reddan, 21 Jonathan Sexton, 22 Geordan Murphy.

Russia:  15 Vasily Artemyev, 14 Denis Simplikevich, 13 Andrey Kuzin, 12 Sergey Trishin, 11 Vladimir Ostroushko, 10 Konstantin Rachkov, 9 Alexander Yanyushkin (c), 8 Victor Gresev, 7 Andrey Garbuzov, 6 Artem Fatakhov, 5 Adam Byrnes, 4 Denis Antonov, 3 Alexander Khrokin, 2 Valery Tsnobiladze, 1 Sergey Popov.
Replacements:  16 Evgeny Matveev, 17 Ivan Prishchepenko, 18 Alexey Travkin, 19 Alexander Voytov, 20 Andrey Bykanov, 21 Mikhail Sidorov, 22 Mikhail Babaev.

Referee:  Craig Joubert (South Africa)
Assistant referees:  Dave Pearson (England), Jérôme Garces (France)
Television match official:  Giulio De Santis (Italy)

Fiji brushed aside by Samoa

Samoa gave their hopes of World Cup quarter-final qualification a boost on Sunday as they easily dispatched Fiji 27-7 at Eden Park in Auckland.

While they only scored two tries through scrum-half Kahn Fotuali'i and number eight George Stowers, Samoa will be delighted with the win.

They were slick, powerful and had ideas that made Fiji fall well short of their rivals.  The real test comes next week against South Africa though.

Sailosi Tagicakibau thought he had scored early on but for an incredible last ditch tackle from Napolioni Nalaga that kept the scores a 3-0 following Tusi Pisi's early penalty goal.  Samoa were most definitely in the ascendancy in the opening minutes as they enjoyed a sustained spell of pressure, possession and territory.

From that near miss from the London Irish wing, Samoa won a scrum penalty which Pisi converted from under the uprights.  Fiji could not buy any ball as a statistic of 95 per cent territory in the first ten minutes said it all in Auckland, and when Pisi slotted a neat drop-goal, the lead was up to nine.

Gradually though, the ailing Fijians did manage to get something of a grip on procedings but were by no means turning the screw against their rivals, who held all the aces right up until the half-time whistle in a performance that was better than the 12-0 score suggested.

Pisi stroked over a fourth penalty early in the second-half before Fiji had their best passage of play with a rolling attack through the forwards, which was eventually ended by a turnover.

Tuilagi then knocked Tagicakibau backwards with a ferocious hit as the big collisions kept coming, but a huge tackle by Fiji's Sisa Koyamaibole on Pisi could not prevent Samoa's first try as the always threatening Crusader Fotuali'i darted over from the ruck.

Fiji's forwards came rumbling back and they were rewarded with a try when flanker Netani Talei went over after receiving the ball on the right for their only score of the day on the hour.

But Samoa found an immediate riposte when number eight Stowers powered over on the left.  Hopes of a Fiji revival were hit when hooker Sunia Koto went off injured and they were denied a last-gasp consolation by a video replay.

Samoa now have the chance of reaching their first quarter-finals in sixteen years when they play South Africa on Friday, while Fiji face the Welsh next Sunday in Hamilton.

Man of the match:  Tusi Pisi gave an intelligent showing at fly-half but the workrate and power of George Stowers sees him take this one.  Paul Williams deserves a mention.

Moment of the match:  Napolioni Nalaga's try-saving tackle on Sailosi Tagicakibau.  Had the Samoans got the seven points at that point in the first half then things could have looked a whole lot worse for the Fijians.  Kahn Fotuali'i's score was also a major moment.

Villain of the match:  Huge respect between the two teams meant little aggro.

The scorers:

For Fiji:
Try:  Talei
Con:  Luveniyali

For Samoa:
Tries:  Fotuali'i, Stowers
Con:  Williams
Pen:  Pisi 4
Drop:  Pisi

Fiji:  15 Kini Murimurivalu, 14 Vereniki Goneva, 13 Gaby Lovobalavu, 12 Seremaia Bai, 11 Napolioni Nalaga, 10 Nicky Little, 9 Nemia Kenatale, 8 Sisa Koyamaibole, 7 Mala Ravulo, 6 Netani Edward Talei, 5 Leone Nakarawa, 4 Seko Kalou, 3 Deacon Manu (captain), 2 Sunia Koto, 1 Campese Ma'afu.
Replacements:  16 Talemaitoga Dautu Tuapati, 17 Setefano Somoca, 18 Rupeni Nasiga, 19 Akapusi Qera, 20 Vitori Tomu Buatava, 21 Albert James Vulivuli, 22 Waisea Sedre Luveniyali.

Samoa:  15 Paul Williams, 14 Sailosi Tagicakibau, 13 George Pisi, 12 Seilala Mapusua, 11 Alesana Tuilagi, 10 Tusi Pisi, 9 Kahn Fotuali'i, 8 George Stowers, 7 Maurie Faasavalu, 6 Taiasina Tuifua, 5 Kane Thompson, 4 Daniel Leo, 3 Census Johnston, 2 Mahonri Schwalger (captain), 1 Sakaria Taulafo.
Replacements:  16 Ti'i Paulo, 17 Anthony Perenise, 18 Filipo Lavea Levi, 19 Manaia Salavea, 20 Jeremy Sua, 21 Eliota Fuimaono Sapolu, 22 James Sooialo.

Referee:  Bryce Lawrence (New Zealand)
Assistant referees:  George Clancy (Ireland), Stuart Terheege (England)
TMO:  Graham Hughes (England)

Saturday, 24 September 2011

All Blacks thump France

Israel Dagg claimed two tries as New Zealand romped to a comfortable 37-17 Rugby World Cup win over France at Eden Park in Auckland on Saturday.

The All Blacks could not have asked for a better performance to celebrate captain Richie McCaw's 100th cap and they are now guaranteed to finish atop of Pool A following three-straight maximums.

It was a sunny day in the build-up to the game, with the anticipation palpable around the city as dashes of blue were shadowed by the black.  Many of New Zealand's public had waited four years for this chance of redemption, yet there was a feeling of less pressure this time out for two reasons.  One was the fact that Marc Lievremont had picked a scrum-half at fly-half in Morgan Parra and the other being the non-catastrophe of losing.

But despite the midweek call from former All Black Zinzan Brooke to lose on purpose, it had never looked remotely possible that New Zealand were after anything other than momentum going into the knockout stages.  To be frank, Australia's loss to Ireland hasn't affected their task whatsoever.

Next up, after overcoming Canada next Sunday will be a quarter-final date with either Argentina or Scotland -- if things go as expected -- and from there the likelihood is they will face South Africa or the Wallabies in the last four.  On this kind of form, they'll fear no-one.

France were not here to just make up the numbers though and quickly set the tone with a fine run from Vincent Clerc, which led to Parra taking a pot-shot at three points and striking the post.  The French then tried the cross-field route via Dimitri Yachvili, who found Damien Traille on the wing.  However, Lievremont's go-to Mr Reliable at full-back spilled possession under pressure from Cory Jane.  France had the upper hand of that there was no doubt.

Five missed tackles in the first seven minutes pretty much told the story at Eden Park until a moment arrived that arguably turned the game on its head.  One scrummage.

The All Blacks earned themselves a huge morale-boosting penalty from that set-piece in their own half and quickly the territory pressure cloud they had been under was lifted.

New Zealand sensed they had weathered the early storm and set about giving the French a taste of their own medicine.  Ma'a Nonu was the architect as he split through the midfield on halfway, taking his side to within five metres, before recycled ball found its way left to flank-cum-winger Adam Thomson.  Carter missed his first attempt at goal but the wheels were definitely in motion.  Back they came with Jane hitting a superb angle from a line-out 30 metres out that doubled the home side's advantage.  This time Carter was on-target and New Zealand were subsequently 12-0 up with only eighteen minutes on the clock.

