Saturday, 18 November 2017

Wales edge Georgia in dour clash

Wales bounced back from last week's loss to Australia by claiming a 13-6, if under-whelming, victory over Georgia at the Principality Stadium.

It wasn't pretty and the Welsh were never out of sight as the Lelos stayed in the match throughout, with Hallam Amos the only try scorer.

Rhys Priestland kicked eight points while in reply Soso Matiashvili slotted Georgia's six in a game they can leave with their heads high.

Wales were frustrated in the first half in Cardiff and were limited to just one try, coming through Amos in the 19th minute to lead 10-3.

Before that they'd set out their stall with quick taps from Rhys Webb showing they wanted to play at pace and not get dragged into a scrap.

Priestland nudged them in front on seven minutes when Georgia were penalised at a ruck and they thought they'd crossed the whitewash soon after, but wing Alex Cuthbert was held up over the line by scrum-half Vasil Lobzhanidze's brilliant try saving tackle.  It remained at 3-0.

Wales weren't to be denied though 10 minutes later when a lineout drive was moved wide by Webb before Priestland's wrap around created the space on the left wing for Amos, who finished easily.  Priestland slotted the difficult extras too to move Wales into a deserved 10-0 lead.

There was then a spell that arguably changed the game as Amos thought he had his second from long range but play was brought back for a rip in contact that saw the ball go forward.  That resulted in a scrum penalty for Georgia and Matiashvili kicked it for a fillip for the Lelos.

After the break the visitors further reduced the margin on 48 minutes when a scrum penalty saw Matiashvili make it 10-6 from 42 metres out.

But Priestland cancelled that out just after the hour mark as the Bath fly-half was informed by his captain to take the points, which was a clear shift in mindset from the early-game attacking.  Wales were now wary that they were struggling to put the rugged Georgians to bed.

In fact Georgia were sniffing a levelling seven-pointer on the 70 minute mark but thankfully for Wales their pack stood up at scrum time to repel the onslaught.  That and more spirited defence that led to replacement prop Tomas Francis being yellow carded on 79 minutes for side entry, ultimately ended with the hosts fending off the visitors' late short carries as Wales held on to avoid a shock defeat.

The scorers:

For Wales:
Try:  Amos
Con:  Priestland
Pens:  Priestland 2
Yellow Card:  Francis

For Georgia:
Pens:  Matiashvili 2

Wales:  15 Liam Williams, 14 Alex Cuthbert, 13 Scott Williams, 12 Owen Watkin, 11 Hallam Amos, 10 Rhys Priestland, 9 Rhys Webb, 8 Seb Davies, 7 Sam Cross, 6 Dan Lydiate (c), 5 Cory Hill, 4 Adam Beard, 3 Leon Brown, 2 Kristian Dacey, 1 Nicky Smith
Replacements:  16 Elliot Dee, 17 Wyn Jones, 18 Tomas Francis, 19 Josh Navidi, 20 Taulupe Faletau, 21 Aled Davies, 22 Dan Biggar, 23 Owen Williams

Georgia:  15 Soso Matiashvili, 14 Giorgi Koshadze, 13 Davit Katcharava, 12 Merab Sharikadze (c), 11 Mirian Modebadze, 10 Lasha Khmaladze, 9 Vasil Lobzhanidze, 8 Beka Bitsadze, 7 Vito Kolelishvili, 6 Lasha Lomidze, 5 Giorgi Nemsadze, 4 Kote Mikautadze, 3 Levan Chilachava, 2 Jaba Bregvadze, 1 Mikheil Nariashvili
Replacements:  16 Shalva Mamukashvili, 17 Kakha Asieshvili, 18 Soso Bekoshvili, 19 Giorgi Chkhaidze, 20 Giorgi Tkhilaishvili, 21 Giorgi Begadze, 22 Revaz Jintchvelashvili, 23 Merab Kvirikashvili

Referee:  Mathieu Raynal (France)
Assistant referees:  Shuhei Kubo (Japan), Sean Gallagher (Ireland)
TMO:  Leo Colgan (Ireland)

Argentina too good for Italy

Argentina got their end-of-year Test campaign back on track when they secured a deserved 31-15 victory against Italy in Florence on Saturday.

In a topsy-turvy match, in which the lead changed hands eight times, the Pumas took control of proceedings during the latter part of the second half and eventually outscored their hosts three tries to none.

The victory is only Argentina's second one of the year, from 11 matches played, but the result is also significant as it means they have now won their seventh successive match against the Azzurri.

Argentina were dealt a blow after five minutes when Nicolas Sanchez was forced off the field for a Head Injury Assessment.  His absence was not too disruptive as his replacement, Juan Martin Hernandez, got the game's opening points courtesy of a penalty in the 12th minute before Sanchez returned three minutes later.

Shortly after Hernandez's penalty, Italy drew level when Carlo Canna added a three-pointer from the kicking tee after Juan Manuel Leguizamon held onto the ball on the ground.

Midway through the half, Santiago Garcia Botta was blown up for illegal scrummaging and Canna succeeded with the resulting penalty which gave the home side a 6-3 lead.

Argentina did not take that lying down and regained the lead in the 27th minute when Sebastian Cancelliere stepped past three defenders inside Italy's 22 before crossing for the game's opening try.

Sanchez's conversion attempt was off target and six minutes later, Canna slotted his third penalty after another Botta indiscretion at a scrum which meant the Azzurri held a slender 9-8 lead at the break.

Five minutes into the second half, the Pumas were back in front courtesy of a Sanchez penalty before Canna restored his side's one-point lead with his only penalty of the second half.

Another Sanchez penalty, five minutes later, meant the Pumas had their noses in front again but Marcello Violi made it 15-14 to Italy when he landed a drop-goal in the 57th minute.

That would be the last time the Azzurri would score points, however, as the Pumas upped the ante on attack in the game's final quarter.

On the hour-mark, Sanchez added his third penalty before Marcos Kremer barged over from close quarters for his first Test try, in the 69th minute.

Sanchez added the extras, which gave the visitors a nine-point lead.  They continued to attack and were rewarded in the 77th minute when Joaquin Tuculet gathered a pass from Emiliano Boffelli before dotting down in the right-hand corner and Sanchez's conversion sealed the win for Argentina.

The scorers:

For Italy:
Pens:  Canna 4
Drop-goal:  Violi

For Argentina:
Tries:  Cancelliere, Kremer, Tuculet
Cons:  Sanchez 2
Pens:  Hernandez, Sanchez 3

Italy:  15 Jayden Hayward, 14 Leonardo Sarto, 13 Tommaso Boni, 12 Tomasso Castello, 11 Mattia Bellini, 10 Carlo Canna, 9 Marcello Violi, 8 Sergio Parisse (c), 7 Abraham Steyn, 6 Francesco Minto, 5 Dean Budd, 4 Marco Fuser, 3 Simone Ferrari, 2 Luca Bigi, 1 Andrea Lovotti
Replacements:  16 Leonardo Ghiraldini, 17 Federico Zani, 18 Dario Chistolini, 19 Federico Ruzza, 20 Giovanni Licara, 21 Tito Tebaldi, 22 Ian McKinley, 23 Matteo Minozzi

Argentina:  15 Joaquin Tuculet, 14 Sebastian Cancelliere, 13 Matias Orlando, 12 Santiago Gonzalez Iglesias, 11 Emiliano Boffelli, 10 Nicolas Sanchez, 9 Martin Landajo, 8 Juan Manuel Leguizamon, 7 Marcos Kremer, 6 Pablo Matera, 5 Tomas Lavanini, 4 Matias Alemanno, 3 Nahuel Tetaz Chaparro, 2 Agustin Creevy (c), 1 Santiago Garcia Botta
Replacements:  16 Julian Montoya, 17 Lucas Noguera, 18 Enrique Pieretto, 19 Guido Petti, 20 Banjamin Macome, 21 Gonzalo Bertranou, 22 Juan Martin Hernandez, 23 Matias Moroni

Referee:  Jaco Peyper (South Africa)
Assistant referees:  Glen Jackson (New Zealand), Pierre Brousset (France)
TMO:  Brian MacNeice (Ireland)

Saturday, 11 November 2017

All Blacks get the better of France

The All Blacks claimed a 38-18 victory over France in their opening November international fixture at Stade de France on Saturday.

Tries from Dane Coles, Ryan Crotty, Sam Cane and a Waisake Naholo brace proved too much for France who scored through Teddy Thomas and a penalty try.

It was a scrappy affair with plenty of knock-ons and a lot of time was consumed with scrum resets.

The All Blacks blew the French out of the water in the first-half.  Les Bleus had a golden spell during the opening thirteen minutes of the second half in which they made the scoreline slightly more respectable.

The All Blacks drew first blood courtesy of Coles who ran the perfect line to latch on to Beauden Barrett's pass to scythe through the French line of defence to dot down.  Barrett added the extras.

Barrett added a penalty on the 16-minute mark after les Bleus were penalised for holding on to extend the visitors' lead to 10-0.

The All Blacks showed good ball retention keeping the ball through the phases in a move that flowed from left to right before the French defence was finally breached when Barrett's long pass found Naholo out on the right wing for an easy run-in.  Barrett slotted the conversion as the All Blacks took a 17-0 lead after 23 minutes.

Soon after, les Bleus scored a wonderful try with textbook expansive rugby as the ball went through the hands of the French backline seamlessly for Thomas to dive over in the right-hand corner.

The first-half was plagued by stoppages due to the scrum collapsing and Rabah Slimani paid the price when he received a yellow-card for repeatedly infringing in this regard.

The All Blacks duly capitalised on their numerical advantage when Crotty ran through to collect an expertly weighted grubber kick through from Sonny Bill Williams.

Soon after, the visitors further asserted their dominance after superb handling and interplay between forwards and backs saw Cane break the line to go over as the All Blacks took a 31-5 lead in to the interval.

The first action of the second half was a Belleau penalty to make the scoreline look slightly more respectable.  Soon afterwards, a Belleau cross-kick after Dupont had brilliantly made the initial break was punched away by Sonny Bill Williams over the dead ball line;  an action for which the All Black centre was yellow-carded and a penalty try awarded.

Belleau added a penalty to make it 31-18.  The All Blacks put the game beyond doubt when Naholo grabbed his brace after good patient build-up once again.  Barrett converted on the final whistle to give the All Blacks a 38-18 victory.

The scorers:

For France:
Try:  Thomas, Penalty Try
Pens:  Belleau 2
Yellow Card:  Slimani

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Coles, Naholo 2, Crotty, Cane
Cons:  Barrett 4
Pen:  Barrett
Yellow Card:  Williams

The teams:

France:  15 Nans Ducuing, 14 Teddy Thomas, 13 Geoffrey Doumayrou, 12 Mathieu Bastareaud, 11 Yoann Huget, 10 Anthony Belleau, 9 Antoine Dupont, 8 Louis Picamoles, 7 Kevin Gourdon, 6 Judicael Cancoriet, 5 Paul Gabrillagues, 4 Sebastien Vahaamahina, 3 Rabah Slimani, 2 Guilhem Guirado (c), 1 Jefferson Poirot
Replacements:  16 Clement Maynadier, 17 Raphael Chaume, 18 Daniel Kotze, 19 Paul Jedrasiak, 20 Anthony Jelonch, 21 Baptiste Serin, 22 Francois Trinh-Duc, 23 Damian Penaud

New Zealand:  15 Damian McKenzie, 14 Waisake Naholo, 13 Ryan Crotty, 12 Sonny Bill Williams, 11 Rieko Ioane, 10 Beauden Barrett, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read (c), 7 Sam Cane, 6 Vaea Fifita, 5 Sam Whitelock, 4 Luke Romano, 3 Nepo Laulala, 2 Dane Coles, 1 Kane Hames
Replacements:  16 Codie Taylor, 17 Wyatt Crockett, 18 Ofa Tu'ungafasi, 19 Scott Barrett, 20 Matt Todd, 21 TJ Perenara, 22 Lima Sopoaga, 23 Anton Lienert-Brown

Referee:  Angus Gardner (Australia)
Assistant referees:  Matthew Carley (England), Tom Foley (England)
TMO:  Rowan Kitt (England)

Ireland whip woeful Springboks

Ireland were in fine form in their opening end-of-year Test as they claimed a deserved 38-3 win over South Africa in Dublin on Saturday.

