Saturday, 13 November 2004

France 27 Australia 14

France outgunned Australia in a pulsating match in Paris for a first win over the Wallabies for three years.

Nicolas Brusque and Frederic Michalak scored tries and scrum-half Jean-Baptiste Elissalde kicked 17 points for France's eighth straight win.

Captain George Gregan scored for the Wallabies but his side were undone by French invention and stout defence.

Australia trailed 12-11 at half time and struggled to find their spark against the Six Nations champions.

France coach Bernard Laporte said:  "I am proud of my players.  They battled to win this match by applying a lot of defensive pressure and taking risks.

"And don't forget we were kept out three times on the try line."

Australia coach Eddie Jones admitted his side "just weren't good enough".

"The second half was really disappointing, there were too many turnovers.  We would have needed to be tactically and technically better.  We didn't respond to the pressure," said Jones.

"Our consistency was not good enough.  We went back to our old habits.  It just wasn't good enough."


Points Scorers:

France:  (12) 27
Tries:  Brusque, Michalak
Cons:  Elissalde
Pens:  Elissalde (5)

Australia:  (11) 14
Tries:  Gregan
Pens:  Giteau, Flatley (2)

The teams:

France:  Brusque, Rougerie, Marsh, Jauzion, Heymans, Michalak, Elissalde, Milloud, Servat, Marconnet, Thion, Pelous, Betsen, Magne, Harinordoquy.
Replacements:  Bruno, Mas, Pape, Bonnaire, Peyrelongue, Poitrenaud, Dominici.

Australia:  Latham, Rathbone, Mortlock, Giteau, Tuqiri, Larkham, Gregan, Young, Paul, Baxter, Harrison, Vickerman, Smith, Waugh, Roe.
Replacements:  Cannon, Dunning, Chisholm, Lyons, Flatley, Rogers, Sailor.

Referee:  Chris White (RFU)

Scotland 100 Japan 8

Scotland put last weekend's defeat against Australia behind them with a try-scoring romp over Japan at McDiarmid Park in Perth.

The inexperienced tourists were shown no mercy by a rampant Scottish side who ran in 15 tries.

Ally Hogg opened the scoring after only 90 seconds, but Japan hit back with a try from Daiman moments later.

It was one-way traffic after that as Scotland racked up the most points they have ever scored in an international.

Scotland went ahead with less than two minutes on the clock through a try from flanker Hogg.

Prop Allan Jacobsen made a break on the halfway line and fed to scrum half Cusiter who then sent Hogg clear into the 22 and the Edinburgh man touched down in the corner.

Paterson converted, but Japan hit back immediately, winger Daiman scoring a try in the left corner after excellent passing and pace from the Japanese backline.

Poor handling from winger Sean Lamont saw a clear-cut Scotland try go begging after the Glasgow winger dropped a pass with the line beckoning.

The opening quarter was played at a frantic pace with both sides tying to keep the ball alive and play the game at a hundred miles an hour.

The result was a scrappy, error-strewn affair, but Scotland settled their nerves with a second try after 19 minutes.

Centre Andy Henderson made a burst through the Japanese midfield before the ball was recycled and fed blind out the backs to Edinburgh full-back Hugo Southwell who raced over to score.

Paterson added the conversion, before slotting a penalty moments later to stretch the Scottish lead to 17-5.

The Scotland wing then grabbed a try of his own ― and another conversion ― after dancing round the Japanese defence on the left touchline.

Japan reduced the scoreline slightly on the half-hour mark with a penalty from scrum-half Ikeda, after flanker Donnie Macfadyen was penalised for hanging onto the ball in front of the posts.

But Scotland nudged ahead thanks to a first ever try in a Test for Scotland from Dan Parks and a Paterson conversion.

Before the half-time whistle, it was try-time again for Matt Williams' side, this time number 8 Jon Petrie popping out of a ruck on the half-way line and sprinting 45 yards unopposed to the Japanese line.

Paterson was unable to maintain his perfect kicking display however and failed to send over the extra two points ― but the Scots still entered the break with a commanding 36-8 lead.

The scoring continued five minutes after the break with Paterson hacking on a bouncing ball from a Dan Parks chip to grab his second try of the afternoon.

Substitute scrum-half Mike Blair then got in on the act, touching down for a try after collecting another delicately-placed Dan Parks kick.

Next up for a try was Henderson, with the Glasgow player running in unchallenged after Scottish pressure created a huge overlap out wide.

Paterson increased his points haul with his third try and another conversion to make it 60-8 with less than an hour gone.

Replacement centre Graeme Morrison added more points to the scoreline with his first ever try for his country, before Lamont, Southwell, Macfadyen and Robbie Russell stretched the lead even further with touchdowns of their own.

With Paterson sending over several conversions to take his points tally to 40, Russell rounded off the scoring with another try to take the scoreline to 100 points for the first time in Scottish Test rugby history.


Points Scorers:

Scotland:  (36) 100
Tries:  Hogg, Southwell (2), Paterson (3), Parks, Petrie, Blair, Henderson, Morrison, Lamont, MacFadyen, Russell (2)
Cons:  Paterson (11)
Pens:  Paterson

Japan:  (8) 8
Tries:  Daiman
Pens:  Ikeda

The teams:

Scotland:  H Southwell (Edinburgh), C Paterson (Edinburgh), B Hinshelwood (Worcester), A Henderson (Glasgow), S Lamont (Glasgow), D Parks (Glasgow), C Cusiter (The Borders), A Jacobsen (Edinburgh), G Bulloch (Glasgow), G Kerr (Leeds Tykes), S Grimes (Newcastle Falcons), N Hines (Edinburgh), A Hogg (Edinburgh), D Macfadyen (Glasgow), J Petrie (Glasgow).
Replacements:  R Russell (London Irish), C Smith (Edinburgh), S MacLeod (The Borders), J White (Sale Sharks), M Blair (Edinburgh), G Ross (Leeds Tykes), G Morrison (Glasgow).

Japan:  Ryohei Miki (World Fighting Bull), Koichiro Kubota (NEC), Seiichi Shimomura (Sanyo), Yukio Motoki (Kobe), Hayato Daimon (Kobe), Keisuke Sawaki (Suntory), Wataru Ikeda (Sanyo), Takuro Miuchi (NEC), Hajime Kiso (Yamaha), Naoya Okubo (JRFU), Hitoshi Ono (Toshiba), Takanori Kumagai (NEC), Ryo Yamamura (Yamaha), Takashi Yamaoka (Suntory), Yuichi Hisadomi (NEC).
Replacements:  Mitsugu Yamamoto (Sanyo), Masahito Yamamoto (Toyota), Feletliki Mau (World Fighting Bull), Takatoyo Yamaguchi (Kubota), Kiyonori Tanaka (Suntory), Masatoshi Mukoyama (NEC), Hideyuki Yoshida (Kubota).

Referee:  A Cole (Australia)

Ireland 17 South Africa 12

Ronan O'Gara scored all Ireland's points as the home side claimed only their second ever win over South Africa on an emotional day at Lansdowne Road.

O'Gara's first-half try, poached after a quick tap-penalty, helped the Irish to a 8-3 lead at half-time.

Three further O'Gara penalties extended Ireland's lead to 17-6 as the game entered the final quarter.

Two Percy Montgomery penalties set up a frantic finish but Ireland held out to claim a famous victory.

Ireland began strongly and were never led, but the match was tense and closely fought throughout.

Aware of the threat posed by the South Africans, Ireland pressed hard from the outset, and played some impressive rugby while searching for a breakthrough.

Early on, Denis Hickie thought he was in for a try after a delightful backline move but Shane Horgan's pass was adjudged to have gone forward by referee Paul Honiss.

Ireland continued to press and they showed their intent by opting for a line-out in the 19th minute when three straight-forward points were on offer.

Another South African infringement a minute later led to Ireland's first points ― O'Gara took a quick tap-penalty and charged over the opposition line for an Irish try.

The Springboks could feel hard done by as captain John Smit had his back to the play when O'Gara pounced after referee Honiss had told the skipper to warn his own players after consistent infringements.

Stung by the score, the South Africans almost replied with a try of their own within 60 seconds with Geordan Murphy's ankle-tap tackle denying a certain try for Percy Montgomery.

However, the Springboks did win a penalty a minute later which Montgomery easily slotted to cut Ireland's lead to 5-3.

Ireland got out of jail when the South Africans had a three-to-one overlap near the Irish line only to waste the chance.

After the sustained Springboks pressure, the Irish produced an attack of their own in the 34th minute which culminated with O'Gara's clever drop-goal to restore his side's lead to five points which remained the margin at half-time.

Sustained Irish pressure immediately after half-time was rewarded by another O'Gara penalty.

However, Montgomery responded quickly by slotting over a superb penalty from near the right touchline to cut Ireland's lead to five points again.

Montgomery then burst through the Irish defence in the 48th minute and it took a superb Girvan Dempsey tackle to prevent a try.

The South Africans suffered a double-blow in the 52nd minute when Schalk Burger was sin-binned for the second week in a row after killing the ball and O'Gara punished the transgression by notching another penalty.

In the 61st minute, Hickie was left frustrated by a poor pass from Girvan Dempsey as a chance to seal the match was wasted.

However, a late tackle on Brian O'Driscoll enabled O'Gara to notch another penalty in the 63rd minute which extended Ireland's lead to 17-6.

However, two Montgomery penalties had Ireland's lead in peril again as the Springboks closed to within five points with seven minutes remaining.

South Africa produced a huge effort in the closing minutes but Ireland held on to claim a deserved victory.


Points Scorers:

Ireland:  (8) 17
Tries:  O'Gara
Pens:  O'Gara 4
Drop goal:  O'Gara 1

South Africa:  (3) 12
Pens:  Montgomery 4

The teams:

Ireland:  G Dempsey, G Murphy, B O'Driscoll (capt), S Horgan, D Hickie, R O'Gara, P Stringer, R Corrigan, S Byrne, J Hayes, M O'Kelly, P O'Connell, S Easterby, J O'Connor, A Foley.
Replacements:  F Sheahan, M Horan, D O'Callaghan, E Miller, G Easterby, D Humphreys, K Maggs.

South Africa:  P Montgomery, B Paulse, M Joubert, De Wet Barry, A Willemse, J van der Westhuyzen, F Du Preez, O Du Randt, J Smit (captain), E Andrews, B Botha, V Matfield, S Burger, AJ Venter, J van Niekerk.
Replacements:  H Shimange, CJ van der Linde, G Britz, D Rossouw, M Claassens, J de Villiers, G du Toit/J Fourie.

Referee:  Paul Honiss (New Zealand)

England 70 Canada 0

Jason Robinson marked his first match as England captain with a dazzling hat-trick as Canada were put to the sword.

England ran in first-half tries through Robinson (two), Josh Lewsey (two), Mike Tindall and Mark Cueto to lead 32-0.

Robinson and Charlie Hodgson added tries at the start of the second half before being taken off to be saved for South Africa.

England added further scores through Will Greenwood, Cueto again, Lewis Moody and Hugh Vyvyan.

The game had an edgy start with knock-ons by both sides before Hodgson took control.

The fly-half sliced through the Canadian backs from a line out and fired a lovely long pass to Robinson.