Things were about to get a whole lot better too as an on-song Carter joined the party with a lovely dummy and break through the line that saw him hand on to a supporting Dagg under the uprights.  It seemed that the ghost of 2007 was well-and-truly banished as New Zealand were going for the jugular -- a fourth try before the interval.

French fans meanwhile were becoming increasingly frustrated at what was unfolding as McCaw began to get his way at the breakdown.  Although an off-the-ball incident involving very slight elbow contact from Jerome Kaino on Yachvili eventually gave France something.

It proved futile as New Zealand took a mere one minute, nineteen seconds to reply upon the turnaround as Carter again spotted an opening before the try eventually came for a stepping Dagg.  There was now no doubt that Graham Henry had made the right call in selection.

Carter added a further three points from the kicking tee seven minutes later to stretch things further to 29-3 and at that point, the French looked like being destined for second spot.

Maxime Mermoz did bring a hint of respectability to the scoreline when he intercepted a Carter pass to score from halfway.  But there was to be no repeat of 2007, despite replacement fly-half Francois Trinh-Duc also going over from close-range late on.

Sonny Bill Williams responded as the Pool A fixture stretched in the dying embers but what was interesting to see was Carter knock over a drop-goal in the final quarter that, as signs go, showed that the All Blacks look to have learned lessons from previous World Cups.  The big question in Auckland and New Zealand though will be will it last the whole distance?

Man of the match:  Ma'a Nonu was sublime again at inside centre while Israel Dagg, Richie McCaw, Sam Whitelock and Jerome Kaino all put in good shifts.  But it was apparent that Daniel Carter seemed to be half-a-step quicker today in both body and mind as he regularly threatened the line while putting in his team-mates on more than one occasion.  It looks like he is coming into form at just the right time for New Zealand.

Moment of the match:  France were definitely on top in the opening exchanges before a scrummage saw the All Blacks win a penalty.  It was a combined statement from Owen Franks, Keven Mealamu and Tony Woodcock and also that the French were now the ones to be on the back foot.  And boy did they stagger for the remaining 70 minutes.

Villain of the match:  Rugby is a contact sport and the over-reaction of Dimitri Yachvili when Jerome Kaino's hand brushed him left a lot to be desired.  The crowd viewed the reply on the big screen and make no mistake, the boos were not aimed at the Blues blindside flanker.

The scorers:

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Thomson, Jane, Dagg 2, S.B. Williams
Cons:  Carter 3
Pens:  Carter
Drop:  Carter

For France:
Tries:  Mermoz, Trinh-Duc
Cons:  Yachvili 2
Pen:  Yachvili

New Zealand:  15 Israel Dagg, 14 Cory Jane, 13 Conrad Smith, 12 Ma'a Nonu, 11 Richard Kahui, 10 Daniel Carter, 9 Piri Weepu, 8 Adam Thomson, 7 Richie McCaw (c), 6 Jerome Kaino, 5 Sam Whitelock, 4 Brad Thorn, 3 Owen Franks, 2 Keven Mealamu, 1 Tony Woodcock.
Replacements:  16 Andrew Hore, 17 Ben Franks, 18 Ali Williams, 19 Anthony Boric, 20 Andy Ellis, 21 Colin Slade, 22 Sonny Bill Williams.

France 15 Damien Traille, 14 Vincent Clerc, 13 Aurélien Rougerie, 12 Maxime Mermoz, 11 Maxime Médard, 10 Morgan Parra, 9 Dimitri Yachvili, 8 Louis Picamoles, 7 Julien Bonnaire, 6 Thierry Dusautoir (c), 5 Pascale Papé, 4 Lionel Nallet, 3 Luc Ducalcon, 2 Dimitri Szarzewski, 1 Jean-Baptiste Poux.
Replacements:  16 William Servat, 17 Fabien Barcella, 18 Julien Pierre, 19 Imanol Harinordoquy, 20 Francois Trinh-Duc, 21 Fabrice Estebanez, 22 Cédric Heymans.

Referee:  Alain Rolland (Ireland)

England find their Mojo

Wings Mark Cueto and Chris Ashton both claimed hat-tricks as England smashed Romania 67-3 in Dunedin on Saturday.

England ran in a total of ten tries in a woefully one-sided encounter under the roof of the Otago Stadium.

Cueto grabbed his hat-trick of tries inside the first half-hour and Ashton added two more before half time to give England a 34-3 lead at the break.

The result moves England five points clear of Scotland -- who face Argentina on Sunday -- at the top of the group, virtually assuring their place in the quarter-finals.

Romania's only reply came through a first-half penalty from fly-half Marin Dumbrava.

The Northampton wing Ashton completed his own hat-trick in the second half after Ben Youngs, Ben Foden, Manu Tuilagi and Tom Croft had all joined in on the try-scoring festival.

It was one-way traffic from the first whistle and England will have every right to be pleased with their performance.  Just how much can be read into the scoreline against a minnow side featuring a lot of tired legs is debatable, however.

But you can only play what is placed in front of you, and England dominated in every sector.

Most pleasing for manager Martin Johnson will be the massive improvement in England's distribution and option taking, with nine out of ten tries being scored by back-line players (even Croft's try came out wide).

England were seldom troubled by the Oaks in the line-outs, Tuilagi was prominent in midfield while captain Lewis Moody and number eight James Haskell both enjoyed strong games.

There will still be elements that will concern Johnson, notably the needless penalties England conceded early on which undermined an otherwise bright start.

Once the scoreboard was ticking however, England were much cleaner at the breakdown and largely eliminated the sloppy work that characterised last weekend's performance against Georgia.

One cannot help feel that Romania had one eye on Wednesday's clash with Georgia but you can't take anything away from England's best performance at the tournament thus far.

Man of the match:  You can't argue with three tries in 26 minutes:  Mark Cueto was not only deadly in his primary role of finishing but was solid on defence and looked dangerous with every touch of the ball.

Moment of the match:  It took fifteen minutes for England to get their first try but from the moment Ashton cut through the Romanian line to put Cueto clear, the game was all but over.  Having missed the wins over Argentina and Georgia due to a back injury, Cueto marked his return in emphatic fashion.  England replaced Wilkinson with Toby Flood at half-time -- a sign that the struggle for the number ten jersey is far from over.

Villain of the match:  No nasty stuff worth reporting.

The scorers:

For England:
Tries:  Cueto 3, Ashton 3, Youngs, Foden, Tuilagi, Croft
Cons:  Wilkinson 3, Flood 3
Pen:  Wilkinson

For Romania:
Pen:  Dumbrava

England:  15 Ben Foden, 14 Chris Ashton, 13 Manu Tuilagi, 12 Mike Tindall, 11 Mark Cueto, 10 Jonny Wilkinson, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 James Haskell, 7 Lewis Moody (c), 6 Tom Croft, 5 Tom Palmer, 4 Louis Deacon, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Steve Thompson, 1 Alex Corbisiero.
Replacements:  16 Lee Mears, 17 David Wilson, 18 Simon Shaw, 19 Tom Wood, 20 Richard Wigglesworth, 21 Toby Flood, 22 Delon Armitage.

Romania:  15 Florin Adrian Vlaicu, 14 Stefan Eugen Ciuntu, 13 Ionel Cazan, 12 Iulian Dumitras, 11 Adrian Marian Apostol, 10 Marin Danut Dumbrava, 9 Lucian Mihai Sirbu, 8 Ovidiu Tonita, 7 Cosmin Aurel Ratiu, 6 Sandu Stelian Burcea, 5 Cristian Constantin Petre (capt), 4 Valentin Poparlan, 3 Silviu Florea, 2 Bogdan Zebega Suman, 1 Nicolae Nere.
Replacements:  16 Marius Tincu, 17 Paulica Ion, 18 Mihai Macovei, 19 Daniel Gabriel Ianus, 20 Valentin Nicolae Calafeteanu, 21 Csaba Minya Gal, 22 Catalin Marius Nicolae.