As the scoreline suggests, the home side delivered a dominant display as they controlled proceedings from start to finish and they eventually outscored their visitors four tries to none.

This was always going to be a difficult encounter for the Springboks but they have only themselves to blame for this defeat as they were outplayed in all facets of play.

They battled from the outset and their performance was littered with errors.  The Boks' game-plan was difficult to understand as it lacked creativity and there was no spark in their attack with the half-back duo of Ross Cronje and Elton Jntjies battling throughout.

By contrast, their counterparts, Conor Murray and Johnny Sexton delivered a tactical masterclass and they were accurate in implementing their side's game-plan.

The Springboks suffered an early setback when Coenie Oosthuizen was forced off the field in the second minute with a leg injury after going down under a challenge from Bundee Aki.

Two minutes later, Beast Mtawarira was blown up for illegal scrummaging and Sexton opened the scoring when he slotted the resulting penalty.

Ireland had the better of the early exchanges and it showed on the scoreboard as they were 9-0 up midway through the half thanks to two further penalties from Sexton.

First, after Lood de Jager was penalised for slowing the ball down illegally in the 15th minute and five minutes later, after Pieter-Steph du Toit infringed at a ruck.

The hosts were slowly taking control of proceedings as they dominated the possession and territorial stakes and, crucially, also winning the bulk of the collisions — best illustrated when Iain Henderson bumped off Eben Etzebeth in an earth-hattering second row confrontation in the 22nd minute.

Ireland's dominance reaped further reward in the 25th minute when Murray launched a teasing box kick which Courtnall Skosan failed to deal with on the edge of the Boks' 22.  Andrew Conway gathered the bouncing ball and outsprinted the cover defence before crossing in the right-hand corner for the game's opening try and the first of his Test career.

Sexton was off target with the conversion but Ireland continued to dominate as the half continued, although they would score no further points during this period and the teams changed sides with the hosts leading 14-0 at half-time.

The visitors dominated the second half's opening exchanges, however, and eventually opened their account in the 44th minute when Jantjies landed a penalty after CJ Stander was blown up for a high tackle on Mtawarira.

Ireland replied with a Sexton penalty in the 57th minute, after Du Toit was penalised at a breakdown again, and although the next 15 minutes was an arm-wrestle, Ireland would seal the win with three late tries from Rhys Ruddock, Rob Herring and Jacob Stockdale.

Ruddock's try was a special one as he beat Franco Mostert with a great side-step before crashing over in the 71st minute.  This after an inside pass from Sexton to Stockdale in the build-up, tore the Bok defence to shreds.  Stockdale offloaded to Conway, who was stopped close to the Boks' tryline, and after another phase was set up, Ruddock rounded off with his superb finish.

That score knocked the wind out of the visitors' sails but Ireland were far from finished.  Five minutes later, South African-born hooker Herring powered his way over the whitewash off the back off a driving maul before Stockdale rounded off a superb backline move in the game's dying moments to add the final nail to the Boks' coffin.

The scorers:

For Ireland:
Tries:  Conway, Ruddock, Herring, Stockdale
Cons:  Sexton, Carbery 2
Pens:  Sexton 4

For South Africa:
Pen:  Jantjies

Ireland:  15 Rob Kearney, 14 Andrew Conway, 13 Robbie Henshaw, 12 Bundee Aki, 11 Jacob Stockdale, 10 Johnny Sexton, 9 Conor Murray, 8 CJ Stander, 7 Sean O’Brien, 6 Peter O’Mahony, 5 Devin Toner, 4 Iain Henderson, 3 Tadhg Furlong, 2 Rory Best (c), 1 Cian Healy
Replacements:  16 Rob Herring, 17 Dave Kilcoyne, 18 John Ryan, 19 James Ryan, 20 Rhys Ruddock, 21 Kieran Marmion, 22 Joey Carbery, 23 Darren Sweetnam

South Africa:  15 Andries Coetzee, 14 Dillyn Leyds, 13 Jesse Kriel, 12 Damian de Allende, 11 Courtnall Skosan, 10 Elton Jantjies, 9 Ross Cronje, 8 Francois Louw, 7 Pieter-Steph du Toit, 6 Siya Kolisi, 5 Lood de Jager, 4 Eben Etzebeth (c), 3 Coenie Oosthuizen, 2 Malcolm Marx, 1 Tendai Mtawarira
Replacements:  16 Bongi Mbonambi, 17 Steven Kitshoff, 18 Wilco Louw, 19 Franco Mostert, 20 Uzair Cassiem, 21 Rudy Paige, 22 Handré Pollard, 23 Francois Venter

Referee:  Ben O’Keeffe (New Zealand)
Assistant referees:  Wayne Barnes (England), Ian Davies (Wales)
TMO:  David Grashoff (England)

Wallabies overpower Wales

The Wallabies secured a 29-21 victory over Wales at the Principality Stadium, outscoring their opponents by four tries to two.

Tries from Tatafu Polota-Nau, Adam Coleman, Michael Hooper and Kurtley Beale proved too much for Wales who scored through Steff Evans and Hallam Amos late on.

Leigh Halfpenny gave Wales an eighth-minute lead as his penalty sailed through the posts.

The Wallabies took the lead with Polota-Nau going over at the back of a lineout driving maul.  Bernard Foley added the extras to make it 7-3 after 13 minutes.

Soon after, Wales retook the lead after good work by Gareth Davies initially to make the break down the right wing.  The ball was recycled to the left where Evans produced a clinical finish.  Halfpenny was, as usual, accurate from the tee and gave the hosts a 10-7 lead.

But the Wallabies hit back immediately with Coleman going over after Foley's grubber bamboozled the Welsh defence.  Marika Koroibete was halted inches from the line and Will Genia's flat, spin-pass was gobbled up by Coleman.  Foley converted as Australia led 14-10 after 23 minutes.

Reece Hodge extended the Wallabies lead with a long-range penalty after Josh Navidi was penalised for holding on after good work by Sean McMahon at the breakdown to get his body over the ball and secure the turnover penalty.

A Halfpenny penalty reduced the deficit to four after 37 minutes but there was still time before the interval for the Wallabies to score another try and it was skipper Hooper who showed good pace to fend off Davies and dot down as the Wallabies took a 22-13 lead into the interval.

Against the run of play, Beale extended the visitors' lead when he pounced on Evans' spill to race through all the way to the line.  Foley converted to make it 29-16 after 64 minutes.

Hooper was then yellow-carded for an offence at the breakdown after repeated infringements from the Wallabies.

And Wales capitalised on their numerical advantage when Amos gathered Davies' kick and managed to dot down within the field of play despite the best efforts of Koroibete.

But the Wallabies had still done too much and ran out 29-21 winners.

The scorers:

For Wales:
Tries:  Evans, Amos
Con:  Halfpenny
Pens:  Halfpenny 3

For Australia:
Tries:  Polota-Nau, Coleman, Hooper, Beale
Cons:  Foley 3
Pen:  Hodge

Wales:  15 Leigh Halfpenny, 14 Liam Williams, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Owen Williams, 11 Steff Evans, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Gareth Davies, 8 Taulupe Faletau, 7 Josh Navidi, 6 Aaron Shingler, 5 Alun Wyn Jones (c), 4 Jake Ball, 3 Tomas Francis, 2 Ken Owens, 1 Rob Evans
Replacements:  16 Kristian Dacey, 17 Nicky Smith, 18 Leon Brown, 19 Cory Hill, 20 Sam Cross, 21 Aled Davies, 22 Owen Watkin, 23 Hallam Amos

Australia:  15 Kurtley Beale, 14 Marika Koroibete, 13 Tevita Kuridrani, 12 Samu Kerevi, 11 Reece Hodge, 10 Bernard Foley, 9 Will Genia, 8 Sean McMahon, 7 Michael Hooper (c), 6 Ned Hanigan, 5 Adam Coleman, 4 Rob Simmons, 3 Sekope Kepu, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 1 Scott Sio
Replacements:  16 Stephen Moore, 17 Tom Robertson, 18 Allan Alaalatoa, 19 Matt Philip, 20 Ben McCalman, 21 Nick Phipps, 22 Karmichael Hunt, 23 Henry Speight

Referee:  Glen Jackson (New Zealand)
Assistant referees:  Jaco Peyper (South Africa), Ian Tempest (England)
TMO:  Graham Hughes (England)

England win arm-wrestle with Argentina

England got their end-of-year international campaign off to a winning start as they battled past Argentina 21-8 at Twickenham on Saturday.

Nathan Hughes and Semesa Rokoduguni's tries saw them to victory in a scrappy display that needs to improve next week against Australia.

The tries came either side of the break with George Ford kicking 11 points, while Nicolas Sanchez crossed for Argentina late on in the contest.

It was hardly a first-half to write home about and with Sam Underhill's tackling the highlight, that told a story of the lack of attacking.  Underhill was a rock in the contact area and alongside Hughes, impressed during the opening stanza, putting his name forward for the shirt.

Missed kicks from both outfits were evident too as Ford was off-target with two of his five first-half attempts, although they both struck the post.  Meanwhile, Juan Martin Hernandez missed two out of two off the tee for Argentina, who still managed to stay in touch with their hosts.

Ford hit the upright on two minutes before knocking over a penalty soon after, with Emiliano Boffelli levelling from range a minute later.

The England number 10 then made it 6-3 before Pumas full-back Joaquin Tuculet was yellow carded for making contact with Mike Brown in the air.  That was the injured Brown's last act as England then went in search of making their numerical advantage count which pleased the Twickenham fans.

It took them no time at all to cross as Ford's brilliant flat pass saw Hughes collect and get over wide out, making it an 11-3 advantage.

Then came the misses from the kickers as first Ford's conversion attempt hit the upright before Hernandez was wayward with two penalties.  However, Ford made no mistake seven minutes before the interval to give his side an 11-point buffer which they deserved at the turnaround.

Things didn't improve in terms of quality early in the second period and just when England seemed to be turning the screw at an attacking line-out, a spillage from Dylan Hartley at the base foiled the set-piece.  It seemed like Eddie Jones would soon be turning to his bench.

Argentina too were racking up the errors, their latest seeing Boffelli miss a penalty.  That meant there was still no points in the half, with replacement fly-half Sanchez also missing his first shot, a relative sitter, on 65 minutes as their kicking woes continued.

That was compounded when England broke from nowhere a minute later and crossed through Rokoduguni, who collected Henry Slade's flat pass and dived over on the right wing.  Ford slotted the extras and suddenly the result was beyond doubt at 21-3.  England rolled on their bench.

But it was a Pumas replacement who had the final say as Sanchez crossed in the 78th minute for a consolation score in a forgetful game at Twickenham.