The new captain still had a lot to do but he handed off the first man and carried the next two Canadian defenders over the line.

Five minutes later Gomarsall's sniping break was acrobatically finished off in the same spot by the flying Lewsey.

And the Wasps wing was soon on the scoresheet again as he plucked Hodgson's pin-point cross-field kick out of the air before racing over untouched.

Hodgson failed to convert all three tries from near the touchline but at 15-0 after 21 minutes England were well on their way.

A fine delayed pass from Henry Paul, followed by a clean break, set up Tindall for England's fourth try, with Hodgson finally on target with the conversion.

Hodgson was heavily involved a minute later, cutting through the defence before feeding Robinson, who put the third member of the Sale triumvirate, Cueto, over for his first England try.

Robinson then collected his second try with a matador's dummy, wrong-footing two Canadian defenders, at the end of a brilliant England counter attack.

Hodgson missed both conversions but England led 32-0 at the break.

The fly-half was on target with the extras after he opened the scoring in the second half with a fine solo try.

Robinson scored a dazzling solo try, converted from wide out by Paul, to complete his hat-trick and was promptly taken off to be saved for the forthcoming tests with South Africa and Australia.

Hodgson soon followed him off after a performance marked by some lovely passing and great vision.

With their bench on the field England lost their rhythm for a few minutes but picked up again to run in further tries through Greenwood, Cueto once more, Moody and Vyvyan.

Paul converted two of them as England got coach Andy Robinson's reign off to an emphatic start.


Points Scorers:

England:  (32) 70
Tries:  Robinson 3, Lewsey 2, Tindall, Cueto 2, Hodgson, Greenwood, Moody, Vyvyan
Cons:  Hodgson 2, Paul 3

Canada:  0

The teams:

England:  Jason Robinson (capt), Mark Cueto, Mike Tindall, Henry Paul, Josh Lewsey, Charlie Hodgson, Andy Gomarsall, Graham Rowntree, Steve Thompson, Julian White, Danny Grewcock, Steve Borthwick, Lewis Moody, Andy Hazell, Martin Corry.
Replacements:  Andy Titterrell, Andrew Sheridan, Ben Kay, Hugh Vyvyan, Hall Charlton, Will Greenwood, Ben Cohen.

Canada:  Derek Daypuck, David Moonlight, Ryan Smith, Marco Di Girolamo, Stirling Richmond, Ed Fairhurst, Pat Fleck, Kevin Tkachuk, Aaron Abrams, Forrest Gainer, Josh Jackson, Mike Burak, Jamie Cudmore, Stan McKeen, Colin Yukes.
Replacements:  Mark Lawson, Garth Cooke, Dan Pletch, Christoph Strubin, David Spicer, John Cannon, Sean O'Leary.

Italy 10 New Zealand 59

An experimental All Blacks side scored nine tries to beat Italy in Rome.

The visitors raced ahead with debutant Conrad Smith, fly-half Daniel Carter and Mils Muliaina all scoring tries in the first eight minutes.

Italy limited the damage to 35-3 by half-time but prop Saimone Taumoepeau ― another All Black new boy ― went over at the restart to renew the onslaught.

Muliaina, Tama Umaga and Richie McCaw all scored twice while Mauro Bergamasco grabbed a late Italian consolation try.

Italy coach John Kirwan was left cursing his team's woeful start.

"It was devastating.  There were too many turnovers and we showed our opponents too much respect," said Kirwan, an All Black legend.

"We just stood back and watched what was happening and you can't do that against a team like the All Blacks."

Meanwhile, New Zealand coach Graham Henry said he would definitely be shuffling his pack for next week's match against Wales in Cardiff.

"We wanted to see how the team performed today.  There will be changes, but not wholesale ones," said Henry.


Points Scorers:

Italy:  (3) 10
Try:  Bergamasco
Con:  Wakarua
Pen:  Wakarua

NZ:  (35) 59
Tries:  Smith, Carter, Muliaina (2), Umaga (2), Taumoepeau, McCaw (2)
Cons:  Carter (7)

The teams:

Italy:  Kaine Robertson, Ludovico Nitoglia, Matteo Barbini, Matteo Pratichetti, Walter Pozzebon, Rima Wakarua, Paul Griffen, Andrea Lo Cicero, Fabio Ongaro, Salvatore Perugini, Marco Bortolami, Santiago Dellape, Aaron Persico, Mauro Bergamasco, David Dal Maso.
Replacements:  Giorgio Intoppa, Salvatore Costanzo, Enrico Pavanello, Silvio Orlando, Pietro Travagli, Luciano Orquera.

New Zealand:  Mils Muliaina, Rico Gear, Conrad Smith, Tana Umaga (capt), Joe Rokocoko, Daniel Carter, Byron Kelleher, Saimone Taumoepeau, Anton Oliver, Carl Hayman, Chris Jack, Norm Maxwell, Jerry Collins, Richie McCaw, Mose Tuiali'i.
Replacements:  Corey Flynn/Keven Mealamu, Greg Somerville, Ali Williams, Steven Bates, Jimmy Cowan, Luke McAlister/Aaron Mauger, Ma'a Nonu.

Wales 66 Romania 7

Tom Shanklin crossed over four times as Wales routed Romania 66-7 in Cardiff ― equalling the Welsh record for individual tries in an international.

Shanklin opened the scoring, throwing a subtle dummy to touch down in the fifth minute before adding one more before the break and two in the second half.

Rhys Williams, Gethin Jenkins, Gavin Henson, Stephen Jones, Dafydd Jones and Gareth Cooper also grabbed tries.

Stephen Jones kicked seven conversions and substitute Ceri Sweeney got one.

Romania gained their consolation try just before half-time from Paris-based scrum-half Lucian Sirbu.

His touchdown was converted by fly-half Ionut Tofan, but it meant little as the visitors could not come close to staving off a sixth successive defeat against the hosts.

Wales took the field in their new change strip of white shirts and black shorts with green trimmings, and they were determined to make an immediate impact.

Lock Luke Charteris made a strong early run into the opposition's midfield, and Wales continued to threaten, with skipper Gareth Thomas only being hauled down courtesy of a desperate ankle-tap tackle.

But the visitors could only keep Wales out for so long and Shanklin, who ended the night having matched the individual scoring exploits of past Welshmen such as Maurice Richards, Ieuan Evans and Glen Webbe, wasted little time in grabbing the seventh international try of his career.

Fly-half Stephen Jones slotted the angled conversion, and Wales were on their way.

The home side struck again on 16 minutes when an exquisite inside pass from Henson sent Williams dashing 30 metres to cross the line.

Jones' conversion made it 14-0, and Wales moved further away when the fly-half ghosted clear and touched down near the posts and then duly converted.

Attacking threat

Romania could offer little in terms of an attacking threat as the first-half closed out with Jenkins crashing over for his first Test try and Shanklin throwing an outrageous dummy and strolling over from 20m, with Jones slotting both conversions.

Sirbu took his chance after a wayward pass from fly-half Jones, but when the second half restarted Wales were swiftly back in the groove, Henson cruising through a gap for his third touchdown in two games.

Then, sent free by another line-breaking Henson pass, Shanklin completed his hat-trick, with Jones maintaining his perfect kicking record by slotting a seventh conversion for a 49-7 lead.

Wales then wrapped up with a flurry of try-scoring to give coach Mike Ruddock plenty to feel positive about ahead of next week's showdown with New Zealand.


Points Scorers:

Wales:  (35) 66
Tries:  Shanklin (4), R Williams, S Jones, Jenkins, Henson, D Jones, Cooper
Cons:  S Jones (7), Sweeney

Romania:  (7) 7
Try:  Sirbu
Con:  Tofan

The teams:

Wales:  G Thomas, R Williams, Shanklin, Henson, Luscombe, S Jones, Peel, Jenkins, M Davies, A Jones, Llewellyn, Charteris, D Jones, Charvis, Owen.
Replacements:  S Jones, D Jones, J Thomas, M Williams, Cooper, Sweeney, Taylor.

Romania:  Maftei, Ghioc, Sauan, Gontineac, Teodorescu, Tofan, Sirbu, P Balan, Zebega, Socaciu, Tatu, Petre, Mersoiu, Tudori, Petrache.
Replacements:  Mavrodin, B Balan, Ursache, Oprisor, Andrei, Dobre, Dimofte.

Attendance:  35,408
Referee:  K Deaker (New Zealand)

Saturday, 6 November 2004

Scotland 14 Australia 31

Australia weathered a second-half fightback from Scotland to begin their European tour with a 31-14 victory.

The Wallabies did all the hard work by half-time at Murrayfield as scores from Stirling Mortlock, Clyde Rathbone (two) and Lote Tuqiri gave them a 28-0 lead.

Sean Lamont and Hugo Southwell's tries cut the gap, with Matt Giteau's penalty the only further score for Australia.

The tourists can claim a fourth victory this year over the Scots if they win the rematch in Glasgow on 20 November.

Scotland sent out a side composed entirely of home-based players for the first time since 1985.

But their chances of claiming a first win over Australia for 22 years faded within the first 20 minutes.

The home side made a strong start and could have taken an early lead, but Chris Paterson missed a simple penalty.

They soon paid the price for some slack defending as Rathbone sent Mortlock charging through a gap to score.

Rathbone added two carbon-copy tries in quick succession, charging down the right wing after slick passing from his team-mates had created an overlap.

Some more quick ball allowed Wallabies captain George Gregan to send Tuqiri in for the fourth try, and Matt Giteau kicked his fourth conversion.

Nathan Hines then denied Stephen Larkham as the Wallaby fly-half slid towards the line, and the Scots survived further embarrassment before half-time.

Scotland were a changed side after the break, and were rewarded for a sustained spell of pressure when Lamont dived over from close range and Paterson converted.

There was a hint of an unlikely comeback when replacement Southwell jinked through on the right and slid over, the video referee confirming his first try for his country.

Paterson's conversion cut the gap to 14 points, but the entertainment value dimmed after that as both sides were let down by some sloppy play in wet conditions.

Giteau scored Australia's first points of the half with a penalty as he continued his flawless kicking display.

But Scotland's strong finish should give them heart ahead of the home meeting with Japan next weekend.


Points Scorers:

Scotland (0) 14
Tries:  Lamont, Southwell
Cons:  Paterson 2

Australia (28) 31
Tries:  Mortlock, Rathbone 2, Tuqiri
Cons:  Giteau 4
Pens:  Giteau 1

The teams:

Scotland:  Moffat, Lamont, Morrison, Henderson, Paterson, Parks, Cusiter, Jacobsen, Bulloch, Douglas, Hines, MacLeod, Gray, Hogg, MacFadyen.
Replacements:  Ford, C. Smith, Kellock, Petrie, Blair, Craig, Southwell.

Australia:  Latham, Rathbone, Mortlock, Giteau, Tuqiri, Larkham, Gregan, Young, Paul, Baxter, Harrison, Vickerman, Smith, Waugh, Roe.
Replacements:  Cannon, Dunning, Chisholm, Lyons, Flatley, Rogers, Sailor.

Referee:  Steve Walsh (New Zealand).

Wales 36 South Africa 38

South Africa's Grand Slam trail began with a narrow win in a pulsating game at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium.

Tries from Jaco van der Westhuyzen and Joe van Niekerk helped the Boks to an early 23-6 lead, but a Schalk Burger sin-binning aided a Wales fightback.