Venue:  Otago Stadium, Dunedin
Referee:  Romain Poite (France)
Assistant referees:  Jonathan Kaplan (South Africa), Simon McDowell (Ireland)
Television match official:  Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)

Friday, 23 September 2011

Wallabies power past USA

Australia returned to winning ways after their shock loss to Ireland at the Rugby World Cup after sweeping past the USA 67-5 in Wellington on Friday.

The Wallabies punished some weak defence from the Americans (responsible for 24 missed tackles) by running in eleven tries, with wing Adam Ashley-Cooper bagging a hat-trick.

However, the bonus-point Pool C victory could come at a major cost for the already injury-hit Australians after losing Kurtley Beale, Rob Horne, Wycliff Palu, Pat McCabe as well as Anthony Fainga'a to injury.

The USA started the match with plenty of promise, dominating proceedings with a fearless approach that caught the Wallabies by surprise.  That was until Australia clipped the high-flying Eagles wings with two quick-fire tries in the 8th and 11th minutes respectively.

First Rob Horne opened the scoring after a Quade Cooper break-out saw the pivot link with Kurtley Beale who then threw a pass to his former Waratahs'team-mate on his outside for a superb try in the corner.  Beale failed to add the extras.

Next over the line was ex-Wallaby skipper Rocky Elsom, who -- after exposing some sloppy defence from the Americans -- dotted down to hand his team a ten-point lead.  Again, Beale was off-target with the conversion.

Beale's two misses didn't seem to matter though, with the crowd anticipating plenty more tries to come from the Tri-Nations champs.

However, up until the half-hour mark it was all the USA as Eddie O'Sullivan's troops marched towards Australia's tryline and set up camp.  Number eight JJ Gagiano then dived over from a 5m scrum to bring out the loudest roar from the stands, who were clearly in support of the underdogs.

Eagles fly-half Nese Malifa shaved the right-hand upright with his conversion attempt, but by trailing Australia by just five points (10-5), the USA looked like they meant business.  Or so we thought.

With their tails up, the USA launched another attack at the Wallabies and a second try looked to be on the cards after Kevin Swiryn broke clear, only for the winger to lose possession in the tackle.  Elsom counter-attacked close to his own line, before unleashing Adam Ashley-Cooper on his outside who bounced off another weak tackle before passing inside to the supporting Beale for a length-of-the-field try.

Cooper took over the kicking duties and was successful from bang in front.  From then on in, the Wallabies took the game by the scruff of its neck and -- as expected -- began to pile on the points with centre Fainga'a going over for Australia's bonus-point try before half-time.

Cooper added to Australia's first-half kicking woes (four tries, three missed conversions) and the 22-5 scoreline at the break gave the Eagles a wee bit of respectability.

It wouldn't last though, as the fired-up Wallabies started the second half in the same fashion they ended the first, after Drew Mitchell marked his return to Test rugby with a well-worked try.

McCabe proved to be a worthy replacement for Horne when he followed suit with Australia's sixth touchdown.  The seventh, eighth and ninth tries deservedly came through Ashley-Cooper in a devastating six-minute spell.

Firstly the winger showed his pace to score on the outside, he then made the most of turnover ball to stroll in before completing his hat-trick as he supported a superb breakaway.

With Beale nursing an injury off the field, Berrick Barnes took his chance to impress with both hands -- setting up McCabe as well as Ashley-Cooper while showing coach Robbie Deans he could be Australia's answer with the tee after knocking over four of his five conversions.

With the Americans fading badly Faingaa added to his tally as he slid over in the corner -- and things got worse for the minnows as Blaine Scully was sin-binned.

Replacement number eight Radiko Samo scored Australia's final try two minutes from time before Faingaa copped a knee in the head in the last tackle of the game.

Man of the match:  Count them ... one, two, three -- it has to be Adam Ashley-Cooper, who proved to be a threat with ball in hand throughout when he wasn't crossing the whitewash.

Moment of the match:  Rocky Elsom's counter-attacking run that ended in Kurtley Beale's try proved to be the beginning of the end for the Americans.

Villain of the match:  A yellow card to USA full-back Blaine Scully was the only mishap in an otherwise incident-free spectacle.

The scorers:

For Australia:
Tries:  Horne, Elsom, Beale, Fainga'a 2, Mitchell, McCabe, Ashley-Cooper 3, Samo
Cons:  Cooper 2, Barnes 4

For USA:
Tries:  Gagiano

Australia:  15 Kurtley Beale, 14 Adam Ashley-Cooper, 13 Anthony Fainga'a, 12 Rob Horne, 11 Drew Mitchell, 10 Quade Cooper, 9 Will Genia (c), 8 Wycliff Palu, 7 Ben McCalman, 6 Rocky Elsom, 5 Nathan Sharpe, 4 Rob Simmons, 3 Ben Alexander, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 1 James Slipper.
Replacements:  16 Stephen Moore, 17 Sekope Kepu, 18 Dan Vickerman, 19 Radike Samo, 20 Luke Burgess, 21 Berrick Barnes, 22 Pat McCabe.

USA:  15 Blaine Scully, 14 Colin Hawley, 13 Tai Enosa, 12 Junior Sifa, 11 Kevin Swiryn, 10 Nese Malifa, 9 Tim Usasz (c), 8 JJ Gagiano, 7 Pat Danahy, 6 Inaki Basauri, 5 Hayden Smith, 4 Scott LaValla, 3 Eric Fry, 2 Phil Thiel, 1 Shawn Pittman.
Replacements:  16 Brian McClenahan, 17 Matekitonga Moeakiola, 18 Louis Stanfill, 19 Nic Johnson, 20 Mike Petri, 21 Roland Suniula, 22 Chris Wyles.

Referee:  Nigel Owens (Wales)

Thursday, 22 September 2011

Twelve-try Springboks run riot

South Africa cruised to an emphatic 87-0 World Cup Pool A win over Namibia on Thursday.

Veteran wing Bryan Habana's first-half score saw him set a new Test try-scoring record for the Springboks, finally breaking Joost van der Westhuizen's long-standing benchmark.

The Namibian scrum was under the cosh from the start, meaning South Africa's backs had plenty of quality ball and the men in green and gold raced to a 31-0 lead at the break

The defending champions had the bonus point secured by half time thanks to tries from Gio Aplon, Habana, Jaque Fourie and a penalty try against the Namibian scrum.

Aplon added a second in after the restart while Francois Hougaard and Juan de Jongh both also touched down twice.

With the Namibian defence dead on their feet, the game turned into a try festival as Frans Steyn, Morné Steyn and Danie Rossouw added their names to the scorecard.

Aplon was the first man to cross the whitewash after Hougaard beat three defenders to put him clear, but the moment all of South Africa had been waiting for came on 22 minutes when Habana had an easy run-in to collect his 39th Test try.

With the Namibian scrum buckling, referee George Clancy raised his arms under the sticks for the Boks third try before a magic off-load from Frans Steyn's set Jaque Fourie free for number four.

The Racing Metro utility back was in the mix again to score South Africa's first try of the second period -- meaning Steyn has scored in all three of the Boks games in the tournament so far.

It was one-way traffic in the last quarter with seven tries being scored in the last twenty minutes.  Morne Steyn, and his replacement Ruan Pienaar, made sure that no points were left behind as they slotted all thirteen of their kicks at goal.

If ever there was any doubt about the Springboks' capacity to defend their title, the rout in Albany confirmed that they mean business.