The scorers:

For England:
Tries:  Hughes, Rokoduguni
Con:  Ford
Pens:  Ford 3

For Argentina:
Try:  Sanchez
Pen:  Boffelli
Yellow Card:  Tuculet

England:  15 Mike Brown, 14 Anthony Watson, 13 Jonathan Joseph, 12 Henry Slade, 11 Elliot Daly, 10 George Ford, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Nathan Hughes, 7 Sam Underhill, 6 Chris Robshaw, 5 George Kruis, 4 Courtney Lawes, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Dylan Hartley (c), 1 Mako Vunipola
Replacements:  16 Jamie George, 17 Ellis Genge, 18 Harry Williams, 19 Joe Launchbury, 20 Sam Simmonds, 21 Danny Care, 22 Alex Lozowski, 23 Semesa Rokoduguni

Argentina:  15 Joaquin Tuculet, 14 Ramiro Moyano, 13 Matias Moroni, 12 Santiago Gonzalez Iglesias, 11 Emiliano Boffelli, 10 Juan Martin Hernandez, 9 Martin Landajo, 8 Tomas Lezana, 7 Marcos Kremer, 6 Pablo Matera, 5 Tomas Lavanini, 4 Matias Alemanno, 3 Nahuel Tetaz Chaparro, 2 Agustin Creevy (c), 1 Santiago Garcia Botta
Replacements:  16 Julian Montoya, 17 Lucas Noguera, 18 Enrique Pieretto, 19 Benjamin Macome, 20 Leonardo Senatore, 21 Gonzalo Bertranou, 22 Nicolas Sanchez, 23 Sebastian Cancellere

Referee:Marius van der Westhuizen (South Africa)
Assistant referees:  Nigel Owens (Wales), Dan Jones (Wales)
TMO:  Olly Hodges (Ireland)

Scotland edge past Samoa

Scotland scored six tries to claim a hard-fought 44-38 win over Samoa in a high-scoring game at Murrayfield on Saturday.

Tries from Stuart Hogg, Huw Jones, Alex Dunbar, Pete Horne and a Stuart McInally brace proved too much for Samoa who scored through Josh Tyrell, Piula Faasalele, Tim Nanai-Williams, Kieran Fonotia and Ofisa Treviranus.

It was a game in which Scotland would extend their lead only to be pegged back by Samoa who almost always came up with a response.

Nanai-Williams was a revelation at fly-half for Samoa showcasing his versatility and that tried and trusted right boot.  Finn Russell was excellent too for Scotland.

Russell's defence-splitting grubber kicks was arguably the Scots' main attacking weapon.  Stuart Hogg was a very willing chaser, profiting once and almost on another occasion but just couldn't keep the ball in play.

Scotland opened the scoring in the third minute.  After winning an early penalty, the home side passed the ball out wide to the right.  Russell's kick resulted in Hogg getting his chance and grabbing his opportunity with both hands to dot down.  Russell made no mistake with the conversion.

Nanai-Williams responded with a penalty after a Scotland tackler was penalised for not rolling away in the 12th minute but Russell restored his side's seven-point buffer with a penalty of his own after this time Samoa were penalised for not rolling away.

Soon after, Russell extended the lead to a 10-point margin at 13-3 with another penalty before Samoa hit back with an excellent try.  Showing great ball retention as they took the ball through the phases among the forwards before Josh Tyrell manouevred his way over from close range.  Nanai-Willliams made it a three-point game at 13-10 with the Samoans breathing down the Scots' necks as he made no mistake in slotting the conversion.

The Scots scored their second try five minutes before half-time.  Taking a quick lineout, Russell did well to keep the ball alive and it was shifted out toward the left touchline courtesy of an long, flat Ali Price spin pass to Huw Jones who ran a great line with the Samoa defence guilty of being slightly stand-offish.  Jones slipped his tackler and had too much momentum for the covering defender as he bashed over.

And the hosts still had time to extend their lead when McInally went over at the back of a well co-ordinated Scottish driving maul.  Russell added the extras with Scotland taking a 25-10 lead in to the interval.

The second half started just as the first ended with McInally going over in the exact same fashion, the hooker emerging from the melee of bodies after another rolling lineout driving maul.

Soon after, Fa'asalele hit back for the visitors as he burst over after a series of powerful carries from the Samoan forwards.  Nanai-Williams added the extras to make the score 32-17 to Scotland with 51 minutes gone.

And then 10 minutes later, Nanai-Williams further reduced the deficit as he cut through the Scotland defence like a hot knife through butter to cap an impressive performance in the unfamiliar 10 position.

Just when it was starting to look dangerous for Scotland, Dunbar got himself in the try column when he bashed between two tacklers to dot down after substitute fly-half Pete Horne produced a delicate kick over the top which Lee Jones collected and offloaded for Dunbar who ran on to the ball with great momentum and was not going to be stopped.

Soon after, Samoa restored their deficit to six when a really quick pick and go from Fonotia saw the former Crusaders man going over for his score.

But Scotland put the game beyond doubt when Horne turned try-scorer, this time after a beautiful pass from Cornell du Preez meant Horne had a gaping hole to cross the whitewash from 20 metres out.

Samoa, as they proved the whole game, managed to find a response when Treviranus showed great speed and ingenuity as he exploited the empty space behing the ruck with his opportunistic pick-and-go to dot down as it ended 44-38 to Scotland.

The scorers:

For Scotland:
Tries:  Hogg, H Jones, McInally 2, Dunbar, Horne
Cons:  Russell 3, Horne
Pens:  Russell 2

For Samoa:
Tries:  Tyrell, Fa'asalele, Nanai-Williams, Fonotia, Treviranus
Cons:  Nanai-Williams 5
Pen:  Nanai-Williams

The teams:

Scotland:  15 Stuart Hogg, 14 Tommy Seymour, 13 Huw Jones, 12 Alex Dunbar, 11 Lee Jones, 10 Finn Russell, 9 Ali Price, 8 Ryan Wilson, 7 Hamish Watson, 6 John Barclay (c), 5 Jonny Gray, 4 Ben Toolis, 3 Willem Nel, 2 Stuart McInally, 1 Darryl Marfo
Replacements:  16 George Turner, 17 Jamie Bhatti, 18 Zander Fagerson, 19 Tim Swinson, 20 Cornell Du Preez, 21 Henry Pyrgos, 22 Pete Horne, 23 Chris Harris

Samoa:  15 Ahsee Tuala, 14 Paul Perez, 13 Kieron Fonotia, 12 Reynold Lee-Lo, 11 David Lemi, 10 Tim Nanai Williams, 9 Pele Cowley, 8 Jack Lam, 7 TJ Ioane, 6 Piula Fa'asalele, 5 Chris Vui (c), 4 Josh Tyrell, 3 Donald Brighouse, 2 Manu Leiataua, 1 Jordan Lay
Replacements:  16 Motu Matu'u, 17 James Lay, 18 Hisa Sasagi, 19 Fa'Atiga Lemalu, 20 Ofisa Treviranus, 21 Mealani Matavao, 22 Aj Alatimu, 23 Alapati Leiua

Referee:  Nic Berry (Australia)
Assistant referees:  Paul Williams (New Zealand), George Clancy (Ireland)
TMO:  Simon McDowell (Ireland)

Italy see off Fiji to end losing streak

Italy got their end-of-year campaign off to an impressive start when they claimed a hard-fought 19-10 win over Fiji in Catania on Saturday.

The result is a significant one for the Azzurri as it is their first victory of 2017 and ends a nine-match losing streak which stretches back to their 19-17 loss to Tonga in Padova last November.

There was plenty of hype about this match in its build-up as both teams went into the fixture employing expansive game-plans, but although there was plenty of enterprising play during the first half, the Azzurri played more with their forwards after half-time and this helped them to secure the result.

Both sides scored a try apiece although Fiji conceded too many penalties in the second half which paved the way to victory for their hosts.

Italy took an early lead courtesy of a Carlo Canna penalty in the fifth minute after Fiji's backs were blown up for offside play close to their try-line.

The Azzurri held the upper-hand for the next 15 minutes but although they set up several attacks inside Fiji's half, they had no reward as they were met by a solid defensive effort from the Pacific isladers.

And in the 21st minute, the visitors drew level via a Ben Volavola penalty after Canna infringed at a ruck.  The Azzurri continued to attack and five minutes later, Simone Ferrari ran onto a Marcello Violi pass and barged over for the opening try.

Fiji thought they had their first try in the 35th minute when Josua Tuisova went over the try-line after he charged down an attempted clearance kick from Jayden Hayward deep inside Italy's 22.  The try was not awarded, however, as television replays showed that Tuisova lost control of the ball while crossing the whitewash.

That setback did not prove too costly though as on the stroke of half-time, Leone Nakarawa burst through a tackle from Sergio Parisse, just outside Italy's 22, and the Fijian lock showed a superb turn of speed to outpace the cover defence before dotting down next to the uprights.

Volavola added the extras which meant the sides were deadlocked at 10-10 at the interval.

The Azzurri were fastest out of the blocks after the break when, from a Fijian lineout on their five-mete line, Canna, who was standing in the scrum-half position, came around at the set-piece and ripped the ball from Apisalome Ratuniyarawa's grasp before dotting down.

Like Tuisova's effort earlier, referee John Lacey checked with his TMO, Neil Paterson, who ruled correctly that Canna came from an offside position.

But despite that ruling, Italy got stronger as the match progressed while Fiji faded badly.  Two Canna penalties in the 52nd and 58th minutes, gave the hosts a six-point cushion which meant the visitors had to take more risks in the final quarter.

But things went from bad to worse when Volavola was sent to the sin bin for a cynical foul at a ruck in the 65th minute.  That meant the visitors were under the cosh for the rest of the match and Italy sealed their win courtesy of a penalty from debutant Ian McKinley, two minutes before full-time.

The scorers:

For Italy:
Try:  Ferrari
Con:  Canna
Pens:  Canna 3, McKinley

For Fiji:
Try:  Nakarawa
Con:  Volavola
Pen:  Volavola
Yellow Card:  Volavola

Italy:  15 Jayden Hayward, 14 Leonardo Sarto, 13 Tommaso Boni, 12 Tomasso Castello, 11 Mattia Bellini, 10 Carlo Canna, 9 Marcello Violi, 8 Sergio Parisse (c), 7 Abraham Steyn, 6 Francesco Minto, 5 Dean Budd, 4 Marco Fuser, 3 Simone Ferrari, 2 Luca Bigi, 1 Andrea Lovotti
Replacements:  16 Leonardo Ghiraldini, 17 Federico Zani, 18 Dario Chistolini, 19 Marco Lazzaroni, 20 Giovanni Licara, 21 Edoardo Gori, 22 Ian McKinley, 23 Matteo Minozzi

Fiji:  15 Kini Murimurivalu, 14 Josua Tuisova, 13 Asaeli Tikoirotuma, 12 Jale Vatubua, 11 Timoci Nagusa, 10 Ben Volavola, 9 Frank Lomani, 8 Nemani Nagusa, 7 Akapusi Qera (c), 6 Semi Kunatani, 5 Leone Nakarawa, 4 Apisalome Ratuniyarawa, 3 Manasa Saulo, 2 Tuapati Talemaitoga, 1 Campese Ma’afu
Replacements:  16 Sunia Koto, 17 Peni Ravai, 18 Ropate Rinakama, 19 Sikeli Nabou, 20 Mosese Voka, 21 Henry Seniloli, 22 Levani Botia, 23 Vereniki Goneva

Referee:  John Lacey (Ireland)
Assistant referees:  Brendon Pickerill (New Zealand), Pierre Brousset (France)
TMO:  Neil Paterson (Scotland)

Saturday, 4 November 2017

All Blacks fight back to sink Barbarians

The All Blacks claimed a 31-22 come-from-behind win over a gutsy Barbarians outfit in a thrilling match at Twickenham on Saturday.

Tries from TJ Perenara, Vaea Fifita, Ngani Laumape, Sam Cane and Nathan Harris proved too much for the Barbarians who scored through Richie Mo'unga, Sam Carter and a George Bridge brace.

The Barbarians dominated the first-half much to everyone's surprise, but the All Blacks had a ruthless ten-minute second-half patch to storm back.

The Barbarians came flying out of the blocks and stunned the world champions with the game's first try after an eight minute spell in which they were camped in All Blacks' territory.  It was Mo'unga who exploited the overlap on the right wing to dot down after Andy Ellis's good blindside pass from the ruck.