A Gavin Henson try and Stephen Jones (21 points) brought it to 23-22, before Jean de Villiers and Percy Montgomery (23 points) took the Boks away.

Henson got his second, then Dwayne Peel crossed with the last move of the game.

It was a nightmare start for the home side, the Springboks' superior physical presence at the breakdown forcing a Wales offence, Montgomery landing a first-minute penalty.

The visitors' forwards were delivering perfect ball, with the outstanding Victor Matfield to the fore, and when Marius Joubert played a neat switch in midfield he found himself in acres of space.

Hal Luscombe managed to scythe the centre down yards from the line, but it was quickly recycled to van der Westhuyzen who crossed in the corner.

Wales responded with some heavy tackling and good driving play, Luscombe again prominent, and were rewarded with two Stephen Jones penalties against one from Montgomery.

But when Michael Owen spilt attacking ball, Newport-based Montgomery quickly punished his adopted country, bursting through a weak Colin Charvis tackle.

After a 60-yard run Montgomery played a one-two with De Wet Barry before sending the supporting van Niekerk in for the second try.

Montgomery and Jones exchanged penalties as referee Paddy O'Brien repeatedly blew up for handling at the ruck, and on the stroke of half-time Springbok flanker Burger was yellow carded for his third offence.

Jones landed the goal, and added another soon after the break when a superb Peel break forced van Niekerk into a cynical offence to deny a try.

The visitors were shaken further as Dafydd Jones stole maul ball deep in their half before rumbling over the top of Montgomery.

Quick ball came back to Henson who side-stepped over, Jones' conversion bringing Wales to within a point.

South African discomfort was short-lived, a great midfield break sending De Wet Barry on a 50-yard run, only for the centre to be superbly held up over the line by Wales captain Gareth Thomas.

From the resulting scrum, Joubert sent a neat inside pass to replacement de Villiers, who restored South Africa's comfort zone with a converted try.

The game was getting loose, and when Shane Williams spilled the ball under a heavy Bakkies Botha tackle it came to van der Westhuyzen on the wing.

His burst for the line was denied by Henson, but the fly-half fed inside to Montgomery for a simple try.

Wales brought on fresh legs, and after good work from the forwards Sonny Parker fed Henson in the corner for his second try.

Then, with the last move of the match, the mighty Springbok scrum was destroyed by tight-head Adam Jones, their defensive set-piece sent into disarray and allowing Peel to sneak over for a memorable, if ultimately worthless, score.


Points Scorers:

Wales (12) 36
Tries:  Henson (2), Peel
Cons:  S Jones (3)
Pens:  S Jones (5)

South Africa (23) 38
Tries:  van der Westhuyzen, van Niekerk, de Villiers, Montgomery
Cons:  Montgomery (3)
Pens:  Montgomery (4)

The teams:

Wales:  G Thomas (Toulouse, capt), H Luscombe (Dragons), S Parker (Ospreys), G Henson (Ospreys), S Williams (Ospreys), S Jones (Clermont-Auvergne), D Peel (Scarlets), D Jones (Ospreys), S Jones (Dragons), A Jones (Ospreys), B Cockbain (Ospreys), M Owen (Dragons), D Jones (Scarlets), C Charvis (Newcastle), R Jones (Ospreys).
Replacements:  M Davies (Neath), G Jenkins (Blues), L Charteris (Dragons), M Williams (Blues), M Phillips (Scarlets), C Sweeney (Dragons), T Shanklin (Blues).

South Africa:  P Montgomery (Dragons), B Paulse (Western Province), M Joubert (Western Province), De Wet Barry (Western Province), A Willemse (Lions), J van der Westhuyzen (NEC), F du Preez (Blue Bulls), Os du Randt (Free State Cheetahs), J Smit (Natal Sharks), E Andrews (Western Province), B Botha (Blue Bulls), V Matfield (Blue Bulls), S Burger (Western Province), J Smith (Free State Cheetahs), J van Niekerk (Western Province).
Replacements:  H Shimange (Western Province), CJ van der Linde (Free State), G Britz (Free State Cheetahs), T Dlulane (Pumas), M Claassens (Free State Cheetahs), J de Villiers (Western Province), B Russell (Natal).

Attendance:  55,346
Referee:  Paddy O'Brien (New Zealand)

Italy 51 Canada 6

Andrea Masi and Fabio Ongaro scored two tries apiece as Italy thrashed Canada 51-6 in L'Aquila.

Mauro Bergamasco and debutant Pietro Travagli also went over for the home side while New Zealand-born fly-half Rima Wakarua kicked 27 points.

Canada's only scoring contribution came from two Jared Baker penalties.

Italy led 13-3 after a scrappy first half but played much better after the interval, with their forwards laying the foundations for an emphatic win.

Afterwards, Italy coach John Kirwan said discipline had been the key to victory at the Tommaso Fattori stadium.

"We made too many errors in the first half and I wasn't at all pleased, but we tightened up in the second," said the New Zealander.

"I told them to keep attacking and they didn't let me down.  We were very aggressive and didn't give much away."

Both teams are in action again next weekend, with Italy facing the All Blacks while Canada travel to Twickenham to play England.


Points Scorers:

Italy:  (13) 51
Tries:  Masi 2, Ongaro 2, Bergamasco, Travagli.
Cons:  Wakarua 6
Pens:  Wakarua 3

Canada:  (3) 6
Pens:  Baker 2

The teams:

Italy:  Robertson, Nitoglia, Canale, Masi, Dallan, Wakarua, Griffen, Lo Cicero, Ongaro, Perugini, Dellape, Bortolami (capt) Persico, Bergamasco, Dal Maso.

Replacements:  Intoppa, Costanzo, Pavanello, Orlando, Travagli, Orquera, Pozzebon.

Canada:  Fyffe, Pyke, Cannon, Di Girolamo, Richmond, Barker, Fairhurts, Tkachuk (co-capt) Lawson (co-capt), Cooke, Burak, Yukes, Cudmore, Webb, McKeen.

Replacements:  Abrams, Gainer, Pletch, Jackson, Fleck, Smith, Daypuck.

Referee:  Lyndon Bray (New Zealand)

Saturday, 7 August 2004

Australia expose All Blacks in Sydney

New Zealand go down to inspired Wallabies

A massive effort from Australia subjected New Zealand to their first defeat under Graham Henry ― a nail-biting 23-18 loss in Sydney on Saturday.  Penalty kicks were traded galore before Wallaby wing Lote Tuquiri snuck across for a crucial try at the Telstra Stadium, the scene of the All Blacks' loss to the Wallabies in RWC 2003.

The home side's victory in front of 82,000 tense spectators throws the Tri-Nations open again, with all three sides still in contention for the title.

It was a tough, uncompromising, closely contested match ― but the Wallabies deserved their victory.

The match had been all Wallabies in the second half until they went into a 23-18 lead in the 68th minute.  Then the All Blacks went into overdrive, but the Wallaby line did not yield.

But for most of the match the Wallabies looked stronger and more cohesive.  The All Blacks appeared surprisingly ragged, almost seeming to hope for a gifted moment.

The Wallabies take four points from the match, the All Blacks a bonus point for being, thanks to penalty goals, within seven points of the winners ― the two sides are now tied on nine points each, with the Boks on two but with a game in hand.

The Bledisloe Cup stays in New Zealand as the series ends 1-1, and that means the holders keep the big trophy.

That the All Blacks scored no tries and now have two from three Tri-Nations matches will invite further questions about their new flat alignment.  Things looked a bit better when Andrew Mehrtens became the general for the last half hour of the match, which will also invite further questions.

The first half was a real battle.  At first it seemed that New Zealand would win it as they looked sharper, more powerful and more effective and went into a 9-0 lead which became 12-3.  But then the Wallabies, with much thanks to flanker George Smith, fought their way back to a 12-all half-time score.

It was a still night in Sydney, but also very cool ― with breath on the air as Carlos Spencer barked the haka.

Australia ran the very first ball from the kick-off and Stirling Mortlock surged forward, but was tackled and the All Blacks won a turn-over.  The Wallabies were off-side and Daniel Carter made it 3-0.

From the re-start it was the All Black turn to run the ball.  Ali Williams broke and Carl Hayman took it on.  It was much better than the Wallabies' first effort.  It became a penalty against Justin Harrison but Crater's comfortable kick swung wide.

When Nathan Sharpe went off-side, Carter made it 6-0.  When George Smith put his hands in a ruck, Carter made it 9-0.  Indeed, at this point it looked like it would be a 'black' night in Sydney.

But then the Wallabies hit back ― Lote Tuqiri surged at the line and the television match official was called upon, only to advise that the big wing was millimetres short.

The referee went back to a penalty earlier at the tackle.  Matt Burke, on for bleeding Mortlock, kicked the goal, 9-3.

The Wallabies then drove the best maul of the half and the ball went sweetly right to Clyde Rathbone who chipped ahead but the ball dribbled into touch.

The All Blacks lost three of their seven line-outs in the half, and they lost this one five metres from their line and the Wallabies bashed.  Latham was almost there and then Carlos Spencer went grossly off-side.  The referee penalised him, but George Gregan ― not for the first time ― added his pennyworth and the referee reversed the penalty right under the Wallaby crossbar.

Instead of a Wallaby three-pointer, Carter got a fourth when Nathan Sharpe held on in a tackle.  12-3 after 27 minutes.

Then the Wallabies took over.

Tuqiri was marked by three each time he touched the ball, but he battled manfully and ended up scoring the only try of the match.

He started an attack that became a penalty for Matt Giteau when Keven Mealamu was off-side.  Giteau made it 12-9 when Xavier Rush wwnt off-side.  The next All Black off-side earned Ali Williams a yellow card.

That gave the Wallabies an attacking line-out.  Attack they did, and then Kees Meeuws kicked the ball whilst lying on the ground at the tackle and Giteau made it 12-12.

Right from the start of the second half ― and for the next half an hour ― the Wallabies dominated.

The Wallabies won the kick-off and Latham cut sharply down the left.  He was tackled five metres short.

The Wallabies came right back, and Rush played a man without the ball.  Giteau kicked the penalty to make it 15-12.  The Wallabies were in front for the first time.  They were not headed again in the next 39 minutes.

Sam Tuitupou came on for Carter and did bits of bashing in tandem with Marty Holah.  But Spencer missed a comfortable kick when the Wallaby front row was penalised.  Then Mils Muliaina cut sharply between Phil Waugh and George Smith and when Smith stayed in the wrong place at a tackle Spencer levelled the scores at 15-15.

Then the Wallabies flung themselves on sharp attack.  They went right and came back left and with three to two David Lyons hung on and was tackled short of the line.  It seemed a chance blown.  But the ball came back quickly with a pass to Tuqiri.  The great wing juggled, hung on and flopped over for the try which made it 20-15.  Burke missed the conversion.

At this stage Williams came back.  In his absence the Wallabies scored eleven points to three.

Tuitupou, Umaga and Holah combined to go directly for the impregnable Wallaby line and when Phil Waugh hung onto Marshall's arm, Mehrtens, on for Spencer, goaled.  20-18.