Man of the match:  Hard to pick a single player because the Boks dominated all over the park.  The official award went to Willem Alberts, who didn't score but left plenty of Namibians bruised.  We'll go for Francois Hougaard however.  Something always seems to happen when he has the ball in hand as illustrated by his two tries.

Moment of the match:  Twelve tries to choose from but one had special significance.  Bryan Habana's record-breaking try was a long time in coming, but is just reward for a distinguished career.

Villain of the match:  N/A

The scorers:

For South Africa:
Tries:  Aplon 2, Habana, penalty try, Fourie, F. Steyn, M. Steyn, De Jongh 2, Hougaard 2, Rossouw
Cons:  M. Steyn 6, Pienaar 6
Pen:  M. Steyn

South Africa:  15 Pat Lambie, 14 Gio Aplon, 13 Jaque Fourie, 12 Frans Steyn, 11 Bryan Habana, 10 Morné Steyn , 9 Francois Hougaard, 8 Pierre Spies, 7 Schalk Burger, 6 Willem Alberts, 5 Danie Rossouw, 4 Bakkies Botha, 3 CJ van der Linde, 2 John Smit (c), 1 Gurthrö Steenkamp.
Replacements:  16 Chiliboy Ralepelle, 17 Tendai Mtawarira, 18 Francois Louw, 19 Heinrich Brüssow, 20 Fourie du Preez, 21 Ruan Pienaar, 22 Juan de Jongh.

Namibia:  15 Chrysander Botha, 14 Danie Dames, 13 Danie van Wyk, 12 Piet van Zyl, 11 Heine Bock, 10 Theuns Kotze, 9 Eugene Jantjies, 8 Jacques Nieuwenhuis, 7 Jacques Burger (c), 6 Tinus du Plessis, 5 Nico Esterhuyse, 4 Heinz Koll, 3 Marius Visser, 2 Bertus O'Callaghan, 1 Johnnie Redelinghuys.
Replacements:  16 Hugo Horn, 17 Jane du Toit, 18 PJ van Lill, 19 Rohan Kitshoff, 20 Ryan de la Harpe, 21 Darryl de la Harpe, 22 Conrad Marais.

Venue:  North Harbour Stadium, Albany
Referee:  George Clancy (Ireland)
Assistant referees:  Bryce Lawrence (New Zealand), Tim Hayes (Wales)
TMO:  Graham Hughes (England)

Wednesday, 21 September 2011

Tonga too good for Japan

Tonga registered their first win at Rugby World Cup 2011 after seeing off Japan 31-18 in Whangerai on Wednesday.

Having lost to New Zealand and Canada, crowd favourites Tonga finally gave their fans something to cheer about following a well-earned win over an error-strewn Japanese outfit.

The Brave Blossoms had targeted this Pool A match as one of two games they wanted to win, but they were their own worst enemies with ball in hand.

Besides countless dropped passes, John Kirwan's team were turned over (Tonga had nine turnovers to Japan's zero) or penalised far too many times for indiscipline while fly-half James Arlidge failed to land any of his shots at goal.

However, Japan only trailed the Pacific islanders 18-13 at half-time and an entertaining display could have gone either way until midway through the second half when Tonga were able to open up daylight on the scoreboard.

Viliami Ma'afu, Tukulua Lokotui and Fetu'u Vainikolo all crossed for tries, with Kurt Morath slotting over 16 points for the Tongans.

Tonga started the match with a roar and a hiss, threatening Japan's tryline early on only for some terrific defending from the Brave Blossoms keeping them at bay.

Fumiaki Tanaka held number eight Ma'afu up over the line after three minutes but there was no stopping him three minutes later as he powered over from a 5m scrum.  Morath missed the conversion.

Japan tied the scores a few minutes later when prop Kensuke Hatakeyama managed to get the ball over the chalk after sustained pressure on Tonga's line.

But Tonga stole the lead again with the easiest of tries from the restart when lock Lokotui made his way over after Japan coughed up possession.  This time Morath converted.

Once again, Japan replied with a try of their own when New Zealand-born flank and the game's man-of-the-match Michael Leitch showed incredible strength to power over in the corner.

With Japan down to fourteen men after Arlidge was perhaps unfairly sin-binned by referee Dave Pearson, Morath nailed two penalties to give his team an 18-10 lead.

However it was Japan that finished the half with a flourish as stand-in kicker Shaun Webb slotted over a 39th-minute penalty.

There was little to choose between the two rivals at the start of the second half, but first blood went to Tonga through the boot of Morath.

And the South Sea islanders moved clear when wing Vainikolo made the most of some poor tackling to dive over in the corner for Tonga's third try of the evening.

Tonga, though, were punished for a run of penalties when replacement Halani Aulika was sin-binned -- and Japan took advantage of the extra man as centre Alisi Tupuailai crashed over.

Tonga gave themselves a 13-point cushion, though, courtesy of another Morath penalty.  And despite Japan's best efforts in attack in the final minutes of the match, they could not find a way through.

Tonga, currently ranked 15th on the IRB rankings, have won five of their 12 games against Japan but they last beat the Brave Blossoms way back in 2006.

Japan's final game is against Canada in Napier next Tuesday while Tonga play France in Wellington on October 1.

The scorers:

For Tonga:
Tries:  Ma'afu, Lokotui, Vainikolo
Cons:  Morath 2
Pens:  Morath 4

For Japan:
Tries:  Hatakeyama, Leitch, Tupuailai
Cons:  Webb

Tonga:  15 Vungakoto Lilo, 14 Fetu'u Vainikolo, 13 Siale Piutau, 12 Alipate Fatafehi, 11 Sukanaivalu Hufanga, 10 Kurt Morath, 9 Taniela Moa, 8 Viliami Ma'afu, 7 Sione Vaiomo'unga, 6 Sione Kalamafoni, 5 Paino Hehea, 4 Tukulua Lokotui, 3 Taufa'ao Filise, 2 Aleki Lutui (c), 1 Soane Tonga'uiha.
Replacements:  16 Aloisio Ma'asi, 17 Alisona Taumalolo, 18 Halani Aulika, 19 Joseph Tu'ineau, 20 Samiu Vahafolau, 21 Samisoni Fisilau, 22 Viliame Iongi.

Japan:  15 Shaun Webb, 14 Kosuke Endo, 13 Alisi Tupuailai, 12 Ryan Nicholas, 11 Hirotoki Onozawa, 10 James Arlidge, 9 Fumiaki Tanaka, 8 Takashi Kikutani (c), 7 Michael Leitch, 6 Itaru Taniguchi, 5 Toshizumi Kitagawa, 4 Luke Thompson, 3 Kensuke Hatakeyama, 2 Shota Horie, 1 Hisateru Hirashima.
Replacements:  16 Yusuke Aoki, 17 Nozomu Fujita, 18 Hitoshi Ono, 19 Sione Talikavili Vatuvei, 20 Atsushi Hiwasa, 21 Takehisa Usuzuki, 22 Murray Williams.

Referee:  Dave Pearson (England)

Tuesday, 20 September 2011

Azzurri savage Russia

Italy ran in nine tries to hammer Russia 53-17 in a rather one-sided World Cup Pool C encounter at Trafalgar Park in Nelson on Tuesday.

The result means Italy move level with Australia on five points in a pool that could have a massive impact on the make up of the play-offs.

The Russian scrum was moving in reverse as soon as the ref said ''engage'', meaning the Italian backs had plenty of quality first-phase ball to work with -- and they used to deadly effect.

The World Cup newcomers put on a gallant display against the USA last week but were simply outclassed by a more experienced, more clinical side.

It wasn't all bad news for the Russians, who scored three good tries -- their first in World Cup competition -- in an entertaining game.