The Baa-baas continued to tear up the script when Steven Luatua made a thrilling intercept and just when it looked as if he was running out of steam, the dynamic flanker did well to offload to Bridge who dotted down for a 10-0 lead.

The All Blacks responded when TJ Perenara's sniping blindside break off the back of an attacking scrum saw the nippy scrum-half feed Waisake Naholo on the overlap, who did exceptionally well to stay in touch and get the pass away back to Perenara who finished off a wonderful team move.

However, the Barbarians were not to be outshone and scored their third try when Sam Carter burst over after a series of powerful carries from the Baa-baas' forwards to give the rogue outfit a shock 17-5 lead.

But Naholo once again came to the fore, turning creator for the second time when once again he produced a wonderful offload with his body falling to the floor for Fifita to dot down after the All Blacks had taken the ball through numerous phases spanning the length of the field.  That would prove to be the last action of an exciting first half which saw the Baa-baas take a shock 17-10 lead in to the interval.

The All Blacks levelled matters at 17-17 after 53 minutes when Laumape took a wonderful crash ball from Tawera Kerr-Barlow to smash through Mo'unga and go over.

Soon after, the world champions took the lead for the first time in the game.  It was Naholo who made the initial break and put the Baa-baas' defence on the back foot.  The ball was recycled and the All Blacks forwards took the ball through close quarters well before Cane burst over from close-range.

The All Blacks pulled away further as they got the luck of the bounce when Kerr-Barlow's box-kick landed perfectly for Harris who gleefully gobbled up the opportunity.  Barrett added the extras to give the All Blacks a 31-17 lead with 60 minutes gone.

There was still time for the Barbarians to score a consolation try when Bridge pounced on a Julian Savea grubber kick to grab his brace, much to the delight of their players and coaching staff as they signed off with a try.

The scorers:

For Barbarians:
Tries:  Mo'unga, Bridge 2, Carter
Con:  Mo'unga

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Perenara, Fifita, Laumape, Cane, Harris
Cons:  B Barrett 3

The teams:

Barbarians:  15 George Bridge, 14 Julian Savea, 13 Richard Buckman, 12 Harold Vorster, 11 Vince Aso, 10 Richie Mo’unga, 9 Andy Ellis (c), 8 Luke Whitelock, 7 Kwagga Smith, 6 Steven Luatua, 5 Dominic Bird, 4 Sam Carter, 3 Atu Moli, 2 Adriaan Strauss, 1 Jacques van Rooyen
Replacements:  16 Akker van der Merwe, 17 Ben Franks, 18 Ruan Smith, 19 Willie Britz, 20 Ruan Ackermann, 21 Mitchell Drummond, 22 Robert du Preez, 23 Dillon Hunt

New Zealand:  15 David Havili, 14 Waisake Naholo, 13 Anton Lienert-Brown, 12 Ngani Laumape, 11 Seta Tamanivalu, 10 Beauden Barrett (c), 9 TJ Perenara, 8 Jerome Kaino, 7 Ardie Savea, 6 Vaea Fifita, 5 Scott Barrett, 4 Luke Romano, 3 Nepo Laulala, 2 Nathan Harris, 1 Kane Hames
Replacements:  16 Asafo Aumua, 17 Tim Perry, 18 Jeffery Toomaga-Allen, 19 Patrick Tuipulotu, 20 Sam Cane, 21 Tawera Kerr-Barlow, 22 Lima Sopoaga, 23 Matt Duffie

Referee:  Nigel Owens (Wales)
Assistant referees:  Nic Berry (Australia), Ben Whitehouse (Wales)
TMO:  Rowan Kitt (England)

Nine-try Wallabies put Japan to the sword

Australia continued with their superb recent form when they secured an impressive 63-30 victory over Japan in Yokohama on Saturday.

As the scoreline suggests, this was a one-sided affair with the Wallabies dominating for large periods and they eventually outscored the Brave Blossoms nine tries to three with Tevita Kuridrani leading the way with a deserved hat-trick.

The Wallabies controlled proceedings from the outset and held a 35-3 lead at half-time courtesy of a brace of tries from Kuridrani and further five-pointers from Samu Kerevi, Henry Speight and Tatafu Polota-Nau.

They continued to dominate in the second half and were rewarded with further tries from Kuridrani, Kerevi, Nick Phipps and Rob Simmons.

Head coach Michael Cheika deserves credit for his decision to play Reece Hodge at fly-half as the 23-year-old impressed as his team's chief playmaker and finished with an 18-point haul after converting all his side's tries.

Japan improved as the game progressed and although they scored three tries in the second half, most of their points came during the game's latter stages when the Wallabies had the game in the bag.

Australia were fastest out of the blocks and Kerevi cantered over for the opening try after Adam Coleman and Polota-Nau laid the groundwork with strong carries in the build-up.

Five minutes later, Speight crossed for his side's second try before Rikiya Matsuda opened the home side's account via an 18th minute penalty after Polota-Nau strayed offside on defence.

The burly hooker made up for that indiscretion in the 24th minute, however, when he dotted down off the back of a driving maul and the visitors undrlined their dominance when Kuridrani scored two of his tries towards the end of the half.

Japan made a fine start to the second half when Wimpie van der Walt barged over from close quarters after Amanaki Mafi set him up with a strong run.  Matsuda converted and kicked a penalty which meant the Wallabies led 35-13 by the 50th minute.

Kerevi soon crossed for his second try though after impressive work from Hodge, Speight and Kurtley Beale before Matsuda slotted his third penalty in the 55th minute.

Australia continued to attack and Kuridrani crossed for his third try on the hour-mark after gathering an offload from Kerevi.  Phipps and Simmons' tries followed in quick succession and with the result secured, the visitors took their foot off the pedal as the clock wound down.

To their credit, the Brave Blossoms did not surrender and they were rewarded wwhen Mafi and Kazuki Himeno scored tries which added respectabilty to the scoreline.

The scorers:

For Japan:
Tries:  Van der Walt, Mafi, Himeno
Cons:  Matsuda, Tamura 2
Pens:  Matsuda 3

For Australia:
Tries:  Kerevi 2, Speight, Polota-Nau, Kuridrani 3, Phipps, Simmons
Cons:  Hodge 9

Japan:  15 Kotaro Matsushima, 14 Lomano Lava Lemeki, 13 Timothy Lafaele, 12 Harumichi Tatekawa, 11 Ryuji Noguchi, 10 Rikiya Matsuda, 9 Fumiaki Tanaka, 8 Amanaki Mafi, 7 Shunsuke Nunomaki, 6 Michael Leitch (c), 5 Uwe Helu, 4 Kazuki Himeno, 3 Takuma Asahara, 2 Shota Horie, 1 Keita Inagaki
Replacements:  16 Atsushi Sakate, 17 Koki Yamamoto, 18 Asaeli Ai Valu, 19 Wimpie van der Walt, 20 Fetuani Lautaimi, 21 Yutaka Nagare, 22 Yu Tamura, 23 Sione Teaupa

Australia:  15 Kurtley Beale, 14 Henry Speight, 13 Tevita Kuridrani, 12 Samu Kerevi, 11 Marika Koroibete, 10 Reece Hodge, 9 Nic Phipps, 8 Sean McMahon, 7 Michael Hooper (c), 6 Ned Hanigan, 5 Adam Coleman, 4 Rob Simmons, 3 Sekope Kepu, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 1 Scott Sio
Replacements:  16 Stephen Moore, 17 Tom Robertson, 18 Allan Alaalatoa, 19 Matt Philip, 20 Ben McCalman, 21 Lopeti Timani, 22 Joe Powell, 23 Curtis Rona

Referee:  Nick Briant (New Zealand)
Assistant referees:  Mike Fraser (New Zealand), Tim Baker (Hong Kong)
TMO:  Ben Skeen (New Zealand)

Maori All Blacks put 50 past Canada

The Maori All Blacks made a superb start to their end-of-year campaign when they claimed a 51-9 victory over Canada in Vancouver on Friday.

The visitors were full value for their win and outscored their hosts seven tries to none with Ihaia West contributing 14 points courtesy of four conversions and two penalties.

West put the Maori All Blacks in front when he landed a penalty in the third minute but Canada drew level when Brock Staller added a three-pointer off the kicking tee two minutes later.

Canada took a 6-3 lead in the 15th minute courtesy of another Staller penalty, after Dan Pryor was blown up for a dangerous tackle which also resulted in him spending the next 10 minutes in the sin bin.

Despite their numerical disadvantage, the Maori All Blacks took the lead shortly afterwards — Ambrose Curtis crossing for the opening try after Charlie Ngatai, Brad Weber and Rob Thompson did well in the build-up.

West added the extras but midway through the half Staller slotted another penalty which meant the Maori All Blacks held a slender 10-9 lead after 20 minutes.

The rest of the half saw Akira Ioane and Tom Franklin scoring converted tries and West also kicked a penalty in the 34th minute which meant the visitors led 27-9 at half-time.

The Maori All Blacks continued to dominate in the second half although they were dealt a blow shortly after the restart when Tim Bateman also received a yellow card for a high tackle.

Despite that setback, Ngatai crossed for their fourth try in the 52nd minute before Canada lock Josh Larsen was also sin-binned for a dangerous challenge on Weber on the hour-mark.

The rest of the match was a one-sided affair and the Maori All Blacks sealed their win in the game's latter stages thanks to well-taken tries from Shaun Stevenson, Jackson Garden-Bachop and Sean Wainui.

The scorers:

For Canada:
Pens:  Staller 3
Yellow Card:  Larsen

For Maori All Blacks:
Tries:  Curtis, Ioane, Franklin, Ngatai, Stevenson, Garden-Bachop, Wainui
Cons:  West 4, Garden-Bachop
Pens:  West 2
Yellow Cards:  Pryor, Bateman

Canada:  15 Andrew Coe, 14 Brock Staller, 13 Ben LeSage, 12 Guiseppe du Toit, 11 Dan Moor, 10 Patrick Parfrey, 9 Phil Mack (c), 8 Tyler Ardron, 7 Matt Heaton, 6 Dustin Dobravsky, 5 Josh Larsen, 4 Kyle Baillie, 3 Matt Tierney, 2 Ray Barkwill, 1 Hubert Buydens
Replacements:  16 Eric Howard, 17 Djustice Sears-Duru, 18 Ryan Kotlewski, 19 Lucas Rumball, 20 Evan Olmstead, 21 Andrew Ferguson, 22 Robbie Povey, 23 Kainoa Lloyd

Maori All Blacks:  15 Charlie Ngatai, 14 Sean Wainui, 13 Tim Bateman, 12 Rob Thompson, 11 Ambrose Curtis, 10 Ihaia West, 9 Brad Weber, 8 Akira Ioane, 7 Dan Pryor, 6 Tom Franklin, 5 Jarrad Hoeata, 4 Jackson Hemopo, 3 Marcel Renata, 2 Ash Dixon (c), 1 Chris Eves
Replacements:  16 Liam Polwart, 17 Ross Wright, 18 Tyrel Lomax, 19 Jordan Manihere, 20 Sam Henwood, 21 Te Toiroa Tahuriorangi, 22 Jackson Garden-Bachop, 23 Shaun Stevenson

Referee:  Kurt Weaver (USA)

Wednesday, 1 November 2017

Georgia upset Samoa in Tbilisi

Georgia caused a big upset at Mikheil Meskhi Stadium as they battled past Samoa 16-15 on Saturday, a team sat 11 places above them in the rankings.

The result was some turnaround from last week's 25-23 loss at home to the USA, as the Georgians left nothing in the tank against the islanders.

While they were outscored two to one on the try chart after Alapati Leiua and Jack Lam's first-half efforts, Merab Sharikadze's crossing four minutes after the turnaround put them into a 13-12 lead.