The tension was enormous and the Wallabies rode it best, especially after Smith stole a wonky pass from Mehrtens whose arm had been snagged by Waugh.  Latham slashed through off a switch and got to a metre or two.  Umaga was penalised for coming in at the side and the Wallabies chose a five-metre line-out.  The All Blacks stood firm.  Then there was a line-out six metres from the All Black line, but Gregan knocked on the knock-down.

Still the Wallabies attacked and Jeremy Paul, on for Cannon, produced a miracle steal from a New Zealand line-out and the Wallabies were attacking again.  Tuqiri was held up over the line near the posts but when Marshall went off-side Burke made it 23-18.

That was the end of the scoring ― though the All Blacks had many attacking opportunities after Carl Hayman had charged down a Larkham clearance.

Latham saved in one attack when he pinched the ball from Mealamu as the hooker fell.  The Wendell Sailor, on for Rathbone, saved by grabbing hold of a dropping pass.

The All Blacks were not finished as they won a Wallaby line-out and produced an overlap which Muliaina could not use.

The final hooter went and the All Blacks attacked and attacked, but when Sam Tuitupou knocked-on an awkward pass from Mose Tuiali'i, Gregan picked up the ball and booted it into touch to put the Wallabies ― and the Springboks ― back into Tri-Nations contention.

Man of the Match:  Tana Umaga did so well in defence, and managed some sharp moments of his own when he had the ball.  Marty Holah was all head-up and earnest endeavour, but really the award but go to a Wallaby.  Brave Nathan Sharpe;  clever Stephen Larkham with his judicious distribution;  energetic, strong Chris Latham;  never-defeated George Gregan;  strong Lote Tuqiri ― and our choice, George Smith, who tackled, ran and stole enough to break New Zealand hearts.

Moment of the Match:  The big moments could be the negative ones ― the scrap over the hoarding when Carlos Spencer wanted to take a quick throw-in and Stephen Larkham was silly.  In fact the whole incident was silly ― astonishingly silly for an international match.  Ali Williams went off-side in a series of New Zealand back-foot offences ― seven in all ― and earned a yellow card, which produced ten productive minutes for the Wallabies.  But the moment must be that Wallaby attack and the juggle, grab and flop for the only try of the match by Lote Tuqiri.

Villain of the Match:  The Larkham-Spencer silliness over the hoarding was unedifying and undignified.  George Gregan could have provided a telling moment when he mouthed off and elicited a reversed penalty for his trouble.  Justin Harrison just carries on being silly.  But really the award must go to Ali Williams ― his yellow card laid the way for the Wallabies' match-winning points.

The scorers:

For Australia:
Try:  Tuqiri
Pens:  Burke 2, Giteau 4

For New Zealand:
Pens:  Carter 4, Spencer, Mehrtens

The teams:

Australia:  15 Chris Latham, 14 Clyde Rathbone (Wendell Sailor, 73), 13 Stirling Mortlock (Matthew Burke, 17-23, 62), 12 Matt Giteau, 11 Lote Tuqiri, 10 Stephen Larkham, 9 George Gregan (captain), 8 David Lyons (John Roe, 70), 7 Phil Waugh, 6 George Smith, 5 Nathan Sharpe (Daniel Vickerman, 70), 4 Justin Harrison, 3 Al Baxter, 2 Brendan Cannon (Jeremy Paul, 57), 1 Bill Young (Matt Dunning, 13-20, 74).
Not used:  20 Chris Whitaker.

New Zealand:  15 Mils Muliaina, 14 Doug Howlett, 13 Tana Umaga (captain), 12 Daniel Carter (Sam Tuitupou, 41), 11 Joe Rokocoko, 10 Carlos Spencer (Andrew Mehrtens, 60), 9 Justin Marshall, 8 Xavier Rush (Mose Tuiali'i, 71), 7 Marty Holah, 6 Jono Gibbes, 5 Ali Williams, 4 Chris Jack, 3 Carl Hayman, 2 Keven Mealamu, 1 Kees Meeuws (Greg Somerville, 71).
Not used:  16 Andrew Hore, 19 Craig Newby, 20 Byron Kelleher.

Yellow card:  Ali Williams (NZ), 38.

Saturday, 31 July 2004

Australia 30 South Africa 26

Australia weathered one of rugby's most protracted cliff-hangers to secure a tense 30-26 Tri-Nations victory over South Africa in Perth.  The Boks lead for long periods of the game, but in the end it was South Africa-born Wallaby Clyde Rathbone who delivered the coup de grace with a try in the 71st minute of play.

The match at the Subiaco Oval was filled with drama for the 42,000 crowd.  The Wallabies scored four tries and thus won a bonus point.  South Africa got a bonus point for losing by fewer than seven points.

Rathbone's winning try -- which took a careful effort from the television match official -- was scored in the right corner with replacement Matt Burke kicked the difficult conversion to put South Africa out of penalty goal range.

As the final whistle was imminent, the Springboks threw everything at the Wallabies in search of a winning try -- but to no avail.

Part of South Africa's problem was their inability to win possession.  They lost seven line-outs to the more competitive Wallabies, and threw one in skew.  They also lost a sloppy scrum.  In addition, they again conceded more penalties than their opponents.

There was a great moment to start the match when George Gregan led his side out in his 100th Test, securing his status as one of the great players of rugby's history.

South Africa played into a stiff breeze in the first half as rain fall intermittently, but they led 16-15 at the interval.

South Africa scored first after they ran from a line-out and kept possession through several phases until Rathbone was penalised for going to ground at a tackle near the touch-line, and Percy Montgomery's place-kick went through off the up-right.

Then came a wonderfully athletic Australian try.  From a line-out after AJ Venter had been penalised, Matt Giteau kicked a right-to-left high diagonal ball.  Montgomery and Breyton Paulse were in the vicinity of the dropping ball but it was winger Lote Tuqiri who outjumped them, caught cleanly, twisted and scored.  Matt Giteau converted from far out and after six minutes the Wallabies led 7-3.

South Africa responded by launching an attack on the left.  Paulse came running round from the right wing and gave a pass to Jean De Villiers which looked to be forward.  The wing, just in from touch, rushed ahead and then grubbered left-footed down into the Wallaby in-goal where Jaco van der Westhuyzen fell on it to score.  Montgomery's conversion, relatively easy, went astray.

The Springboks come close again when Montgomery counter-attacked sharply, and only a brilliant tackle by Giteau on De Villiers saved the Wallaby line.

When Al Baxter was penalised at a scrum, Montgomery made it 11-7 to South Africa.

After Venter had been penalised for an early, tackle the Wallabies mounted an attack.  They seemed to have an overlap but the pass to Rathbone went into touch.  Still the Wallabies attacked, but it was the Springboks who scored!

On the bindside, Larkham passed to his right.  De Villiers stuck out a hand, caught the ball and sprinted some 90 metres to score in the corner -- 16-7.

After the restart, Fourie du Preez kicked downfield, Tuqiri marked and suddenly Chris Latham was on the run.  This created much space for the Wallabies on their right.  Only an ankle-tap stopped Giteau until eventually the ball was out at the corner flag with a line-out to the home side.

The Wallabies mauled from the line-out but the Springboks shoved them sharply back.  But Gregan got the ball to Larkham who slipped the on-rushing Van der Westhuyzen and got over in a tackle.  Again an easy conversion was missed.  16-12 to South Africa.

After the Springboks had lost successive line-outs Gerrie Britz went off-side five metres from his line and slap in front of the posts, and Giteau made it 16-15.

Another Bok indiscretion early in the second half gave Giteau another penalty goal when Bakkies Botha was penalised for toppling Nathan Sharpe in a line-out.  Australia led 18-16.

Soon afterwards the locals were guily used their hands in the ruck and the visitors stole pack the lead with a penalty.

Giteau then missed a penalty from in front, but the Wallabies ran the drop-out back.  Larkham skidded past Eddie Andrews before feeding Latham who rushed it on, bumping off Montgomery to score.  23-19 to Australia.

At this stage Gaffie du Toit was on for De Villiers.  De Wet Barry grubbered left-footed towards the Wallaby line and Du Toit brilliantly gathered the ball just short of the line and managed to touch down with Rathbone and Latham closing in.  Montgomery converted to make it 26-23 to South Africa with 16 minutes to go.

Rathbone then ran back a deep ball and beat three men to put the Wallabies back on the attack.  Burke broke and Latham sent out a brilliant, long pass to Rathbone who squeezed in on the right as Du Preez tackled him.

The Wallabies came close again when Latham appeared to ground the ball for a try, but the Springbok snatched up the ball from the in-goal and Du Preez ran and hoofed downfield.  Rathbone saved brilliantly and -- after a long period of play -- Latham's action was referred to the television match official.

It was not a try, but in the proceeding passage of play Marius Joubert and Stirling Mortlock et al had an emotional moment which became a penalty to South Africa which they ran and ran and ran -- phase after phase -- without really troubling the yellow defence.

Man of the Match:  There are many candidates for Australia Nathan Sharpe who did so much to deny the Springboks possession, George Smith who got his mitts just about everywhere, Clyde Rathbone and Lote Tuqiri with their strong running and Stephen Larkham for three moments of genius which made tries, and for South Africa ubiquitous, competitive, energetic Schalk Burger and Bakkies Botha who was brave and effective.  But our Man of the Match, especially for this match, goes to George Gregan for the way he notched up his century with a strong, calm and decisive display.

Moment of the Match:  There was that unusual moment of referral to the television match official after a long passage of play.  There was Clyde Rathbone's burst downfield.  There was Gaffie du Toit's pick-up and score.  Our Moment of the Match is that athletic bit of commitment -- and immense concentration -- that spawned Lote Tuqiri's try.

Villain of the Match:  There were silly moments but nothing too serious.  One wishes that Marius Joubert and De Wet Barry would keep tackles lower, that Chris Latham would not feign innocence when he is naughty, and that Justin Harrison would not try to be the clumsy Wyatt Earp of the rugby field.

The Teams:

Australia:  1 Alastair Baxter, 2 Jeremy Paul, 3 Bill Young, 4 Justin Harrison, 5 Nathan Sharpe, 6 George Smith, 7 Phil Waugh, 8 David Lyons, 9 George Gregan (c), 10 Steve Larkham, 11 Lote Tuqiri, 12 Matt Giteau, 13 Stirling Mortlock, 14 Clyde Rathbone, 15 Chris Latham
Reserves:  Matthew Burke, Matt Dunning, John Roe, Daniel Vickerman
Unused:  Wendell Sailor, Chris Whitaker, Adam Freier

South Africa:  1 Eddie Andrews, 2 John Smit (c), 3 Os Du Randt, 4 Bakkies Botha, 5 Gerrie Britz, 6 A.J. Venter, 7 Schalk Burger Jr., 8 Jacques Cronje, 9 Fourie Du Preez, 10 Jaco Van Der Westhuyzen, 11 Jean De Villiers, 12 De Wet Barry, 13 Centre Marius Joubert, 14 Breyton Paulse, 15 Percy Montgomery
Reserves:  Gaffie Du Toit, Joe Van Niekerk, C.J. Van Der Linde
Unused:  Hanyani Shimange, Bolla Conradie, Brent Russell, Albert Van Den Bergh

Attendance:  42107
Referee:  White c.