Six first-half tries gave Italy a 38-7 lead at the break with wing Giulio Toniolatti grabbing two and referee Wayne Barnes awarding a penalty try against the Russian scrum.

Centre Tommaso Benvenuti added his second after the restart as Nick Mallett's side touched down three more times to break to the 50-point barrier in a more evenly-contested second half.

It took just six minutes for Italy to open the scoring as skipper Sergio Parisse crossed at the end of a flowing move.

It was one-way traffic for most of the rest of the half with Toniolatti, Benvenuti and scrum-half Edoardo Gori following their captain's example.

Russia did manage to sneak a try, with scrum-half Alexander Yanyushkin striking with a sniping run immediately after Italy were reduced to fourteen when hooker Fabio Ongaro saw yellow for a late tackle.

It was much the same for Italy at the start of the second half as wing Luke McLean and replacement flank Alessandro Zanni drove the Azzurri's advantage home.

But Russia finished strongly as they chased a four-try bonus point.  It wasn't to be, but well-taken tries from wing Vladimir Ostroushko and centre Alexey Makovetskiy were just reward for the Bears' hard work.

Man of the match:  He only played 56 minutes before being pulled off and wrapped in cotton wool, but Sergio Parisse was phenomenal, scoring one try and having a hand in creating three more.  Pure class.  A mention too for his opposite number, Victor Gresev, who worked tirelessly.

Moment of the match:  Parisse's try had the Bears on the ropes and Giulio Toniolatti's first try gave the Italians a healthy lead.  Not only was it a wonderful try to watch, but it effectively ended any suspends regarding the result.

Villain of the match:  No bad guys tonight.

The scorers:

For Italy:
Tries:  Parisse, Toniolatti 2, Benvenuti 2, penalty try, Gori, McLean, Zanni
Cons:  Bocchino 4

For Russia:
Tries:  Yanyushkin, Ostroushko, Makovetskiy
Con:  Rachkov

Yellow card:  Ongaro (Italy -- 32nd min -- late tackle)

Italy:  15 Andrea Masi, 14 Giulio Toniolatti, 13 Tommaso Benvenuti, 12 Matteo Pratichetti, 11 Luke McLean, 10 Riccardo Bocchino, 9 Edoardo Gori, 8 Sergio Parisse (capt), 7 Mauro Bergamasco, 6 Paul Derbyshire, 5 Marco Bortolami, 4 Quintin Geldenhuys, 3 Lorenzo Cittadini, 2 Fabio Ongaro, 1 Salvatore Perugini.
Replacements:  16 Tommaso D'Apice, 17 Martin Castrogiovanni, 18 Cornelius van Zyl, 19 Alessandro Zanni, 20 Pablo Canavosio, 21 Luciano Orquera, 22 Alberto Sgarbi.

Russia:  15 Igor Klyuchnikov, 14 Vasily Artemyev, 13 Andrey Kuzin, 12 Alexey Makovetskiy, 11 Vladimir Ostroushko, 10 Konstantin Rachkov, 9 Alexander Shakirov, 8 Victor Gresev , 7 Andrey Garbuzov, 6 Vyacheslav Grachev , 5 Adam Byrnes, 4 Alexander Voytov, 3 Ivan Prishchepenko, 2 Vladislav Korshunov (c), 1 Vladimir Botvinnikov
Replacements:  16 Valery Tsnobiladze, 17 Alexander Khrokin, 18 Denis Antonov, 19 Artem Fatakhov, 20 Alexander Yanyushkin, 21 Mikhail Sidorov, 22 Yury Kushnarev.

Venue:  Trafalgar Park, Nelson
Referee:  Wayne Barnes
Assistant referees:  Steve Walsh, Chris Pollock
TMO:  Shaun Veldsman

Sunday, 18 September 2011

Clerc hat-trick seals win for France

France wing Vincent Clerc scored three tries to help see off a resurgent Canada outfit 46-19 in the wet at McLean Park on Sunday.

In difficult conditions that made handling of the ball difficult, France scrum-half Moran Parra landed 23 points from the boot to ensure Les Bleus were able to bank their second win of the tournament in Napier.

The scrum-half's sure-footed accuracy in heavy rain meant France were able to bounce back from a slow start and quell the fight of the Canucks.

Canada tried hard but effort was about all they brought to the contest.

The Canadians had twice led early on but they were left to rue the misses from full-back James Pritchard as France were let off the hook.

Pritchard started well enough -- slotting over his first penalty attempt to put Canada into an early lead.  However, France hit back through Clerc after an up-and-under from Francois Trinh-Duc was missed by Pritchard, and the French flyer was able to pick up the loose ball and score an easy try.

The Canucks replied with a try of their own -- also from an up-and-under.  France full-back Damien Traille couldn't control the high ball and Canada centre Ryan Smith pounced for a converted try under the sticks.

Canada led 10-7, but failed to extend their lead after Pritchard missed two shots at goal, while Parra slotted over four penalties -- three in the final six minutes of the first half to gibe his team a 19-10 lead at half-time.

Pritchard missed his third penalty attempt three minutes after the break, however Canada pivot Ander Monro did cut the deficit with a drop-goal.  Parra, though, brought his personally tally to 17 points with his fifth successful penalty -- only for Monro to respond with his second drop-goal of the match.

Parra finally missed an attempt at goal in the 51st minute but Trinh-Duc was on target with a drop-goal of his own to restore the nine-point advantage.

In a see-saw battle, Canada responded again when Pritchard added a three-pointer.  However France put the game beyond doubt with a moment of brilliance from Traille breaking the Canadian resistance.

And although the Canucks attempted to find a way back into the game, France had the last word as Clerc crossed twice in the final minutes to give the score an unflattering look.

Man of the match:  Morgan Parra's kicking from the tee was flawless.

Moment of the match:  Canada's try alerted the French that they were gonna have a mighty big game on their hands.

Villain of the match:  Nothing to report!

The scorers:

For France:
Tries:  Clerc 3, Traille
Cons:  Parra 4
Pens:  Parra 5
Drop:  Trinh-Duc

For Canada:
Try:  Smith
Con:  Pritchard
Pens:  Pritchard
Drops:  Monro 2

France:  15 Damien Traille, 14 Vincent Clerc, 13 David Marty, 12 Maxime Mermoz, 11 Aurélien Rougerie (c), 10 Francois Trinh-Duc, 9 Morgan Parra, 8 Louis Picamoles, 7 Julien Bonnaire, 6 Fulgence Ouedraogo, 5 Romain, Millo-Chluski, 4 Pascale Papé, 3 Luc Ducalcon, 2 William Servat, 1 Jean-Baptiste Poux Poux.
Replacements:  16 Guilhem Guirado, 17 Fabien Barcella, 18 Julien Pierre, 19 Imanol Harinordoquy, 20 Dimitri Yachvili, 21 Fabrice Estebanez, 22 Maxime Médard.

Canada:  15 James Pritchard, 14 Ciaran Hearn, 13 DTH van der Merwe, 12 Ryan Smith, 11 Phil Mackenzie, 10 Ander Monro, 9 Ed Fairhurst, 8 Aaron Carpenter, 7 Chauncey O'Toole, 6 Adam Kleeberger, 5 Jamie Cudmore, 4 Jebb Sinclair, 3 Jason Marshall, 2 Pat Riordan (c), 1 Hubert Buydens.
Replacements:  16 Ryan Hamilton, 17 Scott Franklin, 18 Tyler Hotson, 19 Nanyak Dala, 20 Sean White, 21 Nathan Hirayama, 22 Conor Trainor.

Referee:  Craig Joubert (South Africa)

Georgia make life tough for England

England ran six tries past Georgia for a 41-10 win, but were made to work overtime for their victory in Dunedin on Sunday.