And despite Samoa landing a 70th minute penalty from Tusi Pisi to add to his one from the touchline on the half-hour mark, Georgia full-back Merab Kvirikashbili would be the hero as time ticked on.

Kvirikashbili fired over the final three of his eleven points on the day in added time before the hosts fought off a late barrage until the final whistle.

The scorers:

For Georgia:
Try:  Sharikadze
Con:  Kvirikashbili
Pen:  Kvirikashbili 3

For Samoa:
Tries:  Leiua, Lam
Con:  Pisi
Pen:  Pisi

Georgia:  15 Merab Kvirikashbili, 14 Tamaz Mtchedlidze, 13 Davit Kacharava, 12 Merab Sharikadze, 11 Giorgi Shkinin, 10 Lasha Khmaladze, 9 Giorgi Begadze, 8 Giorgi Chkhaidze, 7 Mamuka Gorgodze (c), 6 Giorgi Tkhilaishvili, 5 Levan Datunashvili, 4 Konstantine Mikautadze, 3 Levan Chilachava, 2 Shalva Mamukashvili, 1 Mikheil Nariashvili.
Replacements:  16 Simon Maisuradze, 17 Zurab Zhvania, 18 Davit Kubriashvili, 19 Girogi Nemsadze, 20 Shalva Sutiashvili, 21 Vazha Khutsishvili, 22 Tedore Zibzibadze, 23 Beka Tsiklauri.

Samoa:  15 Faatoina Autagavaia, 14 Alapati Leiua, 13 Isaia Tuifua, 12 Johnny Leota, 11 Brando Vaaulu, 10 Tusi Pisi, 9 Kahn Fotualii (c), 8 Faifili Levave, 7 Jack Lam, 6 Ofisa Treviranus, 5 Teofilo Paulo, 4 Piula Faasalele, 3 James Johnston, 2 Tii Paulo, 1 Sakaria Taulafo.
Replacements:  16 Wayne Ole Avei, 17 Viliamu Afatia, 18 Anthony Perenise, 19 Joe Tekori, 20 Taisina Tuifua, 21 Jeremy Sua, 22 Sinoti Sinoti, 23 Ken Pisi.

Referee:  Romain Poite (France)
Assistant referees:  Andrew McMenemy (Scotland), Vlad Jordachescu (Romania)

Saturday, 28 October 2017

Moore try helps Wallabies to victory

A 72nd minute try from replacement hooker Stephen Moore helped Australia to a 31-28 win over the Barbarians at the Sydney Cricket Ground.

With Taqele Naiyaravoro and Quade Cooper in the sin-bin, the Barbarians couldn't hold Australia out as they recovered to seal the victory.

There is concern for head coach Michael Cheika though as Lukhan Tui (hamstring) and Jack Dempsey (knee) both left the field and are now in doubt ahead of the Wallabies' tour to Japan and Europe.  Cheika will hope they can recover in time as both have been in impressive form.

The Barbarians led 21-12 at half-time thanks to tries from Andrew Ready, Naiyaravoro and Tom Banks, with Duncan Paia'aua and Henry Speight hitting back for the Wallabies, who knew they were in a contest against the invitational side that included several international players.

Australia moved 24-21 in front when tries from flank Dempsey and fly-half Paia'aua in the 53rd and 61st minute got them on the front foot.

But Naiyaravoro nudged the Barbarians back in front before those yellow cards led to Moore driving over from a maul to secure the victory.

The scorers:

For Australia:
Tries:  Paia'aua 2, Speight, Dempsey, Moore
Cons:  Paia'aua 3

For Barbarians:
Tries:  Ready, Naiyaravoro 2, Banks
Cons:  Cooper 4
Yellow Cards:  Naiyaravoro, Cooper

Australia:  15 Karmichael Hunt, 14 Henry Speight, 13 Samu Kerevi, 12 Billy Meakes, 11 Israel Folau, 10 Duncan Paia'aua, 9 Nick Phipps (c), 8 Lopeti Timani, 7 Jack Dempsey, 6 Ned Hanigan, 5 Lukhan Tui, 4 Rory Arnold, 3 Allan Alaalatoa, 2 Jordan Uelese, 1 Tom Robertson
Replacements:  16 Stephen Moore, 17 Tetera Faulkner, 18 Jermaine Ainsley, 19 Kane Douglas, 20 Ben McCalman, 21 Joe Powell, 22 Curtis Rona, 23 Izaia Perese

Barbarians:  15 Tim Nanai-Williams, 14 Taqele Naiyaravoro, 13 Tom Banks, 12 George Moala, 11 Eto Nabuli, 10 Quade Cooper (c), 9 Augustine Pulu, 8 Wycliff Palu, 7 Matt Hodgson, 6 Isi Naisarani, 5 Sam Carter, 4 Luke Jones, 3 Taniela Tupou, 2 Andrew Ready, 1 Pekahou Cowan
Replacements:  16 Anaru Rangi, 17 Ben Alexander, 18 Salesi Manu, 19 Matt Philip, 20 Kane Koteka, 21 Theo Strang, 22 Sam Greene, 23 Andrew Kellaway

Referee:  Brendon Pickerill (New Zealand)
Assistant referees:  Jamie Nutbrown (New Zealand), James Leckie (Australia)
TMO:  Aaron Paterson (New Zealand)

Saturday, 21 October 2017

Wallabies stun All Blacks in Brisbane

The Wallabies claimed a 23-18 win in the third and final Bledisloe Cup Test of the year at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane on Saturday.

Australia have ended a six-game winless drought against the All Blacks.  All the hard work by Michael Cheika and his coaching staff in holding an extended training camp prior to the Rugby Championship has paid off.

It gives Wallabies fans something to smile about after a torrid season for Australian rugby which saw their Super Rugby sides go winless against New Zealand opposition for the entire duration of the campaign and which saw the bad blood surrounding the Force’s axing.

Although the Bledisloe Cup had already been won the All Blacks, both sides were definitely not treating the match as a dead rubber, playing with the usual ferocity and passion accompanied with these clashes in the past.

The field was very slippery after inclement weather for 12 hours prior to the game.  This didn’t stop both sides from throwing the ball around but did result in a number of handling errors making it a rather stop-start first-half.

However, the game remained entertaining as referee Wayne Barnes allowed good advantage and both sides must be commended for persisting with their running games despite the poor conditions.

The Wallabies stunned the All Blacks against the run of play with the game’s opening try when Reece Hodge pounced to intercept after a set-piece move from the All Blacks went wrong from an attacking scrum in Wallabies territory.  Despite the scrum wheeling to the right, Aaron Smith persisted in going left putting his fly-half Lima Sopoaga under immense pressure whose errant pass was intercepted by Hodge who ran coast-to-coast to dot down between the sticks.  Bernard Foley converted for a six-minute 7-0 lead.

But the All Blacks responded eight minutes later.  From a 10-metre attacking lineout out on the left touchline, they took the ball through nine phases spanning the width of the field before Smith fired a skip pass wide for Waisake Naholo to run on to over the whitewash untouched just within the field of the play on the right touchline.  Sopoaga added the extras to level matters on the scoreboard.

And Sopoaga who was having a good game with his kicking in the tough conditions, gave the All Blacks the lead at 10-7 for the first time in the game when his 45-metre penalty sailed over after the All Blacks had done well to counter-ruck and win the penalty from the Wallabies.

And the All Blacks number 10 extended the lead to six points at 13-7 with another penalty after Wallabies flanker Jack Dempsey was penalised for offside.

However, it was the Wallabies who had the last laugh of the first-half when Israel Folau got on the inside of Naholo after Kurtley Beale’s pass had stretched the All Blacks defence after 12 phases between forwards and backs with Dempsey and Michael Hooper heavily involved.  Foley missed the conversion as the Wallabies trailed 13-12 at the break.  Folau became only the third Wallaby to score against the All Blacks in three consecutive Tests.

The stop-start nature of the game reared its head once again after the interval with plenty of knock-ons stifling the flow of the game with the only real chance of the opening ten minutes a penalty that was badly shanked by Foley whose record of one from three looked like it might come back to haunt the Wallabies.

Wallabies skipper Hooper’s decision to go for touch was vindicated when from the attacking lineout on the right touchline the ball was switched out on to the left touchline to Folau who did well to draw his defender before feeding Marika Koroibete who had too much power in his one on one with Damian McKenzie to stay within the field of play and crash over.

Hodge added a good penalty from out wide on the left touchline in the 63rd minute to extend the Wallabies’ lead to seven points at 20-13.

The All Blacks started to keep hold of the ball better and put together the phases working the ball out to the left wing.  Sonny Bill Williams produced the moment of individual brilliance to unlock the Wallabies defence in typical style with an offload to Kieran Read who showed good hands to release Rieko Ioane who had to much pace for the covering Sean McMahon.  With Sopoaga off the park, McKenzie missed the conversion meaning the All Blacks still trailed by two at 20-18.

Hodge then showed great composure to boot a monster 50 metre penalty and eat up some time in the process making it a five point lead as the Wallabies held on for an historic 23-18 win.

The scorers:

For Australia:
Tries:  Hodge, Folau, Koroibete
Con:  Foley
Pens:  Hodge 2

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Naholo, Ioane
Con:  Sopoaga
Pens:  Sopoaga 2

Australia:  15 Israel Folau, 14 Marika Koroibete, 13 Tevita Kuridrani, 12 Kurtley Beale, 11 Reece Hodge, 10 Bernard Foley, 9 Will Genia, 8 Sean McMahon, 7 Michael Hooper, 6 Jack Dempsey, 5 Adam Coleman, 4 Rob Simmons, 3 Sekope Kepu, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 2 Scott Sio.
Replacements:  16 Stephen Moore, 17 Tom Robertson, 18 Allan Alaalatoa, 19 Lukhan Tui, 20 Ned Hanigan, 21 Nick Phipps, 22 Samu Kerevi, 23 Henry Speight

New Zealand:  15 Damian McKenzie, 14 Waisake Naholo, 13 Ryan Crotty, 12 Sonny Bill Williams, 11 Rieko Ioane, 10 Lima Sopoaga, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read (c), 7 Sam Cane, 6 Liam Squire, 5 Scott Barrett, 4 Samuel Whitelock, 3 Nepo Laulala, 2 Dane Coles, 1 Kane Hames.
Replacements:  16 Codie Taylor, 17 Wyatt Crockett, 18 Ofa Tu’ungafasi, 19 Patrick Tuipulotu, 20 Matt Todd, 21 Thomas Perenara, 22 Anton Lienert-Brown, 23 David Havili

Date:  Saturday, October 21
Venue:  Suncorp Stadium, Australia
Kick-off:  19:05 local(09:05 GMT)
Referee:  Wayne Barnes (England)
Assistant referees:  Marius van der Westhuizen (South Africa), Egon Seconds (South Africa)
TMO:  Marius Jonker (South Africa

Sunday, 8 October 2017

Wallabies get maximum, finish above Springboks

Australia secured second spot in the Rugby Championship as they beat Argentina 37-20 at Estadio Malvinas Argentinas on Saturday.

Tries from Marika Koroibete, Reece Hodge (2), Bernard Foley and Will Genia saw them to the five points as they finish one point ahead of the Springboks and 13 behind champions New Zealand, who ended with five wins from five.

The Pumas are bottom of the pile as despite a spirited performance that saw Matias Alemanno and Santiago Gonzalez Iglesias score, it was loss number five for them, ending another dismal campaign in the southern hemisphere.

In an entertaining opening 40 minutes there was nothing to separate the sides as they went into the break locked up at 13 points apiece.

Argentina were chasing their first win of the Rugby Championship campaign while Australia only had one themselves, plus two draws.