Points Scorers:

Australia
Tries:  Latham C.E. 1, Rathbone C. 1, Tuqiri L.D. 1, Larkham S.J. 1
Conv:  Giteau M.J. 1, Burke M.C. 1
Pen K.:  Giteau M.J. 2

South Africa
Tries:  De Villiers J. 1, Van Der Westhuyzen J 1, Du Toit G.S. 1
Conv:  Montgomery P.C. 1
Pen K.:  Montgomery P.C. 3

Saturday, 24 July 2004

New Zealand 23 South Africa 21

An inspired South Africa gave the All Blacks the fright of their lives by taking a lead into the final minute of the Tri-Nations clash in Christchurch, but Doug Howlett broke South African hearts by sliding over for a last-gasp winning try.  The Boks won 3-1 on tries, but the spoils go to the home side who finished the day 23-21 to the good.

It was a thriller as the All Blacks attacked and attacked, battered and battered, and then got it wide to Howlett who scored in the corner to win the match.  The Springboks might have scored three tries to one -- but they gave away a heap of penalty.

The victory puts the All Blacks well clear at the top of the Tri-Nations with successive victories, but both at home and each with only a single try.

As against Australia, the All Blacks dominated possession and territory but as against Australia they -- with their much-vaunted back-line -- scored only one try, and that at the death.

The score was 21-18 to the Springboks as the All Black wave broke over the visitors again and again, breaking on the rocks of determined defence till it went wide and there was nobody left to tackle Howlett.  It was the All Blacks' only real chance of a try and they took it -- with ecstatic gratitude.

It was a reward for the grip they had on the game but especially on the second half when they kept the Springboks point-less.  The All Blacks were aided by a powerful display in the scrums, where the Springboks were expected to dominate, and a penalty count of 13-5 in their favour.

It was icy cold, crisp, wind-free and dry at Jade Stadium in Christchurch.

The Springboks ended the first half leading 21-12, but more significantly three tries to zero.

The first try came before half a minute had run.  Jaco van der Westhuyzen kicked off to start.  Marty Holah gathered the rolling kick and charged ahead.  The All Black forwards gathered, the ball came back and John Smit of South Africa was there to pick up.

He passed to Van der Westhuyzen who passed to De Wet Barry who did a switch with Jean de Villiers.  Tackled short De Villiers was able to place the ball for a try in the left corner.

Percy Montgomery converted.  7-0.

Then the All Blacks settled in Springboks territory and garnered penalties.  Daniel Carter's first kick bounced back off the upright but then he goaled three in a row to make the score 9-7 to New Zealand.

But the Springboks came back.  They won their scrum which disintegrated.  Fourie du Preez picked up, put his head down and charged.

He chipped feebly but AJ Venter gathered the ball and got a brilliant pass out to Jacques Cronjé, who had earlier lost the ball three times.  This time he caught it and plunged over in that left corner.  Again Montgomery converted.  14-9.

Carter responded by adding yet another penalty before the third -- and final -- Bok try.  Montgomery countered sharply and with acceleration from a Mils Muliaina kick.  Marius Joubert ran strongly past Greg Somerville and got an awkward pass to Schalk Burger who managed to control the ball and get it to Du Preez who went over in the same corner, from which Montgomery goaled again.

In that half the All Blacks came fairly close once but were well tackled.  The Springboks had a gilt-edged chance when Cronjé knocked on with a four-to-one opportunity.

In the second half Carter kicked two more penalties and then when he went off Carlos Spencer kicked one.  That made it 21-18 with 11 minutes to go.

The Springboks were close-ish on two occasions, both from Breyton Paulse chips.  On the first occasion they were close to getting a five-metre scrum as Muliaina took the ball back for the touch down and once when Joe Rokocoko beat Paulse to the ball and Paulse was penalised.

Then came the victory attack in which Tana Umaga created a telling break and strong replacement Byron Kelleher was an effective presence in everything.

Two moments had a serious bearing -- the Springbok scrum which the All Blacks wheeled to get the put-in and the long throw the Springboks took at a defensive line-out that went awry and created a scrum to New Zealand, six metres out and slap in front.

Man of the match:  Byron Kelleher in his effective quarter of an hour is a candidate as were Kees Meeuws whose scrummaging has been so powerful and meaningful for New Zealand, Chris Jack who was great at line-outs and with ball in hand, Joe Rokocoko who made things out of bits and pieces, Mils Muliaina looked to run whenever possible and Keven Mealamu who does not stop.  Percy Montgomery meant much to the Springboks and Jaco van der Westhuyzen had probably his best match at fly-half.  But our Man of the Match is all-action Schalk Burger who had a huge effect on the match and was certainly the dominant loose forward on the field, just shading strong AJ Venter.

Moment of the Match:  All four tries were glittering moments against a black backdrop.  The brightest pair were early and late -- the Springboks' try in the first minute and the All Blacks' in the last.  But the Moment of the Match was doubtless the last moment as the ball went from Kelleher to Spencer.  He sent a long pass to Mils Muliaina with Brent Russell coming at him.  Muliaina gave the sweetest of passes to Doug Howlett who surfed over in the victorious corner.

Villain of the Match:  None, because it was hard but well-mannered, though two penalties for high tackles by De Wet Barry brings him closest to villainy.

The Teams:

New Zealand:  1 Greg Somerville, 2 Keven Mealamu, 3 Kees Meeuws, 4 Chris Jack, 5 Simon Maling, 6 Jerry Collins, 7 Marty Holah, 8 Xavier Rush, 9 Justin Marshall, 10 Carlos Spencer, 11 Doug Howlett, 12 Daniel Carter, 13 Tana Umaga (c), 14 Joe Rokocoko, 15 Mils Muliaina
Reserves:  Ali Williams, Byron Kelleher, Sam Tuitupou
Unused:  Nick Evans, Andrew Hore, Craig Newby, Tony Woodcock

South Africa  1 Eddie Andrews, 2 John Smit (c), 3 Os Du Randt, 4 Bakkies Botha, 5 Albert Van Den Bergh, 6 A.J. Venter, 7 Schalk Burger Jr., 8 Jacques Cronje, 9 Fourie Du Preez, 10 Jaco Van Der Westhuyzen, 11 Jean De Villiers, 12 De Wet Barry, 13 Marius Joubert, 14 Breyton Paulse, 15 Percy Montgomery
Reserves:  Faan Rautenbach, Brent Russell, Joe Van Niekerk
Unused:  Danie Coetzee, Bolla Conradie, Quinton Davids, Gaffie Du Toit

Attendance:  34000
Referee:  Cole a.

Points Scorers:

New Zealand
Tries:  Howlett D.C. 1
Pen K.:  Carter D.W. 5, Spencer C.J. 1

South Africa
Tries:  De Villiers J. 1, Du Preez P.F. 1, Cronje J. 1
Conv:  Montgomery P.C. 3

Saturday, 17 July 2004

South Africa 38 Pacific Islanders 24

The Springboks got their Australasian tour off to a victorious start with a 38-24 win over the Pacific Islanders in Gosford.  The win also saw veteran fullback Percy Montgomery overtake Naas Botha as the most prolific points scorer for the Boks.

But the Boks will not be happy with a performance that saw them slip from total domination in the first half to an outfit that lacked cohesion and structure to allow the gutsy Islanders team back into the game after the break.

The Boks were never going to attempt to beat the Islanders at their own game and they signaled their intent early on, destroying their out-gunned opponents in the forward exchanges.  It was an awesome display by the South African pack, out-muscling the Islanders at the breakdowns and scrums and out-jumping them at the lineouts.

The commentators implied that the Islanders were suffering from fatigue after a gruelling Test schedule, but such an assumption was laughable.  The Boks were simply denying their opponents any ball, and the little they got was on the back-foot and under immense pressure.

Montgomery got the scoring underway with a long-range penalty and the Boks then spent the next five minutes camped in the Islander half for a prolonged period of assault from their gargantuan tight five.

Predictably the first Bok try came from the scrum -- an area the Islanders never came to grips with despite their weight advantage -- and young No.8 Jacques Cronje broke from the back and scored underneath the posts.  Montgomery continued to find the middle of the posts.

The Islanders attempted to gather some momentum after the try, but when Bok centre De Wet Barry put in a massive hit on his opposite number the Islanders were turned over and hurried back into their own 22.

Scrum-half Bolla Conradie chipped over the retreating defence and winger Breyton Paulse showed a clean pair of heels to snap the ball up and go over for the first of his two tries.  Montgomery continued to close in on Botha's record with the conversion.

At the break it looked ominous for the Islanders with the Boks well in control at 23-0.

But the second half was a different game.  The Islanders looked more motivated, while the Boks -- sensing a big win -- began to play as individuals, seeking personal glory over the whitewash, rather than keeping to the game-plan that had worked to their advantage.

It worked initially with fly-half Jaco van der Westhuyzen drawing the defence to put Paulse over for his second of the evening.

Montgomery then claimed the South African record with another long-range effort, but the glory was short-lived when brilliant Islander winger Sitiveni Sivivatu burst through some shabby Bok defence to score in the corner.

But it served as little motivation to the South Africans who continued to throw the ball around shamelessly.  The result was a host of errors and another Sivivatu try in the corner.

The sight of the Chiefs star grounding the ball again seemed to sting the Boks back into action and it was again Montgomery who proved the catalyst, chipping through the Islanders defence for winger Jean de Villiers to pick up his first international try.

But from that point onwards the Boks did little to impress.  Their game-plan was thrown out the window never to return.  Montgomery in particular seemed to suffer a rapid change of fortune, but he was not the only one.

Two more tries from hard-running No.8 Sione Lauaki and big winger Sireli Bobo made the score more respectable for the Islanders at 38-24.  But it should never have been that close.

The Boks should have closed the game down long before Bobo went over in the 80th minute and it should serve as a wake-up call for the South Africans who will face a far more challenging All Blacks side next weekend in Christchurch.

Man of the match:  For the Islanders Sivivatu and Lauaki were both superb and never threw in the towel.  But this award could go to only one man -- Schalk Burger -- who once again got through a mountain of work for the Boks.  Where he gets the energy is anybody's guess.

Moment of the match:  There were some fantastic tries, but Jean de Villiers' try in the second half welcomed the belated return of a phenomenal talent, who has been kept off the centre stage for far too long.

Villian of the match:  It was a clean game and despite some poor option-taking, nobody deserves this award.

The Teams:

South Africa:  1 Eddie Andrews, 2 John Smit (c), 3 Os Du Randt, 4 Bakkies Botha, 5 Gerrie Britz, 6 A.J. Venter, 7 Schalk Burger Jr., 8 Jacques Cronje, 9 Bolla Conradie, 10 Jaco Van Der Westhuyzen, 11 Jean De Villiers, 12 De Wet Barry, 13 Marius Joubert, 14 Breyton Paulse, 15 Percy Montgomery
Reserves:  Fourie Du Preez, Quinton Davids, C.J. Van Der Linde, Pedrie Wannenburg
Unused:  Danie Coetzee, Gaffie Du Toit, Brent Russell

Pacific Islanders:  1 Soane Tonga'uiha, 2 Aleki Lutui, 3 Tevita Taumoepeau, 4 'Inoke Afeaki (c), 5 Ifereimi Rawaqa, 6 Sione Lauaki, 7 Alifereti Doviverata, 8 Sisa Koyamaibole, 9 Mosese Rauluni, 10 Tanner Vili, 11 Sireli Bobo, 12 Seilala Mapusua, 13 Seru Rabeni, 14 Sitivini Sivivatu, 15 Norman Ligairi
Reserves:  Filipo Levi, Tu Tamarua, Brian Lima, Steven So'oialo, Taufa'ao Filise, Seremaia Baikeinuku, Joeli Lotawa

Referee:  Young s.