Whilst England bagged maximum points against the brave Georgians, who never gave up until the final whistle, Martin Johnson will know there's still plenty of work ahead in what was another unconvincing display by his side.

But as it was, Shontayne Hape (2), Delon Armitage, Manu Tuilagi and Chris Ashton (2) crossed for tries, while Toby Flood added 11 points with the boot.

Georgia managed a try of their own, through number eight Dimitri Basilaia, however will rue five missed kicks at goal by pivot Merab Kvirikashvili -- three in the first half, and two after the break.

The minnows, who had to cope with a four-day turnaround after a 15-6 defeat by Scotland on Wednesday, briefly had a shot at the greatest World Cup upset of all-time.

They were only 17-10 down at half-time after England, for the second match in a row, had a player yellow-carded, with hooker Dylan Hartley sin-binned shortly before the break.

However, one couldn't blame England for thinking they were in for an easy night's work as they opened the scoring after just three minutes after Hape scooted through a gap at the fringes of the breakdown to run through unopposed.

Georgia's response was almost immediate, though, as England coughed up possession from a scrum in their own 22, but Ashton did just enough to deny opposite number Irakli Machkhaneli in the corner.

Kvirikashvili then missed two shots at goal while Alexander Todua was brought down by Ben Youngs as the eastern Europeans took the game to their more illustrious hosts.

England were doing themselves no favours as they conceded a series of needless penalties at the breakdown.  However having endured an uncomfortable 15-minute spell, England began to settle and put the phases together.

And unlike Georgia, they took their chance when it came along with Hape benefiting after a series of drives forward to dot down for his second try.  Flood converted to put England 14-0 up after 22 minutes.

Kvirikashvili was off target with his third successive kick before the Georgia fly-half finally found his target after 27 minutes.  Flood, though, responded with a penalty of his own to restore England's 14-point lead.

But Georgia finished the half with a flourish and England again shot themselves in the foot as Hartley was sin-binned for hands in a ruck.

Basilaia bundled his way over from a close-range scrum for a try on the stroke of half-time which Kvirikashvili converted.

England's nerves were soothed though when wing Delon Armitage went over for a 45th minute try after being denied earlier by the TMO, who ruled his foot went into touch.

Georgia kept coming and when England infringed again, Kvirikashvili hit the left post from right in front.  And just after the hour mark England put the game beyond Georgia's reach, with two quickfire tries.

First Tuilagi scythed through on a well-angled, cut back run from a pass by Youngs before Ashton, released by flanker Tom Wood, had too much speed for a tired defence to swallow dive in under the posts.

In the dying seconds, Ashton crossed in the corner for his second try of the match.

Victory for England, but a proud performance from Georgia.

Man of the match:  A late inclusion at number eight after Nick Easter's injury, James Haskell produced a lung-bursting defensive performance and gave England some go-forward, but was overshadowed by Georgia openside and our man of the match Mamuka Gorgodze.

Moment of the match:  Of all the seven tries scored, we felt the only one that left a lasting impression was the one scored by Georgia.  It signalled that the eastern Europeans weren't going to roll over so easily.

Villain of the match:  Dylan Hartley joins England's yellow card club.

The scorers:

For England:
Tries:  Hape 2, Armitage, Tuilagi, Ashton 2
Cons:  Flood 4
Pen:  Flood

For Georgia:
Try:  Basilaia
Con:  Kvirikashvili
Pen:  Kvirikashvili

England:  15 Ben Foden, 14 Chris Ashton, 13 Manu Tuilagi, 12 Shontayne Hape, 11 Delon Armitage, 10 Toby Flood, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 James Haskell, 7 Lewis Moody (c), 6 Tom Wood, 5 Tom Palmer, 4 Simon Shaw, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Dylan Hartley, 1 Matt Stevens.
Replacements:  16 Steve Thompson, 17 Alex Corbisiero, 18 Tom Croft, 19 Louis Deacon, 20 Joe Simpson, 21 Jonny Wilkinson, 22 Matt Banahan.

Georgia:  15 Revaz Gigauri, 14 Irakli Machkhaneli, 13 David Kacharava, 12 Tedo Zibzibadze, 11 Alexander Todua, 10 Merab Kvirikashvili, 9 Irakli Abuseridze (c), 8 Dimitri Basilaia, 7 Mamuka Gorgodze, 6 Shalva Sutiashvili, 5 Vakhtang Maisuradze, 4 Ilia Zedginidze, 3 David Kubriashvili, 2 Jaba Bregvadze, 1 David Khinchagishvili.
Replacements:  16 Akvsenti Giorgadze, 17 David Zirakashvili, 18 Levan Datunashvili, 19 Giorgi Chkhaidze, 20 Bidzina Samkharadze, 21 Givi Berishvili, 22 Lasha Khmaladze.

Referee:  Jonathan Kaplan (South Africa)

Wales still alive at World Cup 2011

Wales kept their World Cup quarter-final hopes alive after seeing off Samoa 17-10 at Waikato Stadium in Hamilton on Sunday.

Trailing by four points (6-10) at half-time, Wales dug deep to deny the Samoans victory thanks to a try by wing Shane Williams thirteen minutes from full-time which proved to be the match-winner.

After major upsets in 1991 and 1999 against Samoa, it was Wales' first victory over their bogey team at a World Cup tournament.

The win, following their 16-17 opening loss to South Africa, puts Wales in the box seat to qualify second from Pool D with a likely quarter-final against Six Nations rivals Ireland.

However Wales were given a scare or two along the way and it looked as if Warren Gatland's reign as coach could be brought to an end in his hometown of Hamilton.

In bright and breezy conditions at a packed Waikato Stadium, James Hook's early penalty from the halfway line went narrowly wide and Samoa passed up a golden chance when Sailosi Tagicakibau spilled a low pass just metres from the tryline.

Wales suffered a blow when flanker Danny Lydiate limped off in just the 11th minute to be replaced by Andy Powell.  But Hook was gifted an easy three points when Maurie Faasavalu high-tackled pivot Rhys Priestland.

Jamie Roberts crossed on 14 minutes but was brought back for a forward pass and Priestland missed his third drop-goal of the World Cup, before Samoa full-back Paul Williams levelled the scores with a well-struck penalty.

Samoa's forwards disintegrated under a powerful Welsh scrum to give Hook another penalty to make it 6-3.

Despite clearly having issues in the scrum, the Samoans had no such problems in the breakdown -- with their pack happy to hammer away around the fringes of the breakdown to drive Wales back.

And they were left frustrated when an 18-phase spell ended with Fa'asavalu burrowing over from close range, only for the flanker to be pinged for a double movement.

A missed penalty from Williams soon after did little to lift the mood of the Samoans.

However, Samoa had the final say in the first half as their forwards took control and they dealt Wales an enormous hit when another crunching attack culminated in a try to prop Anthony Perenise's on the stroke of half-time.  Williams' conversion gave the islanders a 10-6 half-time lead.

Hook was replaced by Leigh Halfpenny at half-time after a shoulder injury and the Welsh reduced the margin to 10-9 when Priestland's penalty fortuitously bounced off the crossbar and over.

The Wales backs were suddenly in the game and centre Jonathan Davies had the tryline at his mercy when a long cross-field kick bounced off his legs, but Priestland then kicked them 12-10 ahead after a ruck infringement.

And Wales were again rewarded for their greater endeavour when Halfpenny broke down the left and fed Davies, whose one-handed pass was gathered off the floor by Williams for his 55th Test try, 13 minutes from the end.

Samoa regrouped and continued to hammer away at the Wales line but they couldn't find a way through.  Samoa's forwards massed for one final assault but the attempt was undone when number eight George Stowers lost control of the ball at the tryline.

Wales survive to fight another day.