Foley put his side in front on 15 minutes after the home side infringed in front of their posts, but he was off-target soon after with a sitter.

Fortunately for the Wallabies they made amends in perfect style a minute later when Koroibete finished well down the left from 30 metres out.  Again though Foley couldn't add points to the tally although this was a much more difficult attempt from the touchline.  Australia were 8-0 up.

On 25 minutes the Pumas suddenly clicked and a series of strong carries led to Alemanno barging his way over near the uprights for seven.  Argentina looked confident at this point and edged in front with a Nicolas Sanchez penalty, after Michael Hooper went off his feet at a ruck.

However, the hosts switched off on 34 minutes to allow Hodge to have a simple run in from eight metres out that put Australia 13-10 up.

Sanchez would level matters off the tee four minutes later before team-mate Joaquin Tuculet rightly had his try chalked off for a knock-on.  That meant the teams went into their respective dressing room with honours even on the scoreboard which was a fair reflection of the half.

Foley's night didn't improve from the tee upon his return as he missed another attempt on 45 minutes, this time following a scrum offence.

The Wallabies were now desperately hunting a try as their next form of score, proved by their decision to snub three points from in front in favour of a scrum.  It paid off with Foley throwing a dummy and slicing through to make it 20-13 for a try he thoroughly enjoyed of course.

But the lead was shortlived as a solid Pumas scrum set-piece led to Iglesias cutting back inside to go in near the posts to level matters.

Australia though just seemed the more likely to cut loose in the final quarter and so it proved with a slick move off the back of a lineout seeing Hodge bust through near halfway before finding Genia on his shoulder.  The Wallabies were looking strong with a bonus-point in sight.

However they couldn't shake off the Pumas, who were denied a try from Juan Martin Hernandez because of an earlier forward pass.  That was compounded soon after when Marcos Kremer was yellow carded for a tip tackle that meant they'd end the game down to 14 players.

Foley also added to Argentina's woes by extending the lead to 10 points following Kremer's indiscretion, leaving them with plenty to do.  And it proved far too much with the Wallabies in fact putting the seal on an impressive victory with a bonus-point try coming from Hodge on the left.

The scorers:

For Argentina:
Tries:  Alemanno, Iglesias
Cons:  Sanchez 2
Pens:  Sanchez 2
Yellow Card:  Kremer

For Australia:
Tries:  Koroibete, Hodge 2, Foley, Genia
Cons:  Foley 3
Pens:  Foley 2

Argentina:  15 Joaquin Tuculet, 14 Matias Moroni, 13 Matias Orlando, 12 Santiago Gonzalez Iglesias, 11 Emiliano Boffelli, 10 Nicolas Sanchez, 9 Martin Landajo, 8 Tomas Lezana, 7 Javier Ortega Desio, 6 Pablo Matera, 5 Matias Alemanno, 4 Marcos Kremer, 3 Nahuel Tetaz Chaparro, 2 Agustin Creevy (c), 1 Lucas Noguera Paz
Replacements:  16 Julian Montoya, 17 Santiago Garcia Botta, 18 Enrique Pieretto, 19 Banjamin Macome, 20 Leonardo Senatore, 21 Gonzalo Bertranou, 22 Juan Martin Hernandez, 23 Santiago Cordero

Australia:  15 Israel Folau, 14 Marika Koroibete, 13 Tevita Kuridrani, 12 Kurtley Beale, 11 Reece Hodge, 10 Bernard Foley, 9 Will Genia, 8 Sean McMahon, 7 Michael Hooper (c), 6 Jack Dempsey, 5 Adam Coleman, 4 Izack Rodda, 3 Sekope Kepu, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 1 Scott Sio
Replacements:  16 Stephen Moore, 17 Tetera Faulkner, 18 Allan Alaalatoa, 19 Rob Simmons, 20 Lukhan Tui, 21 Nick Phipps, 22 Samu Kerevi, 23 Henry Speight

Referee:  Mathieu Raynal (France)
Assistant referees:  Jaco Peyper (South Africa), Marius van der Westhuizen (South Africa)
TMO:  Marius Jonker (South Africa)

Saturday, 7 October 2017

All Blacks squeeze past Springboks

The All Blacks finished with a perfect Rugby Championship record as they secured a 25-24 win over the Springboks at Newlands in Cape Town on Saturday.

The first half saw opportunities but good last-ditch defending from both sides was on show, especially the Boks who kept the All Blacks relatively quiet and just conceded the one try in the opening 40.

The Boks successfully managed to unsettle the All Blacks at the contact and breakdown area with Malcolm Marx and Pieter-Steph du Toit especially good on the ground.  This saw the All Blacks conceding a number of penalties.  In fact, hooker Marx made an incredible four turnovers.

The All Blacks were lucky to win in the end as the Boks actually had them under pressure for large periods of the second half but were unable to turn that dominance into enough points and in the end the All Blacks showed they are just more clinical and able to win games ugly when being second-best.

South Africa won a penalty in the ninth minute when All Blacks lock Sam Whitelock was penalised for having hands in the ruck.  Springbok fly-half Elton Jantjies slotted the penalty between the posts for a 3-0 lead.

All Blacks fly-half Beauden Barrett responded with a penalty just two minutes later.  But this was the only action of the first quarter.

Jantjies missed an easy chance to put the Boks back into the lead after Sam Cane was guilty of going offside.

The game was brought sparkling to life on the half-hour mark as Barrett's kick-through was well chased down by All Blacks centre Ryan Crotty who dotted down to give the All Blacks an 8-3 lead with Barrett missing the resulting conversion.

The Boks applied persistent pressure after the interval and were rewarded with scrum-half Ross Cronje dotting down on the base of the post after 14 sweeping phases.  Jantjies put the home side 10-8 in the lead with the conversion.

The Springboks continued to dominate but were unlucky to trail when completely against the run of play, Rieko Ioane pounced on a loose Bok pass and had the pace to outsprint the opposition defence all the way from deep in his own 22.  Lima Sopoaga added the extras to give the All Blacks a five-point buffer at 15-10.

But the Boks weren't to be denied as finally they had tangible reward for their pressure when substitute Jean-Luc du Preez crossed the whitewash after fellow substitute Handre Pollard did well to get his hands free in the tackle, offloading to Marx who showed good handling skills before he played the final pass for Du Preez to have a clear run to the line.  Pollard's conversion put the Boks back in front at 17-15 with 12 minutes to play.

Soon after, All Blacks full-back Damian McKenzie scored a magnificent individual counter-attacking try capitalising on a disjointed, shifting Springbok defence with his scything run after David Havili did well in the build-up to set up the break.  Sopoaga converted to restore the All Blacks' five-point buffer at 22-17 with 10 minutes to go.

With five minutes to play, Damian de Allende was shown a red card for his follow-through in trying to charge down Sopoaga's drop-goal in which he connected with the All Blacks replacement fly-half.  Sopoaga kicked the resulting penalty to make it 25-18, meaning a converted try would not be enough for the Boks.

Despite being a man down, the Boks fought back to within just one point when Marx crashed over at the back of a lineout driving maul to set up a tense finale.

But the All Blacks held on for victory and denied the Boks a rare victory.

The scorers:

For South Africa:
Tries:  Cronje, Du Preez, Marx
Cons:  Jantjies 2, Pollard
Pen:  Jantjies
Red Card:  De Allende

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Crotty, Ioane, McKenzie
Cons:  Sopoaga 2
Pen:  Barrett, Sopoaga

South Africa:  15 Andries Coetzee, 14 Dillyn Leyds, 13 Jesse Kriel, 12 Jan Serfontein, 11 Courtnall Skosan, 10 Elton Jantjies, 9 Ross Cronje, 8 Francois Louw, 7 Pieter-Steph du Toit, 6 Siya Kolisi, 5 Lood de Jager, 4 Eben Etzebeth (c), 3 Ruan Dreyer, 2 Malcolm Marx, 1 Steven Kitshoff
Replacements:  16 Chiliboy Ralepelle, 17 Trevor Nyakane, 18 Wilco Louw, 19 Franco Mostert, 20 Jean-Luc du Preez, 21 Rudy Paige, 22 Handré Pollard, 23 Damian de Allende

New Zealand:  15 Damian McKenzie, 14 Nehe Milner-Skudder, 13 Ryan Crotty, 12 Sonny Bill Williams, 11 Rieko Ioane, 10 Beauden Barrett, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read (c), 7 Sam Cane, 6 Liam Squire, 5 Scott Barrett, 4 Sam Whitelock, 3 Nepo Laulala, 2 Dane Coles, 1 Kane Hames
Replacements:  16 Codie Taylor, 17 Wyatt Crockett, 18 Ofa Tu’ungafasi, 19 Patrick Tuipulotu, 20 Matt Todd, 21 Tawera Kerr-Barlow, 22 Lima Sopoaga, 23 David Havili

Referee:  Jérôme Garcès (France)
Assistant referees:  Romain Poite (France), Shuhei Kubo (Japan)
TMO:  Rowan Kitt (England)

Sunday, 1 October 2017

Bonus-point win for New Zealand

New Zealand moved 11 points clear at the Rugby Championship summit after they beat Argentina 36-10 at Estadio Vélez Sarsfield on Saturday.

With the 2017 title already sewn up due to South Africa and Australia drawing 27-27 in Bloemfontein, the All Blacks had the pressure off.

And it was a simple victory in the end, thanks largely to their strong start, as crossings from number eight Kieran Read (2), full-back Damian McKenzie and wing Waisake Naholo saw them to the five points.  David Havili, on debut, also crossed the whitewash in the game's final play.

In reply Argentina's lone try scorer was Juan Manuel Leguizamón as their poor Rugby Championship campaign now reads five losses from five.

It was a quite sensational first half-hour from the All Blacks as they raced into a 29-3 lead to leave the Pumas struggling for answers.

Following an early penalty from each side, New Zealand clicked into gear in the seventh minute when Naholo's line break led to him finding Read on the right wing for a run in.  Beauden Barrett couldn't add the kick from wide out but it was a warning shot fired by the visitors.

The next score seemed inevitable when New Zealand applied big pressure on 15 minutes and they had their wish two minutes later as, from a scrum penalty, an alert McKenzie raced forward for a quick tap in front of referee Jaco Peyper before diving over to make it a 15-3 lead.

More was to come as fly-half Barrett's run down the right led to him offloading to Naholo, who showed power and pace to extend the buffer.

Things got worse for Argentina soon after as Tomas Lavanini received a yellow card for a no arm tackle on Sonny Bill Williams.  And the try followed five minutes later as Barrett's under-leg pass to McKenzie then saw him set off before finding Read on his shoulder for a brace.

It wasn't all doom and gloom for Argentina though as they pressed hard before half-time, but came up short despite Matt Todd being carded.

Argentina were clearly riled by their first-half showing and upped their performance in the early stages of the second period, setting up camp in the All Black 22 with more lineout mauls.  However.  Pablo Matera was unsuccessful in his quest for the line after good scrambling defence.

What gave the Pumas further hope of cutting the deficit was the sight of Read being sin-binned for a high tackle on 51 minutes.  Once again New Zealand fought tooth and nail in defence but eventually the pressure told as Leguizamón barged over from close range to make it 29-10.

The All Blacks thought they had responded in the ideal fashion when Naholo crossed, but replays showed his earlier pass drifted forward so it was chalked off.  Soon after, the Pumas were down to 14 men when Ramiro Herrera was yellow carded for repeated scrum infringements.

Still though New Zealand struggled to add a fifth try, that was until replacement Havili sliced through from close range to add the icing to the win as they now head to South Africa looking to make it a clean sweep in the Rugby Championship.