Points Scorers:

South Africa
Tries:  Paulse B.J. 2, De Villiers J. 1, Cronje J. 1
Conv:  Montgomery P.C. 3
Pen K.:  Montgomery P.C. 4

Pacific Islanders
Tries:  Bobo I. 1, Sivivatu S.W. 2, Lauaki S. 1
Conv:  Rabeni R.S. 2

Australia 7 New Zealand 16

New Zealand beat Australia 16-7 at Westpac Stadium in Wellington, thus retaining the Bledisloe Cup and taking a strong step forward to Tri-Nations success.  They were full value for their victory as they dominated the match far more comprehensively than the score suggests.  The Wallabies were brave in defence, in which the weather was their ally.

Wellington was wet -- not especially windy -- but wet as the rain teemed down, handling was iffish and footing uncertain.

From Stephen Larkham's first kick-off which went directly into touch, the All Blacks had almost total domination of the first half.  The Wallabies had one foray into the All Black 22 while the New Zealanders were several times close to the Australian goal-line.  In the second half, too, the Wallaby went twice into the All Blacks 22 -- and scored once!

In the first half the All Blacks threw into 18 line-outs, the Wallabies into seven, which is part of the story of getting possession.  True the All Blacks lost three but the Wallabies gave up three as well.

In the second half the All Blacks were not penalised at all, while the two penalties which the All Blacks scored both came from some form of foul play.  For the first Brendan Cannon punched Keven Mealamu in the face in what looked like gratuitous violence.  For the second, just before the end, Stirling Mortlock tackled Tana Umaga high.

After his first failed kick-off, Larkham followed with more flops as the Wallabies appeared unnerved in the absence of George Gregan and in the face of pressure.  Larkham may well have had his worst match in the Wallaby jersey.  Lost without Gregan?

Both teams, the best ball-handlers in the world of rugby, battled with passing, but the All Blacks more than the wallabies as they tried to attack.

The Wallabies threatened first when Justin Harrison charged down a Mils Muliaina clearance but Doug Howlett saved and Clyde Rathbone was penalised.

That was the best of the first ten minutes.

Muliaina broke past Stirling Mortlock and the move was carried on until Muliaina kicked and Chris Latham saved.

Kees Meeuws, twice penalised at scrums, worked a clever move at a line-out and the All Blacks attacked but lost the ball.

They got a ball they did not deserve soon afterwards when the referee adjudged the Wallabies to have carried over and gave the All Blacks a five-metre scrum but a skidding pass became a scrum which became a penalty and relieved the pressure on the wallabies -- temporarily.

The All Blacks had a good moment from a line-out when Mealamu threw short to Chris Jack who set off with Mealamu to within three metres of the line.

After Daniel Carter had been short with a kick at goal when Phil Waugh stamped on a player some distance from the obvious ball. he goaled one when Al Baxter was penalised at a scrum.  Carter later missed one when Bill Young was penalised for playing a man without the ball.

That made the half-time score 3-0 to New Zealand.

The second half was marred by an ugly fight.  Cannon punched Mealamu who objected.  They were not the only fighters as Justin Harrison, who expressed his dislike for Justin Marshall, and Carlos Spencer also appeared to be doing the punching.  In the end both hookers -- Mealamu and Cannon -- were sent to the sin bin, Australia were penalised and Carter made it 6-0.

Twice in the half Chris Whitaker was forced to carry over an All Black grubber.  From a five-metre scrum the All Blacks bashed, Joe Rokocoko came from the left and threw a long pass to his right and Doug Howlett had an easy passage to the line.  Carter converted.  13-0.

The game looked safe for New Zealand who carried on attacking.

Then the Wallabies had two chances, one slight, one realised, both from kicks.

Lote Tuqiri had a long kick but Howlett got back, Wallabies did not arrive and Justin Marshall cleared.

Then Matt Giteau kicked high and seemingly innocuously.  But Rokocoko dropped and slipped to the ground.  Mortlock dived onto the ball and surfed over under the bar.  Giteau converted.  13-7, but that was that -- the Wallabies had no other chances in the match.

With a minute to go Mortlock was penalised and Carter kicked the straight-forward kick over.

Man of the Match:  Brave as Stirling Mortlock was, and hard as Chris Whitaker tried, the Man of the Match has to be an All Black, the question is who.  Chris Jack had a huge game, Keven Mealamu was all action and courage, blotted copybook apart, Tana Umaga was always a handful and Mils Muliaina full of life.  But our choice was eventually between Marty Holah who was here there and effectively everywhere and our eventual choice brave, strong, decisive Justin Marshall on a night when the scrum-half had to be good.

Moment of the Match:  There was the joy of Doug Howlett's try, there was Simon Maling's skidding pass, and there was the unedifying fight.  But our moment is Stirling Mortlock's dive onto the ball as he surfed it over in the wet.

Villain of the Match:  Brendan Cannon and Keven Mealamu were the men with the yellow cards in which Cannon looked more guilty than Mealamu.

The Teams:

Australia:  1 Alastair Baxter, 2 Brendan Cannon, 3 Bill Young, 4 Justin Harrison, 5 Nathan Sharpe (c), 6 Radike Samo, 7 Phil Waugh, 8 David Lyons, 9 Chris Whitaker, 10 Steve Larkham, 11 Lote Tuqiri, 12 Matt Giteau, 13 Stirling Mortlock, 14 Clyde Rathbone, 15 Chris Latham
Reserves:  Jeremy Paul, Wendell Sailor, Matt Henjak, Matt Dunning, George Smith
Unused:  Matthew Burke, Daniel Vickerman

New Zealand:  1 Carl Hayman, 2 Keven Mealamu, 3 Kees Meeuws, 4 Chris Jack, 5 Simon Maling, 6 Jono Gibbes, 7 Marty Holah, 8 Xavier Rush, 9 Justin Marshall, 10 Carlos Spencer, 11 Doug Howlett, 12 Daniel Carter, 13 Tana Umaga (c), 14 Joe Rokocoko, 15 Mils Muliaina
Reserves:  Jerry Collins, Andrew Hore
Unused:  Nick Evans, Craig Newby, Greg Somerville, Byron Kelleher, Sam Tuitupou

Attendance:  38000
Referee:  Rolland a.

Points Scorers:

Australia
Tries:  Mortlock S.A. 1
Conv:  Giteau M.J. 1

New Zealand
Tries:  Howlett D.C. 1
Conv:  Carter D.W. 1
Pen K.:  Carter D.W. 3

Saturday, 3 July 2004

Australia 29 Pacific Islanders 14

Australia were made to work very hard for their 29-14 win in the historical inaugural Test against the Pacific Islanders at the Adelaide Oval.  The Wallabies outscored the hardy visitors by five tries to two, but the game was a lot closer than the margin suggested.

In an historic match in Adelaide, Australia beat the Pacific Islanders 29-14, a tough encounter on a slithery evening before a cheerful crowd of some 20 000.  The Wallabies won but the Islanders hurt the Wallabies.

Clyde Rathbone, three-try scorer against England, was hurt in three tackles this week and eventually left the field.  Joe Roff hurt a knee in a tackle and left.  George Gregan was heavily dumped in a tackle and left.  Stirling Mortlock was hurt in a tackle and left with a bulging eye.  Others could also have been hurt as the Islanders bashed with ball in hand and then bashed the Wallabies when the Australians had the ball.

The Islanders played their first Test ever and did so well.

There were also memorable moments for André Watson, who was refereeing his last Test after a wonderful career, and Brumbies prop Nic Henderson, brought into the squad when Matt Dunning hurt an eye.  Late in the match Henderson got onto the field, just in time to win his first cap.

It certainly was a contest.  One interesting area of contention was at the tackle where the Islanders drove in hard and won a surprising number of turn-overs.

For long periods of the match, despite the conditions, the Islanders, in their blue and red shorts and red, white and blue jerseys, deprived the Wallabies of the ball as they went through many phases -- more phases than metres against a determined Australian defence.

A feature of the match was the judicious kicking by the Wallabies against the pointless kicking of the Islanders.

The rain held off for the start of the match.  There was none while the Australians sang their anthem and the Pacific Islanders their aggressive dance, a sipi tau, a Tongan form of wardance, led by a tattooed baggage master in war dress.

Not long afterwards, the rain started and the ground became increasingly slippery, very much a cricket ground in shape, amenities and bald pitch.

The Islanders' full back, experienced Norman Ligairi, had problems getting to the ball as the Wallabies kicked cleverly.  A Stephan Larkham kick forced a line-out, to the Islanders, five metres from the Islanders' line.  The Islanders lost five of their 16 line-outs but won this own and scrumhalf Mosese Rauluni cleared badly.  Rathbone, back after his first shaking up, played inside.  The Wallabies countered on their left, Lote Tuqiri straightened up to fix two defenders before giving to Mortlock who still had hard work ahead as he scored in Lome Fa'atua's tackle.  Roff missed the conversion from the corner.  He missed the next two conversions as well, unusual for the great man.

Just before half-time Australia countered off a Tanner Chan Vili kick and got their second try when Larkham grubbered ahead on the left and Matt Giteau did well to grab the bobbing ball to score in the corner.

That made it 10-0 at half-time.

The best two breaks of the half had been by Larkham and Vili.  It was a half of stern defence.

In the second half Seremaia Bai missed his second penalty kick at goal but then the Islanders bashed with urgent purpose at the Wallaby line, which held.  The ball then came to their left and strong flank Sione Lauaki burst through George Gregan and Justin Harrison to score near the posts.  10-7 after 48 minutes.

Australia had had two five-metre line-outs in the first half without scoring.  But in the second half they got one right, drove their maul over for back-man Jeremy Paul to score:  15-7.

They tried it again soon afterwards but the maul fell down.  Back the ball came to Larkham who lobbed a long high kick across the posts to his right.  Lote Tuqiri was one of those contesting the ball.  He knocked it back and Giteau dropped on it.  This time Roff converted.  22-7 after 57 minutes.

Paul was just short after a fourth five-metre line-out and then the television match official judged that Chris Latham had lost the ball in grounding it.

The Islanders survived and scored when Bai broke, looked to his right and chipped a delightful ball which speedster Sireli Bobo caught and scored.  Bai converted.  22-14 after 71 minutes.

The Wallabies caught the Islanders napping from the kick off.  Larkham kicked left.  Matt Burke got the ball, and got a clever pass to Mortlock who battled his way ahead to score in the corner.  Matthew Burke converted.

Man of the Match:  There were two excellent, creative flyhalves -- Tanner Chan Vili for the Islanders and Stephen Larkham for the Wallabies.  Our Man of the Match is Stephan Larkham, who ran with decision, kicked judiciously and tackled as effectively as anybody on the field.

Moment of the Match:  Seremaia Bai's chip that gave Sireli Bobo his try.