Man of the match:  Sam Warburton did some great work for Wales at key moments, and he was at the forefront of his team's effort, however it's hard to look past Welsh Wizard Shane Williams whose try allowed his team to breathe a little easier.

The scorers:

For Wales:
Try:  Williams
Pens:  Hook 2, Priestland 2

For Samoa:
Try:  Perenise
Con:  Williams
Pen:  Williams

Wales:  15 James Hook, 14 George North, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 Shane Williams, 10 Rhys Priestland, 9 Mike Phillips, 8 Toby Faletau, 7 Sam Warburton (c), 6 Dan Lydiate, 5 Alun-Wyn Jones, 4 Luke Charteris, 3 Adam Jones, 2 Huw Bennett, 1 Paul James.
Replacements:  16 Lloyd Burns, 17 Gethin Jenkins, 18 Bradley Davies, 19 Andy Powell, 20 Tavis Knoyle, 21 Scott Williams, 22 Leigh Halfpenny.

Samoa:  15 Paul Williams, 14 Sailosi Tagicakibau, 13 George Pisi, 12 Seilala Mapusua, 11 Alesana Tuilagi, 10 Tusi Pisi, 9 Kahn Fotuali'i, 8 George Stowers, 7 Maurie Fa'asavalu, 6 Ofisa Treviranus, 5 Daniel Leo, 4 Kane Thompson, 3 Anthony Perenise, 2 Mahonri Schwalger (c), 1 Sakaria Taulafo.
Replacements:  16 Ti'i Paulo, 17 Census Johnston, 18 Joe Tekori, 19 Taiasina Tuifu'a, 20 Junior Poluleuligaga, 21 Eliota Fuimaono Sapolu, 22 Tasesa Lavea.

Referee:  Alain Rolland (Ireland)

Saturday, 17 September 2011

Ireland shock lifeless Wallabies

Ireland scored the first major upset of RWC 2011 after stunning Australia 15-6 at Eden Park in Auckland on Saturday.

There is no hiding the fact that a poor Wallabies side came off second best to the Irish as their key players were superbly contained by a side who in Brian O'Driscoll's words ''dug deep into the well''.

Ireland love silencing the critics -- as they have done so many times in the past in such one-off games -- and they did just that in a team effort that was spearheaded by loosehead prop Cian Healy.

Healy was the heartbeat of an Irish scrum that helped the underdogs claim the majority of their points, while Sean O'Brien, Stephen Ferris and Paul O'Connell chipped in with strong showings.

But for Australia there are some harsh lessons to learn from this shock defeat, not least why their playmaking duo of Will Genia and Quade Cooper were seemingly absent for most of the game.

Cooper looked disinterested in Auckland while his centre combination of Pat McCabe and Anthony Faingaa struggled to make any impact outside him.  Kurtley Beale was the only shining light for the Wallabies, who now look like joining New Zealand and South Africa in the tougher side of the knockout draw.  England and France must be licking their lips.

The day started badly and ultimately got worse for the Wallabies when vital openside flanker David Pocock and hooker Stephen Moore both pulled out of the game injured before kick-off.

It would only have been human of Irish fans to sense an opening for a shock result and their team duly delivered, despite going 0-3 down on 12 minutes to a James O'Connor penalty.

Jonathan Sexton, who had another hot-and-cold night with the boot, sent over a levelling penalty four minutes later and then knocked Ireland ahead with a drop to cap a good spell.

O'Connor was also struggling to find his range though before a moment that summed up Australia's troubles occurred.  Genia was under pressure at the base of a scrum and upon picking up the ball he was met and driven back ten metres by Ulster back-row Ferris.

The neutral promptly knew that the game could go either way as the confidence in the Irish camp continued to grow, despite O'Connor levelling matters on 24 minutes.  That was how things stayed until the break when there were no doubt choice words from Robbie Deans.

It was to no avail as Ireland continued to win the tight exchanges and mini-battles in the engine room and midfield, with James Horwill becoming increasingly frustrated as he gave away another three at a ruck on 50 minutes.  Ireland were in front again and looking calm.

Then came a moment that many thought would make or break this game as Gordon D'Arcy hobbled off and was replaced by Ronan O'Gara.  Sexton subsequently shifted out to inside centre and it worked superbly for Declan Kidney's side, with the duo pinning back the Wallabies and O'Gara ultimately adding six more points for a memorable 15-6 victory.

Man of the match:  Little doubt about this one as Cian Healy was at the heart of this victory.  He made Ben Alexander's life miserable at Eden Park and kicked on from Tom Court's scrum performance last week.  Mentions too for Sean O'Brien and Paul O'Connell.

Moment of the match:  Ireland fans must have been licking their lips when news broke that Stephen Moore and David Pocock had withdrawn from the game injured.  Would they have made a difference? Pocock definitely as Ben McCalman struggled to have any impact.

Villain of the match:  Nothing to report.

The scorers:

For Australia:
Pen:  O'Connor 2

For Ireland:
Pen:  Sexton 2, O'Gara 2
Drop:  Sexton

Australia:  15 Kurtley Beale, 14 James O'Connor, 13 Anthony Fainga'a, 12 Pat McCabe, 11 Adam Ashley-Cooper, 10 Quade Cooper, 9 Will Genia, 8 Radike Samo, 7 Ben McCalman, 6 Rocky Elsom, 5 James Horwill (c), 4 Dan Vickerman, 3 Ben Alexander, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 1 Sekope Kepu.
Replacements:  16 Saia Faingaa, 17 James Slipper, 18 Rob Simmons, 19 Wycliff Palu, 20 Scott Higginbotham, 21 Luke Burgess, 22 Drew Mitchell.

Ireland:  15 Rob Kearney, 14 Tommy Bowe, 13 Brian O'Driscoll (c), 12 Gordon D'Arcy, 11 Keith Earls, 10 Jonathan Sexton, 9 Eoin Reddan, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 Sean O'Brien, 6 Stephen Ferris, 5 Paul O'Connell, 5 Donncha O'Callaghan, 3 Mike Ross, 2 Rory Best, 1 Cian Healy.
Replacements:  16 Sean Cronin, 17 Tom Court, 18 Donnacha Ryan, 19 Denis Leamy, 20 Conor Murray, 21 Ronan O'Gara, 22 Andrew Trimble.

Referee:  Bryce Lawrence (New Zealand)
Assistant referees:  Dave Pearson (England), Stuart Terheege (England)
Television match official:  Graham Hughes (England)

Boks show Fiji no mercy

South Africa made up for their opening World Cup wobble against Wales by powering past Fiji 49-3 in Wellington on Saturday.

The defending champions were a far superior outfit from the one that edged the Welsh by one point a week ago, and silenced their critics with a comprehensive six-try victory.

Perhaps the biggest achievement for South Africa was keeping the Flying Fijians tryless, and credit must go to their outstanding defence which was rock-solid for 80 minutes.

Whilst Fiji never took a step back, the Boks simply had too much class for the islanders in a free-flowing spectacle that saw plenty of running rugby -- most of which came from the men in green and gold.

Fiji had the Boks on the backfoot for the early stages of the first half after stringing some impressive phases together with ball in hand, and it took some tremendous defensive work from South Africa to keep the islanders at bay.

Bok pivot Morne Steyn missed his first shot at goal that would have given his team the perfect start with barely three minutes gone on the clock, but his namesake Francois was more successful with a whopping 60m penalty kick to put South Africa on the board.

Fiji replied with a three-pointer of their own through centre Seremaia Bai that leveled the scores (3-3), but the Boks settled their supporters' nerves when prop Gurthrö Steenkamp steamrolled past two tacklers for a well-worked try.

Frans Steyn made the initial break, showing tremendous upper-body strength with ball in hand to take his team into Fiji's dangerzone, before the ball was shifted on the shortside to Steenkamp finished off in the corner.