The scorers:

For Argentina:
Try:  Leguizamón
Con:  Sanchez
Pen:  Sanchez
Yellow Cards:  Lavanini, Herrera

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Read 2, McKenzie, Naholo, Havili
Cons:  Barrett 4
Pen:  Barrett
Yellow Card:  Todd

Argentina:  15 Joaquin Tuculet, 14 Matias Moroni, 13 Matias Orlando, 12 Jeronimo de la Fuente, 11 Emiliano Boffelli, 10 Nicolas Sanchez, 9 Tomas Cubelli, 8 Juan Manuel Leguizamón, 7 Tomas Lezana, 6 Pablo Matera, 5 Tomas Lavanini, 4 Guido Petti, 3 Nahuel Tetaz Chaparro, 2 Agustin Creevy (c), 1 Lucas Noguera
Replacements:  16 Julian Montoya, 17 Santiago Garcia Botta, 18 Ramiro Herrera, 19 Marcos Kremer, 20 Javier Ortega Desio, 21 Martin Landajo, 22 Juan Martin Hernandez, 23 Santiago Cordero

New Zealand:  15 Damian McKenzie, 14 Waisake Naholo, 13 Anton Lienert-Brown, 12 Sonny Bill Williams, 11 Rieko Ioane, 10 Beauden Barrett, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read (c), 7 Matt Todd, 6 Vaea Fifita, 5 Scott Barrett, 4 Luke Romano, 3 Nepo Laulala, 2 Dane Coles, 1 Kane Hames
Replacements:  16 Codie Taylor, 17 Wyatt Crockett, 18 Ofa Tu’ungafasi, 19 Patrick Tuipulotu, 20 Ardie Savea, 21 TJ Perenara, 22 Ngani Laumape, 23 David Havili

Referee:  Jaco Peyper (South Africa)
Assistant referees:  Mathieu Raynal (France), Marius van der Westhuizen (South Africa)
TMO:  Marius Jonker (South Africa)

Saturday, 30 September 2017

Boks and Wallabies end all square in Bloem

South Africa and Australia could not be separated as they played out a highly entertaining 27-27 draw in Bloemfontein on Saturday.

In a fast-paced and thrilling encounter, in which the lead changed hands several times, both sides gave the ball plenty of air throughout and each team scored three converted tries.

With the All Blacks on course to win the Rugby Championship again, this Test was a shootout for second place in the standings and both sides were competitive throughout although like the corresponding Test in Perth, they had to settle for a share of the spoils.

The Springboks showed their intent from the outset and opted to run the ball from all areas of the field.  This tactic seemed to surprise their opponents initially, but the Wallabies adapted quickly and soaked up the early pressure with a solid defensive effort.

And in the 11th minute, the Wallabies caught the Boks by surprise with a brilliant move which saw Israel Folau crossing for the opening try.

This, after an attacking scrum on the edge of South Africa's 22 saw Tevita Kuridrani running a superb dummy line, before Bernard Foley threw an inside pass to the on-rushing Folau, who glided through a huge gap in the Bok back-line before scoring next to the posts.

Foley added the extras, but the Boks were soon camped inside the visitors' 22 and five minutes later, they were rewarded when Ruan Dreyer shrugged off a couple of tacklers before barging over for his first Test try.

Elton Jantjies converted before a Foley penalty in the 23rd minute gave the Wallabies a 10-7 lead but Jantjies restored parity two minutes later with a penalty of his own, after Jack Dempsey was blown up for deliberately knocking down the ball when South Africa were on the attack deep inside Australia's half.

The Wallabies regained the lead in the 35th minute — Foley slotting a penalty after Dreyer was penalised for illegal scrummaging.

Both sides continued to show attacking intent as the half drew to a close, but no further points were scored during this period.  Folau was fortunate not to be yellow carded, however, as a rough challenge — in which he pulled Dillyn Leyds by the hair — led to some pushing and shoving off-the-ball between several players, just before the break.

The Boks made a superb start to the second half when, three minutes after the restart, Jan Serfontein crossed for his side's third try after Leyds and Siya Kolisi combined brilliantly in the build-up.

That score meant the Boks held the lead for the first time and although Jantjies slotted the conversion, the Wallabies gave the perfect response shortly afterwards when Foley made a telling break before offloading to Marika Koroibete, who outpaced the cover defence before crossing for his first Test try.

The topsy-turvy nature of this game continued as two minutes later, Serfontein made a telling break before getting a pass out to Courtnall Skosan, who crossed for his side's third try despite the attentions of two defenders.

Five minutes later, the Wallabies struck back — Koroibete rounding off in the left-hand corner after the ball was taken through several phases in the build-up.

Foley showed his class as he calmly slotted the conversion from close to the touchline which meant the Wallabies were now leading 27-24 with just over 20 minutes left on the clock.

The Boks were desperate to strike back and they did just that courtesy of a long range penalty from Jantjies in the 71st minute.  That meant the score was level again and although Jantjies had a chance to win the game for the hosts, he pushed a difficult penalty attempt wide of the posts in the dying moments.

The scorers:

For South Africa:
Tries:  Dreyer, Serfontein, Skosan
Cons:  Jantjies 3
Pens:  Jantjies 2

For Australia:
Tries:  Folau, Koroibete 2
Cons:  Foley 3
Pens:  Foley 2

South Africa:  15 Andries Coetzee, 14 Dillyn Leyds, 13 Jesse Kriel, 12 Jan Serfontein, 11 Courtnall Skosan, 10 Elton Jantjies, 9 Ross Cronje, 8 Uzair Cassiem, 7 Francois Louw, 6 Siya Kolisi, 5 Franco Mostert, 4 Eben Etzebeth (c), 3 Ruan Dreyer, 2 Malcolm Marx, 1 Tendai Mtawarira
Replacements:  16 Chiliboy Ralepelle, 17 Steven Kitshoff, 18 Trevor Nyakane, 19 Pieter-Steph du Toit, 20 Jean-Luc du Preez, 21 Rudy Paige, 22 Handré Pollard, 23 Damian de Allende

Australia:  15 Israel Folau, 14 Marika Koroibete, 13 Tevita Kuridrani, 12 Kurtley Beale, 11 Reece Hodge, 10 Bernard Foley, 9 Will Genia, 8 Sean McMahon, 7 Michael Hooper (c), 6 Jack Dempsey, 5 Adam Coleman, 4 Izack Rodda, 3 Sekope Kepu, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 1 Scott Sio
Replacements:  16 Stephen Moore, 17 Tom Robertson, 18 Allan Alaalatoa, 19 Rob Simmons, 20 Ned Hanigan, 21 Lukhan Tui, 22 Nick Phipps, 23 Samu Kerevi

Referee:  Ben O’Keeffe (New Zealand)
Assistant Referees:  Jérôme Garcès (France), Shuhei Kubo (Japan)
TMO:  Rowan Kitt (England)

Saturday, 16 September 2017

Wallabies secure bonus-point victory over Argentina

Australia secured a bonus-point 45-20 victory over Argentina in their Rugby Championship clash in Canberra on Saturday.

The Wallabies displayed brilliant interplay between forwards and backs and were lethal when presented with try-scoring opportunities.  An Argentinian yellow card ten minutes from time helped the home side run away with the win, scoring three more tries to secure the much-needed bonus point.

The home side opened the scoring through a penalty goal from fly-half Bernard Foley after Argentina were penalised for another offside offence.  After 14 minutes, fly-half Nicolas Sanchez levelled the score with a penalty goal of his own after a Wallaby entered a maul incorrectly.

Pumas scrum-half Martin Landajo scored the first converted try of this clash after he sold a fantastic dummy before diving over the line from a few centimeters out.

Wallabies full-back Israel Folau then scored a converted try in the far right corner after some fantatsic interplay from the Wallabies forwards and backs ended with Foley unleashing Folau, who brushed past a hapless Argentinian defender.

Sanchez slotted another penalty with 35 minutes gone after a Wallaby was caught offside to give the Pumas a 13-10 lead at half-time.

Wallabies prop Sekope Kepu scored a converted try early in the second 40 when he crashed over from close range after a few solid, patient carries from his fellow forwards.

Folau scored his second in the opposite corner after scrum-half Will Genia sent him a long pass which he gathered before shifting his feet to bamboozle the last Argentinian defender.  Foley converted the try and extended the Wallabies lead to 11 points.

Ten minutes before the final whistle, Argentina gave away another penalty after an early engagement and prop Enrique Pieretto was sent to the sin bin.  From the resulting scrum, Genia broke and dived in for his try before Foley converted to make the score 31-13 to the home side.

Australian number eigh Sean McMahon then broke before passing inside to reserve scrum-half Nick Phipps, who just had enough gas and arm stretch to score his side's bonus point try.

Pumas wing Matias Moroni chipped and gathered in sensational fashion down the right wing to score in the 77th minute before Sanchez added the extra two points.  But the home side hammered the final nail in Argentina's coffin after the final hooter had sounded when reserve hooker Jordan Uelese scored from a close-range leap before Foley's conversion sealed their bonus-point victory.

The scorers:

For Australia:
Tries:  Folau 2, Kepu, Genia, Phipps, Uelese
Cons:  Foley 6
Pen:  Foley

For Argentina
Tries:  Landajo, Moroni
Cons:  Sanchez 2
Pens:  Sanchez 2

Australia:  15 Israel Folau, 14 Henry Speight, 13 Tevita Kuridrani, 12 Kurtley Beale, 11 Reece Hodge, 10 Bernard Foley (vc), 9 Will Genia (vc), 8 Sean McMahon, 7 Michael Hooper (c), 6 Ned Hanigan, 5 Adam Coleman, 4 Rob Simmons, 3 Sekope Kepu, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 1 Scott Sio
Replacements:  16 Jordan Uelese, 17 Tom Robertson, 18 Allan Alaalatoa, 19 Izack Rodda, 20 Jack Dempsey, 21 Nick Phipps, 22 Samu Kerevi, 23 Marika Koroibete

Argentina:  15 Emiliano Boffelli, 14 Matias Moroni, 13 Matias Orlando, 12 Jeronimo de la Fuente, 11 Ramiro Moyano, 10 Nicolas Sanchez, 9 Martin Landajo, 8 Tomas Lezana, 7 Javier Ortega Desio, 6 Pablo Matera, 5 Matias Alemanno, 4 Guido Petti, 3 Nahuel tatez Chaparro, 2 Agustin Creevy, 1 Lucas Noguera
Replacements:  16 Julian Montoya, 17 Santiago Garcia Botta, 18 Enrique Pieretto, 19 Marcos Kremer, 20 Juan Martin Leguizamon, 21 Tomas Cubelli, 22 Santiago Gonzalez Iglesias, 23 Manuel Montero

Referee:  John Lacey (Ireland)
Assistant referees:  Glen Jackson (New Zealand), Paul Williams (New Zealand)
TMO:  Ben Skeen (New Zealand)

Rampant All Blacks blow Springboks away

New Zealand took a giant step towards winning the Rugby Championship when they claimed a 57-0 win over South Africa in Albany on Saturday.

The world champions were full value for their win and had the result in the bag in the first half as they led 31-0 at the break thanks to an early Beauden Barrett penalty and tries from Rieko Ioane, Nehe Milner-Skudder, Scott Barrett and Brodie Rettalick.

In the end, they outscored their hapless visitors eight tries to none with Milner-Skudder, Ofa Tu’ungafasi, Lima Sopoaga and Codie Taylor also dotting down in the second half and the result is New Zealand's biggest ever triumph against their traditional rivals.

For the Springboks this was a sobering experience as it was their first defeat from seven Tests in 2017.  Allister Coetzee's charges looked a pale shadow of the side that beat France and Argentina, and drew with Australia last weekend.

They made a plethora of handling errors while their lineout — an attacking platform in their previous Tests this year — was a shambles with Malcolm Marx and Bongi Mbonambi missing their jumpers with regularity.

The result means the All Blacks now have an eight-point lead on the Boks, who are in second place, in the standings after four matches played.