Villain of the Match:  Dan Vickerman got the only yellow card of the match but our villain is Inoke Afeaki.  Long after Clyde Rathbone had passed to his right Afeaki, from behind, laid him waste and forced the young wing off the field.

The Teams:

Australia:  1 Alastair Baxter, 2 Brendan Cannon, 3 Bill Young, 4 Justin Harrison, 5 Nathan Sharpe, 6 Radike Samo, 7 Phil Waugh, 8 David Lyons, 9 George Gregan (c), 10 Steve Larkham, 11 Lote Tuqiri, 12 Matt Giteau, 13 Stirling Mortlock, 14 Clyde Rathbone, 15 Joe Roff
Reserves:  Matthew Burke, Chris Latham, Jeremy Paul, Chris Whitaker, Nic Henderson, George Smith, Daniel Vickerman

Pacific Islanders:  1 Taufa'ao Filise, 2 Aleki Lutui, 3 Soane Tonga'uiha, 4 'Inoke Afeaki (c), 5 Ifereimi Rawaqa, 6 Sione Lauaki, 7 Sisa Koyamaibole, 8 Alifereti Doviverata, 9 Mosese Rauluni, 10 Tanner Vili, 11 Lome Fa'atau, 12 Seilala Mapusua, 13 Seremaia Baikeinuku, 14 Sitivini Sivivatu, 15 Norman Ligairi
Reserves:  Sireli Bobo, Leo Lafaiali'i, Semo Sititi, Steven So'oialo, Tevita Taumoepeau, Seru Rabeni
Unused:  Joeli Lotawa

Attendance:  19296
Referee:  Watson a.

Points Scorers:

Australia
Tries:  Mortlock S.A. 2, Giteau M.J. 2, Cannon B.J. 1
Conv:  Roff J.W.C. 1, Burke M.C. 1

Pacific Islanders
Tries:  Lauaki S. 1, Bobo I. 1
Conv:  Baikeinuku S. 2

Saturday, 26 June 2004

South Africa 53 Wales 18

South Africa brushed Wales aside with disdain as they scored a 53-18 win over the hapless Dragons at Loftus in Pretoria, outscoring their opponents by seven tries to two.  It was another impressive performance by a South African team that improves every week.

But for the third successive week their victory celebrations were tempered by the news that a player may have suffered a potentially serious injury.  Lock Victor Matfield left the field late in the 60th minute, and was later seen with ice packed to his knee.

Coach Jake White admitted that he was concerned, but said that he was not sure how serious it was.  It is unlikely the Boks will know before Sunday or Monday what the full extent of the injury is, but it is not the kind of news he would have wanted ahead of the Tri-Nations series next month.

But Matfield's injury aside, it was another performance that displayed the potential in White's team.

Many still expected the Boks to win and win comfortably, but few expected such a brutal performance, despite the team still being way off the pace.

Even against the Welsh on Saturday there were periods when the Boks were simply too casual or over eager and wasted scoring chances.

The tight forwards totally dominated proceedings and the Welsh were always living off scraps.  As a result, the visitors spent large periods of the game defending deep inside their own half.

But in the end the visitors had no answer for the wave, after wave of Springbok attacks.

The South Africans were full of running in the early stages, but their finishing let them down.

In fact it was Wales who scored first, when Gavin Henson slotted a 50-metre penalty, after a South African went offside on the halfway line.

The Boks continued to enjoy territorial dominance, but a number of chances were lost -- either through some sloppy play or just over-eagerness.

But after 14 minutes the Bok machine clicked into gear and from phase ball they spun it to the left, where fly-half Jaco van der Westhuyzen floated through a gap.

He was brought down just five metres out, but captain John Smit came flying through and despite being scragged saw his momentum carry him over for a try that had the crowd jumping out of their seats in delight.  Montgomery added the conversion for a 7-3 lead.

Penalties dominated the play for the next 15 minutes, with Montgomery slotting two and Henson one as the scored moved on to 13-6.

It was not until the 30th minute that the crowd had something to really cheer about.  It started with a failed touch-finder.  The Boks started running it back and it was giant lock Victor Matfield who powered his way through the Welsh defence to set up the try.

Matfield timed his pass to perfection as he sent winger Brent Russell over for a try under the uprights.  Montgomery's conversion moved the score along to a comfortable 20-6.

The next moment of brilliance came in the 39th minute, when the Boks again showed their brilliant counter-attacking abilities.  It came from a ruck and No.8 Jacques Cronjé bursting away with the ball.  Quick hands by Percy Montgomery and Schalk Burger saw the ball go wide to Marius Joubert, who threw a long pass to a flying Breyton Paulse on the right.

He set off down the touchline, with the Welsh desperately scrambling in cover.  But a neat little inside step saw him burst through a tackle and over for the try.  Montgomery added the conversion to make it 27-6 at the break.

The Boks appeared to become a touch sloppy after the break, probably knowing they had the game won and wanted to run everything and in the process neglecting the basics.

But they were simply still too powerful for the brave Welsh and by the 52nd minute they powered their way over for another try.

After some scrappy play, which saw the Boks go backwards, they settled and Wayne Julies powered his way through a tackle, off-loaded to Marius Joubert and stayed up in support to collect the inside pass and go over for his try.

Six minutes later it was winger Brent Russell who went over for his second try after some very quick and slick passing by the Boks.  Montgomery's conversion made it 39-6.

The Welsh scored a consolation try, when the Boks when into a lull, in the 66th minute.  Henson's conversion made it 39-13.

But it wasn't long before the Boks scored again, with scrum-half Bolla Conradie going over after a brilliant little dart down the left touchline in the 70th minute.  Montgomery took it to 46-13 with the conversion.

The Boks broke the half century mark when young Schalk Burger powered his way over in the 78th minute, while the Welsh completed the scoring with a consolation touch-down in the 80th minute.

Man of the match:  There was stirling performances from Jaco van der Westhuyzen at fly-half, who was always dangerous and really troubles the Welsh defence, Percy Montgomery, Brent Russell and Breyton Paulse -- all who did themselves proud.  In the forwards the loose trio were again and outstanding feature and the tight forwards dominated as they should.  But our vote for man of the match goes to veteran prop forward Os du Randt, who did all that was expected of him in the set pieces, drove the ball up strongly and then still found the energy to chase down backs on the defence -- such as that 80th minute tackle he put in on Welsh centre Tom Shanklin.

Moment of the match:  With nine tries in the match there is sure to be many great moments -- such as scrum-half Bolla Conradie's dart down the touchline in the 70th minute, Breyton Paulse's step inside to beat the cover defence on his way to a try and captain John Smit's hurdling antics when he scored his try.  But for us the moment was the sight of big lock Victor Matfield charging downfield and powering through the defence in midfield, before off-loading to a flying Brent Russell in the 30th minute.

Villain of the match:  None, not in this match.

The Teams:

South Africa:  1 Faan Rautenbach, 2 John Smit (c), 3 Os Du Randt, 4 Victor Matfield, 5 Quinton Davids, 6 Schalk Burger Jr., 7 Pedrie Wannenburg, 8 Jacques Cronje, 9 Fourie Du Preez, 10 Jaco Van Der Westhuyzen, 11 Breyton Paulse, 12 Marius Joubert, 13 Wayne Julies, 14 Brent Russell, 15 Percy Montgomery
Reserves:  Eddie Andrews, Geo Cronje, Henno Mentz, Hanyani Shimange, Gerrie Britz, Bolla Conradie, Gaffie Du Toit

Wales:  1 Gethin Jenkins, 2 Mefin Davies, 3 Adam Jones, 4 Deiniol Jones, 5 Gareth Llewellyn, 6 Dafydd Jones, 7 Colin Charvis (c), 8 Alix Popham, 9 Dwayne Peel, 10 Nicky Robinson, 11 Shane Williams, 12 Sonny Parker, 13 Tom Shanklin, 14 Haldane Luscombe, 15 Gavin Henson
Reserves:  Huw Bennett, Duncan Jones, Ceri Sweeney, Jonathan Thomas, Darren Morris
Unused:  Rhys Williams, Mike Phillips

Attendance:  43920
Referee:  Walsh s.

Points Scorers:

South Africa
Tries:  Paulse B.J. 1, Julies W. 1, Russell R.B. 2, Smit J.W. 1, Burger Jr. S.W.P. 1, Conradie J.H. 1
Conv:  Montgomery P.C. 6
Pen K.:  Montgomery P.C. 2

Wales
Tries:  Williams S.M. 1, Peel D. 1
Conv:  Henson G.L. 1
Pen K.:  Henson G.L. 2

Australia 51 England 15

Australia secured their first win over England since 1999 -- and the Cook Cup -- by recording an impressive 51-15 victory in Brisbane, with Clyde Rathbone making the most of a very late call-up by collecting a hat-trick of tries.

The South African-born flyer was asked to start the match after wing Wendell Sailor pulled up injured during the warm-up, and the replacement went on to show England a clean pair of heels on three occasion.

Despite the frightening symmetry of the final scoreline, England were full of industry, and played reasonably well in patches.

Whether their overall performance was an improvement on their games in New Zealand is a matter of debate, but they manage to play some effective forward-dominated rugby that kept Australia in reverse gear for long periods of the match.

Not that it seemed to worry the Wallabies too much.

Each time England lost the ball in attack -- and there were numerous occasions of this -- the yellows seized on the opportunity and countered from deep with peerless verve, instinct and imagination.

England -- in their 18th Test of the season -- looked positively geriatric in comparison to the fleet-footed Australian backs, and had no answers to their opponents' scything breaks.

Australia fullback Joe Roff got the scoreboard ticking with a penalty after his opposite number, Josh Lewsey, failed to release -and he added another soon after for an England infringement at the line-out.

England fly-half Charlie Hodgson reduced the deficit from in front of the posts, but the home side replied with the first of their six tries.

Fly-half Stephen Larkham's long pass from a line-out on the half-way line found Matt Giteau, who released Lote Tuqiri, who sent Rathbone over in the right corner.

England responded with some tight rugby and got themselves back into the game with their first try of their three-Test tour on the 30-minute mark.

A wave of English attacks broke down in the Australian 22 and winger Ben Cohen reacted quickly, swapping passes with Tom Voyce before sending the supporting Richard Hill over in the left corner for an unconverted try.

The five-pointer sparked England's confidence, but the Wallabies soon burst the tourists' balloon with another long-range try.

Larkham's cut-out pass found Roff steaming up the middle.  The veteran No.15 sold Cohen a dummy and sent Rathbone in for his second at the stroke of half-time.

Despite Rathbone's brace, England went into the break with a game to win -- trailed as they did by only 21-8.

Their optimism was evident early in the second half when the arrival of Matt Dawson and Olly Barkley added a little initiative to the England backs, and they were soon rewarded with a try.

Dawson was at his spiky best, and two quick tap-penalties saw the Wallabies chasing backwards, and they failed to grips with England skipper Lawrence Dallaglio who went over from close range.

Hodgson converted to make it 24-15, and England were eyeing up a shock victory to close out their season -- but it was not to be.

Rathbone opened the Australian floodgates by collected his own kick ahead to complete his hat-trick, and three more tries followed in a devastating 15-minute spell.

Roff showed his class to scythe through and send replacement hooker Jeremy Paul over a try, and the hooker collected his second score moments later when England's defence was caught short out wide.