Morne Steyn was on target with the touchline conversion and stretched his team's lead even further with a penalty that gave SA some breathing space at 13-3.

The Boks weren't done there, however, and were over for their second try when centre Jaque Fourie touched down in the same corner visited by Steenkamp seven minutes earlier.  The TMO was called in to judge whether Fourie's foot strayed into touch, but the green light was given.

Steyn missed the conversion put nailed another penalty on the stroke of half-time to take the Boks into the break 21-3 ahead.

After a scrappy start to the second half, a moment of brilliance from Bok flank Heinrich Brussow helped Frans Steyn cross for their third try.  With South Africa hot on the attack, Brussow chipped over the top for Steyn to regather and step inside to score.  Morne Steyn was on target with the extras.

Despite the quality of the game dropping, with the pace and defensive efforts telling on both sides, the Boks were able to register their 100th World Cup try when Morne Steyn dived over.

Naipolioni Nalaga thought he had finally breached the Boks defence when he dived over in the corner but play was called back for a forward pass.

And South Africa rubbed salt into the wounds as replacement prop Tendai Mtawarira stretched out from close-range after taking a pop pass from that man Frans Steyn who had been stopped inches short.  Morne Steyn brought his personally tally to 19 points with the extras.

Nalaga dived over again with nine minutes left but this time the ball was knocked out of his grasp by opposite number JP Pietersen.

Again the Boks made the most of the let-off, with the hard-working Danie Rossouw crashing through with three minutes left to seal the deal for South Africa.

Man of the match:  Every Bok player from 1-15 put their hand up, but we'll go for Frans Steyn, who was influential throughout.

The scorers:

For South Africa:
Tries:  Steenkamp, Fourie, F Steyn, M Steyn, Mtawarira, Rossouw
Cons:  M Steyn 5
Pens:  F Steyn, M Steyn 2

For Fiji:
Pens:  Bai

South Africa:  15 Pat Lambie, 14 JP Pietersen, 13 Jaque Fourie, 12 Frans Steyn, 11 Odwa Ndungane, 10 Morné Steyn, 9 Fourie du Preez, 8 Pierre Spies, 7 Schalk Burger, 6 Heinrich Brüssow, 5 Danie Rossouw, 4 Bakkies Botha, 3 Jannie du Plessis, 2 John Smit (c), 1 Gurthrö Steenkamp.
Replacements:  16 Bismarck du Plessis, 17 Tendai Mtawarira, 18 François Louw, 19 Willem Alberts, 20 François Hougaard, 21 Ruan Pienaar, 22 Juan de Jongh.

Fiji:  15 Kini Murimurivalu, 14 Vereniki Goneva, 13 Gaby Lovobalavu, 12 Seremaia Bai, 11 Naipolioni Nalaga, 10 Waisea Sedre Luveniyali, 9 Neemia Kenatale, 8 Sakiusa Matadigo, 7 Akapusi Qera, 6 Dominiko Maiwiriwiri Waqaniburotu, 5 Wame Lewaravu, 4 Leone Nakarawa, 3 Deacon Manu (c), 2 Sunia Koto, 1 Campese Ma'afu.
Replacements:  16 Talemaitoga Dautu Tuapati, 17 Waisea Nailago, 18 Netani Edward Talei, 19 Sisa Koyamaibole, 20 Vitori Tomu Buatava, 21 Nicky Little, 22 Ravai Fatiaki.

Referee:  Romain Poite (France)

Pumas hit back against Romania

Argentina recorded an immediate response to their defeat to England by teaching Romania a rugby lesson in a 43-8 win in Invercargill on Saturday.

The Pumas were full value for their win in a one-sided Pool B encounter that saw seven tries being scored -- six of them to Argentina.

Santiago Fernandez, Juan Manuel Leguizamon, Juan Figallo, Lucas Gonzalez Amorosino, Florin Vlaicu and Genaro Fessia all crossed for tries -- and Argentina could have scored more but for some desperate Romanian defending.

There was also am improved showing with the boot as centre Martin Rodriguez, who was guilty of missing too many efforts in the 13-9 loss to England, was more accurate this time as he added 13 points from the kicking tee.

He missed an early penalty attempt with barely three minutes up on the clock but made up for his blunder by converting Argentina's opening try to pivot Fernandez, who strolled over in the sixth minute.

The Pumas wasted little time in scoring their second when -- just two minutes later -- flanker Leguizamon used his pace and power to charge through two would-be defenders to crash over beside the posts.

Romania had hardly touched the ball twelve minutes into the match, but were rewarded for their best spell of pressure with a penalty and fly-half Tiberius Dimofte made no mistake.

However, the Pumas extended their lead even further when prop Figallo burrowed his over from close range before full-back Amorosino secured Argentina's four-try bonus point when he broke through some tired tackling after a concerted spell of pressure.

Romania weren't prepared to roll over that easily though and hit back with a try through wing Ionel Cazan, who flew over in the corner after the Oaks had stretched the Pumas defence for the first time in the match.

Dimofte missed the conversion as well as a penalty attempt on the stroke of half-time that saw Romania head into the break 26-8 down.

Argentina started the second half in the same fashion they began the first -- with a missed penalty followed by a successful one through Rodriguez.

Romania kept the Pumas tryless until prop Mihaita Lazar was sin-binned for repeated infringements.

Argentina finally broke the Romania resistance when replacement back Juan Jose Imhoff stepped and then showed electric acceleration to score a converted try under the sticks.

Romania thought they had hit back when Dimofte intercepted and found Daniel Carpo in support.  The number eight shipped the ball to Cazan but as the winger attempted to keep the move alive, Argentina were able to hack the ball on -- with replacement flanker Fessia picking up and running in unopposed to score.

Game, set and match Argentina!

The win sets up a showdown with Scotland in Wellington next Sunday with the winner in pole position to ensure a slot in the quarter-finals, while the east Europeans are now set to make it seven straight failures to get out of the pool stages at the World Cup.

The scorers:

For Argentina:
Tries:  Fernandez, Leguizamon, Figallo, Amorosino, Imhoff, Fessia
Con:  Rodriguez 5
Pen:  Rodriguez

For Romania:
Try:  Cazan
Pen:  Dimofte

Argentina:  15 Lucas González Amorosino, 14 Gonzalo Camacho, 13 Martin Rodriguez, 12 Marcelo Bosch, 11 Horacio Agulla, 10 Santiago Fernandez, 9 Nicolas Vergallo, 8 Juan Martin Fernandez Lobbe, 7 Juan Manuel Leguizamon, 6 Julio Farias Cabello, 5 Patricio Albacete, 4 Manuel Carizza, 3 Juan Figallo, 2 Mario Ledesma, 1 Rodrigo Roncero.
Replacements:  16 Agustin Creevy, 17 Martin Scelzo, 18 Mariano Galarza, 19 Alejandro Campos, 20 Alfredo Lalanne, 21 Nicolas Sanchez, 22 Juan Jose Imhoff.

Romania:  15 Iulian Dumitras, 14 Madalin Lemnaru, 13 Csaba Gal, 12 Constantin Gheara, 11 Ionel Cazan, 10 Tiberius Dimofte, 9 Florin Surugiu, 8 Daniel Carpo, 7 Ovidiu Tonita, 6 Mihai Macovei, 5 Cristian Petre, 4 Valentin Ursache, 3 Paulica Ion, 2 Marius Tincu (c), 1 Mihaita Lazar.
Replacements:  16 Bogdan Suman, 17 Silviu Florea, 18 Valentin Poparlan, 19 Daniel Ianus, 20 Valentin Calafeteanu, 21 Marin Dumbrava, 22 Florin Vlaicu

Referee:  Steve Walsh (Australia)