Tuqiri then jinked his way through a demoralised field of English defenders to notch up Australia's sixth try, before Roff delivered the coup de grace by bring up the half-century with a penalty in the final minute.

This was England's fourth successive loss -- equalling their worst sequence of results since coach Sir Clive Woodward took charge almost seven years ago.

England -- like their footballing counterparts -- will now return to the UK for a thankful rest, and a chance to work out where it all went so horribly wrong.

Tim Henman, it's over to you!  Heaven help us.

Man of the Match:  Of course, Clyde Rathbone deserves a stout thump on the back for seizing the initiative and three tries -- but it was the outstanding Joe Roff who masterminded the breaks and marshalled the Australian attack.  What England would do to have such a thinker behind the scrum.

Moment of the Match:  Rathbone's speed and Samo Radike's athleticism combined to dizzying effect early in the second half during a break down the wing, but it was Lote Tuqiri's try that will live longest in the memory.

Villain of the Match:  Wallaby captain George Gregan may deserve a slap on the wrists for deciding to go for the poles in the last minute of the game -- he was simply effectively a bucket of salt into a very painful English wound.  But the 50 points were all well deserved, and it will only add to this fixture's rich pageantry -- we'll let him off with a warning!

The Teams:

Australia:  1 Alastair Baxter, 2 Brendan Cannon, 3 Bill Young, 4 Justin Harrison, 5 Nathan Sharpe, 6 Radike Samo, 7 Phil Waugh, 8 David Lyons, 9 George Gregan (c), 10 Steve Larkham, 11 Lote Tuqiri, 12 Matt Giteau, 13 Stirling Mortlock, 14 Clyde Rathbone, 15 Joe Roff
Reserves:  Chris Latham, Jeremy Paul, Matt Henjak, Matt Dunning, John Roe, George Smith, Daniel Vickerman

England:  1 Julian White, 2 Mark Regan, 3 Tim Payne, 4 Simon Shaw, 5 Steve Borthwick, 6 Richard Hill, 7 Joe Worsley, 8 Lawrence Dallaglio (c), 9 Andy Gomarsall, 10 Charlie Hodgson, 11 Ben Cohen, 12 Mike Catt, 13 Mike Tindall, 14 Tom Voyce, 15 Josh Lewsey
Reserves:  Fraser Waters, Martin Corry, Matt Dawson, Olly Barkley, Michael Lipman, Steve Thompson, Mike Worsley

Attendance:  52492
Referee:  O'brien p.

Points Scorers:

Australia
Tries:  Rathbone C. 3, Tuqiri L.D. 1, Paul J.A. 2
Conv:  Roff J.W.C. 3
Pen K.:  Roff J.W.C. 5

England
Tries:  Dallaglio L.B.N. 1, Hill R.A. 1
Conv:  Hodgson C.C. 1
Pen K.:  Hodgson C.C. 1

Saturday, 19 June 2004

NZ Maori 26 England A 19

A long-range try in the final minute of extra-time sealed a first ever Churchill Cup win for the New Zealand Maori, who saw of England XV in the Final with a 26-19 victory.

Had the Maori not scored they would have won based on tries scored in the game, but the stamp of the try was a pleasing end to a long day of rugby in Edmonton's Commonwealth Stadium.

With the scores tied 19-19 in the 99th minute of play, Caleb Ralph streaked to the five-metre line popping up to Hosea Gear -- who then crossed untouched for the winner.

Before that, in the first period of extra time, New Zealand's Glen Jackson failed to land a drop-goal from 30 metres out.  He was then rewarded for an English hand in the ruck, giving him a 39-metre kick from the touchline for the lead -- but his effort drifted to the left, and the deadlock dragged on.

England fly-half Dave Walder -- in for the injured Alex King -- also missed a drop-goal and then a penalty in extra time.

Jackson could have saved the Maori from extra time in the 84th minute of regular time, but he missed a penalty, and opened the door to England.

Indeed, it was England who had all the early play, and got the scoreboard ticking over with a Walder penalty in the fifth minute, but Ryan Nichols responded two minutes later with a try from 20 metres out -- Jackson failed to convert and the Maori had a tenuous two point lead 5-3.

Newcastle Falcons centre Jamie Noon got the English back into the lead after getting a pass from Henry Paul who release him from 25 metres out.  Walder added the conversion and England had the lead at 10-5 after fifteen minutes.

Maori skipper Corey Flynn then put his side into arrears with a sin-binning for killing the ball as England were threatening to attack.  Walder added his second penalty from the offense to increase the English lead to 13-5.

Walder hit his third penalty of the game to extend the England lead to 16-5 after thirty four minutes.

New Zealand were showing promise on limited possession, but had no answers for the waves of English movement with ball in hand -- and Walder added his fourth penalty to give his side a 19-5 lead at the break.

The Maori cracked the try-line for the first time in the second half when Ralph stayed out on the far left and collected a miss-two that allowed the speedster to go over with a clean pair of heels.  With the conversion the Maori were back in it -- adrift by only 19-12 after 49 minutes.

Two minutes later it was an interception by Jackson -- which he converted himself -- that set by the 19-19 tie that the Maori managed to break at a death.

Man of the Match:  Former All Black wing Caleb Ralph for the Maori was impressive on his second half try, and it was his tireless efforts in the overtime period that finally broke the English defense to put Hosea Gear away for the eventual winner.

Moment of the Match:  Again, involving Ralph, when the inventive winger streaked for some forty metres to set up the Gear try -- ending a 99-minute classic of a game between England and the Maori.

Villain of the Match:  None of note in a relatively clean match -- though the finger could be pointed at Maori captain Corey Flynn for his sin-binning (killing the ball) in the first half -- putting his team under stress early on.

Points Scorers:

New Zealand
Tries:  Nicholas, Ralph, Jackson, Gear
Cons:  Jackson 2

England
Try:  Noon
Con:  Walder
Pens:  Walder 4

Referee:  Pearson d.

England 12 New Zealand 36

There was drama at Eden Park when the All Blacks beat England 36-12 -- and not all the drama was acceptable.  It was a cantankerous match which will be remembered for unpleasant reasons.

Whatever happened in the first half was overshadowed by the fighting which had its nadir in the sending off of Simon Shaw of England for using his knee on Keith Robinson of New Zealand.  Robinson was not England's favorite New Zealander.

It was never a charming match with simmering violence there all the time.

There was much in the England performance which was admirable -- but their virtues spilled over into vices as a bit of Albuferra came to Auckland, but this time amongst the players, not the fans.

The All Blacks also suffered a player reduction late in the match when with 12 minutes left Marty Holah was sent to the sin-bin for a critical infringement near the All Black line.

Oh, and the All Blacks won the series 2-0, twice scoring more than thirty points against the holders of the World Cup who failed to score a try in either Test.

England started off doing to the All Blacks what the All Blacks did to them in Dunedin -- getting stuck in at the tackle and doing it in numbers.In those first ten minutes of English aggression England went 6-0 ahead when Carl Hayman was penalised at a scrum and then a second three minutes later when New Zealand were off-side during a concerted England attack.

Then came the fighting madness.  First Joe Worsley and Keith Robinson were spoken to.  Then came worse when Robinson was lying over bit of a tackle area.  Julian White put an admonishing boot on him and then Shaw stuck the knee, producing unhappy reactions on both sides.

The referee showed Shaw a red card.  Reduced to 14 men England battled manfully and with more control but gradually the All Blacks got on top.

Daniel Carter broke sharply down the New Zealand right and gave to Mils Muliaina, who had wasted an earlier run by footing into the England in-goal.  Back this time the ball came going left and then back right.  Justin Marshall was close, possibly within stretching distance.  He lost the ball.

England eventually broke out and were in a position to score a try but the game was brought 80 metres back because Mark Regan had tackled Marshall without the ball.  Carter goaled and the score was 6-3 to England.

The All Blacks collected an England drop-out and there was the electric majesty of Joe Rokocoko surging thorough their defence.  He gave to Carter who seemed to have a straight ruin to the line, but Tom Voyce hauled him in and it took a sharp decision by the television match official for the try to be awarded.  Carter then converted from far out.

That made the score 10-6 to New Zealand at half-time.

Joe Rokocoko scored a hat-trick of tries in the second half.

From a line-out Muliaina came wrapping round from the right-wing.  Nick Evans burst ahead and gave to Rokocoko who scored.  Carter converted.  17-6 after 47 minutes.

Seven minutes later it was the Evans-Rokocoko combination that made the wing's second try with an inside pass.  Carter, inevitably, converted.  24-6.

In this half the All Blacks were penalised repeatedly, England not at all.  Hodgson kicked two at a time when substitutions proliferated.  24-12 to England after 62 minutes.

Andrew Mehrtens came on as a replacement at this stage to rapturous Eden Park applause.  He had one masterful break which should have led to a try but petered out on a Carter grubber into in-goal.

From a scrum Xavier Rush and Marshall did clever thins.  The ball came back to Spencer who kicked a high diagonal kick which Rokocoko juggled, gather and used to score his thirds Test-match hat-trick.  Cater converted.  31-12.

While Holah was considering his sins on the side-line, the All Blacks scored a sweeping, long-range try with Spencer surging over in the corner.  Mehrtens missed the conversion.

There was a little time for some more containerise moments but eventually the final whistle blew on an affair that was noble in some aspects, so sad in others.

Man of the Match:  Elegant Joe Rokocoko.  He made one and scored three.

Moment of the Match:  Moments are not always pleasant.  There were pleasant ones, such as Trevor Woodman's break, and Joe Rokocoko's third try off the high hoof, but the dominant moment was Simon Shaw's indiscretion and sending off.

Villain of the Match:  Simon Shaw.

Red card:  Simon Shaw

The Teams:

England:  1 Trevor Woodman, 2 Mark Regan, 3 Julian White, 4 Simon Shaw, 5 Steve Borthwick, 6 Richard Hill, 7 Joe Worsley, 8 Lawrence Dallaglio (c), 9 Andy Gomarsall, 10 Charlie Hodgson, 11 Ben Cohen, 12 Mike Tindall, 13 Stuart Abbott, 14 Tom Voyce, 15 Josh Lewsey
Reserves:  Fraser Waters, Matt Dawson, Danny Grewcock, Olly Barkley, Michael Lipman, Andy Titterrell, Matt Stevens

New Zealand:  1 Carl Hayman, 2 Keven Mealamu, 3 Kees Meeuws, 4 Chris Jack, 5 Keith Robinson, 6 Jono Gibbes, 7 Marty Holah, 8 Xavier Rush, 9 Justin Marshall, 10 Carlos Spencer, 11 Mils Muliaina, 12 Daniel Carter, 13 Tana Umaga (c), 14 Joe Rokocoko, 15 Nick Evans
Reserves:  Jerry Collins, Andrew Hore, Craig Newby, Tony Woodcock, Andrew Mehrtens, Sam Tuitupou
Unused:  Byron Kelleher

Attendance:  49000
Referee:  Williams n.

Points Scorers:

England
Pen K.:  Hodgson C.C. 4

New Zealand
Tries:  Carter D.W. 1, Rokocoko J.T. 3, Spencer C.J. 1
Conv:  Carter D.W. 4
Pen K.:  Carter D.W. 1