The sides were evenly matched during the opening exchanges but the Springboks wasted a chance to open the scoring in the eighth minute when Elton Jantjies' penalty attempt struck an upright after Ioane was penalised for holding onto the ball on the ground.

Shortly afterwards, the visitors threw down the gauntlet at a scrum when they pushed their counterparts off the ball at the set-piece just inside the Bok half.

The All Blacks were soaking up the early pressure from their fired up visitors and eventually took the lead in the 14th minute courtesy of Barrett's penalty after Jesse Kriel was blown up for offside play on defence.

And three minutes later, the world champions increased their lead thanks to a well-taken try from Ioane.  This, after a moment of magic from Aaron Smith, who played quickly after his side were awarded a penalty inside the Springboks' half.

The diminutive number nine spotted a gap behind the visitors' defence and delivered an inch-perfect chip kick which Ioane gathered before crossing the whitewash.

South Africa tried gallantly to strike back but things went pear-shaped in the 21st minute when Milner-Skudder intercepted a wayward pass from Jean-Luc du Preez close to New Zealand's 22.

He was hauled in from behind by Courtnall Skosan but did well to offload to Barrett who returned the favour before the flyer went over for his side's second try.

The All Blacks further extended their lead in the 33rd minute when Beauden Barrett launched a teasing cross-field kick, deep inside the Boks' 22, which Skosan knocked on before Scott Barrett gathered the loose ball and cantered over for an easy five-pointer.

The Boks seemed shell-shocked and they were soon standing under their posts again when Retallick crossed for the All Blacks' fourth try after a brilliant break from the impressive Ioane in the build-up.

New Zealand continued to dominate after the restart and in the 53rd minute Milner-Skudder went over in the right-hand corner after gathering a long pass from Beauden Barrett.

The Boks were battling now but there was more to follow with the All Blacks' replacements coming on to complete the visitors' misery.  Ten minutes later, Tu’ungafasi gathered a pass from TJ Perenara before crashing over from close quarters for his first Test try.

New Zealand were not done yet and in the 74th minute Anton Lienert-Brown tore the Boks' defence to shreds with a mazy run before offloading to Sopoaga who dotted down next to the posts.

Barrett added the extras which brought up a half century of points for his side and just before full-time Taylor added the final nail in the Bok coffin when he dotted down from the back of a driving maul deep inside the visitors' 22.

The scorers:

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Ioane, Milner-Skudder 2, S Barrett, Retallick, Tu’ungafasi, Sopoaga, Taylor
Cons:  B Barrett 7
Pen:  B Barrett

New Zealand:  15 Damian McKenzie, 14 Nehe Milner-Skudder, 13 Ryan Crotty, 12 Sonny Bill Williams, 11 Rieko Ioane, 10 Beauden Barrett, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read (c), 7 Sam Cane, 6 Liam Squire, 5 Sam Whitelock, 4 Brodie Retallick, 3 Nepo Laulala, 2 Dane Coles, 1 Kane Hames
Replacements:  16 Codie Taylor, 17 Wyatt Crockett, 18 Ofa Tu’ungafasi, 19 Scott Barrett, 20 Ardie Savea, 21 TJ Perenara, 22 Lima Sopoaga, 23 Anton Lienert-Brown

South Africa:  15 Andries Coetzee, 14 Raymond Rhule, 13 Jesse Kriel, 12 Jan Serfontein, 11 Courtnall Skosan, 10 Elton Jantjies, 9 Ross Cronje, 8 Uzair Cassiem, 7 Jean-Luc du Preez, 6 Siya Kolisi, 5 Franco Mostert, 4 Eben Etzebeth, 3 Ruan Dreyer, 2 Malcolm Marx, 1 Tendai Mtawarira
Replacements:  16 Bongi Mbonambi, 17 Steven Kitshoff, 18 Trevor Nyakane, 19 Lood de Jager, 20 Pieter-Steph du Toit, 21 Francois Hougaard, 22 Handré Pollard, 23 Damian de Allende

Referee:  Nigel Owens (Wales)
Assistant referees:  Angus Gardner (Australia), Matthew Carley (England)
TMO:  George Ayoub (Australia)

Saturday, 9 September 2017

Wallabies and Springboks draw in Perth

Australia and South Africa played out to a 23-23 draw in their Rugby Championship clash at nib Stadium in Perth on Saturday.

Both sides scored their points in identical fashion:  two tries, two conversions and three penalties each.

The away side opened the scoring in the fourth minute with a penalty from fly-half Elton Jantjies after the Wallabies were penalised once again for an early drive.  Four minutes later, the Wallabies fired back with a penalty of their own courtesy of fly-half Bernard Foley.

South Africa scored the game's first try.  Scrum-half Ross Cronje offloaded to outside centre Jesse Kriel, who hoofed the ball downfield for the galloping Raymond Rhule to chase.  He shouldered off Wallabies skipper Michael Hooper, giving Kriel space to collect his own kick and score unopposed in the right hand corner.

Moment later the Wallabies scored their reply try.  Full-back Israel Folau jumped and tapped back a kick-off to Adam Coleman.  The ball found inside centre Kurtley Beale, who utilised his vision and footwork to run around the Bok defenders to score.  Foley landed another penalty just before the half-time hooter to give the home side a three point advantage at the break.

A fantastic driving maul saw Australia hooker Tatafu Polota-Nau score a converted try early in the second half.  South Africa reduced the home side's lead to seven points after Jantjies slotted another penalty kick which was awarded after a Wallaby was caught offside.

The Springboks then scored a levelling converted try after a 20 metre maurauding maul resulted in a try for Springbok hooker Malcolm Marx.  After 67 minutes, a monsterous Bok scrum from five metres out resulted in a penalty awarded which Jantjies duely converted.

Foley responded with his third penalty conversion after South Africa illegally cleared out the scrum-half.  Posession was exchanged numerous times in the last five minutes but the drama ended with a 23-23 draw.

The scorers:

For Australia:
Tries:  Beale, Polota-Nau
Cons:  Foley 2
Pens:  Foley 3

For South Africa:
Tries:  Kriel, Marx
Cons:  Jantjies 2
Pens:  Jantjies 3

Australia:  15 Israel Folau, 14 Henry Speight, 13 Tevita Kuridrani, 12 Kurtley Beale, 11 Reece Hodge, 10 Bernard Foley, 9 Will Genia, 8 Sean McMahon, 7 Michael Hooper (c), 6 Ned Hanigan, 5 Adam Coleman, 4 Rory Arnold, 3 Sekope Kepu, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 1 Scott Sio
Replacements:  16 Jordan Uelese, 17 Tom Robertson, 18 Allan Alaalatoa, 19 Rob Simmons, 20 Jack Dempsey, 21 Nick Phipps, 22 Samu Kerevi, 23 Curtis Rona

South Africa:  15 Andries Coetzee, 14 Raymond Rhule, 13 Jesse Kriel, 12 Jan Serfontein, 11 Courtnall Skosan, 10 Elton Jantjies, 9 Ross Cronje, 8 Uzair Cassiem, 7 Jaco Kriel, 6 Siya Kolisi, 5 Pieter-Steph du Toit, 4 Eben Etzebeth (c), 3 Coenie Oosthuizen, 2 Malcolm Marx, 1 Tendai Mtawarira
Replacements:  16 Bongi Mbonambi, 17 Steven Kitshoff, 18 Trevor Nyakane, 19 Lood de Jager, 20 Jean-Luc du Preez, 21 Francois Hougaard, 22 Handré Pollard, 23 Damian de Allende

Referee:  Glen Jackson (New Zealand)
Assistant referees:  John Lacey (Ireland), Paul Williams (New Zealand)
TMO:  Ben Skeen (New Zealand)

All Blacks late surge puts Pumas to bed

The All Blacks made it three wins from three in the Rugby Championship with a 39-22 bonus-point victory over Argentina at Yarrow Stadium in New Plymouth on Saturday.

It was a valiant effort from Los Pumas who actually led 16-15 at half-time.  But they faded in the last quarter of the match with the scoreline slightly flattering the All Blacks by the time the final whistle was blown.

The All Blacks took the lead after eight minutes.  Vaea Fifita busted through a few tackles in midfield before the recycled ball was spread out left to Damian McKenzie who ghosted a through gap and timed his pass on the outside expertly for Nehe Milner-Skudder to dot down.

Los Pumas responded with a Nicolas Sanchez penalty after Kieran Read was penalised for having his hands in the ruck.

The next All Blacks try came off the back of an attacking scrum centre field.  The ball was switched to the left before Beauden Barrett's grubber kick was well gathered by Anton Lienert-Brown who dotted down just before the dead-ball line.

Emiliano Boffelli kicked a monster penalty to cut the deficit to four after Agustin Creevy did well to force the penalty as the All Blacks were penalised for holding on.

Sanchez then kicked a drop-goal to bring Los Pumas within one after 28 minutes.

Once again, the All Blacks scored courtesy of an attacking scrum.  Barrett didn't throw the best of passes over the top to Israel Dagg on the overlap but it was good enough as Dagg went over in the corner.

Argentina did excellently to steal an All Blacks' five-metre defensive lineout after the hooter had gone when the All Blacks were looking to control the lineout so they could kick the ball out and end the half.  Creevy made a good carry before the ball was switched out to Sanchez to step well off his left foot and evade the tackle of Fifita to dive over.  Sanchez converted his own try to give Los Pumas a 16-15 lead at the break.  Barrett's three missed conversions cost his side at the interval.

Boffelli kicked another monster penalty shortly after the resumption of the second-half to extend Los Pumas' lead to 19-15.  Sanchez missed a chance to extend the lead to seven after he shanked an easy penalty.

Barrett was then yellow-carded for being offside after repeated infringements from the All Blacks in the face of persistent Argentine pressure on the All Blacks' try-line.  This time, Sanchez slotted the resulting penalty.

Fifita then scored a magnificent individual try.  It came from Tomas Cubelli's attempted box-kick being charged down.  After the All Blacks had regathered the ball, the ball was switched to Fifita, who fulfilled all the pre-match hype when he showed electric pace to sprint 50 metres and dot down in the left-hand corner.  Lima Sopoaga, on as a substitute for Barrett, slotted the conversion to level the score at 22-22 after 53 minutes.

Persistent pressure from the All Blacks paid off when McKenzie dotted down in the left-hand corner after TJ Perenara did well to find him on the overlap with a skip pass.  Sopoaga added the extras as the All Blacks extended the lead to 29-22 with 15 minutes to play.

Sopoaga then slotted a penalty to extend the All Blacks lead to 32-22 with ten minutes to go.

After some relentless pressure from the All Blacks, Barrett put the icing on the cake scything through the Los Pumas defence after a good decoy run by Lienert-Brown.  Sopoaga added the extras to make it 39-22.  And that's how it ended.

The scorers:

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Lienert-Brown, Milner-Skudder, Dagg, Fifita, McKenzie, Barrett
Cons:  Sopoaga 3
Pen:  Sopoaga
Yellow Card:  Barrett

For Argentina:
Try:  Sanchez
Cons:  Sanchez
Pens:  Sanchez 2, Boffelli 2
Drop Goal:  Sanchez

New Zealand:  15 Damian McKenzie, 14 Israel Dagg, 13 Anton Lienert-Brown, 12 Sonny Bill Williams, 11 Nehe Milner-Skudder, 10 Beauden Barrett, 9 TJ Perenara, 8 Kieran Read (c), 7 Ardie Savea, 6 Vaea Fifita, 5 Brodie Retallick, 4 Luke Romano, 3 Nepo Laulala, 2 Dane Coles, 1 Joe Moody
Replacements:  16 Codie Taylor, 17 Wyatt Crockett, 18 Ofa Tu’ungafasi, 19 Scott Barrett, 20 Sam Cane, 21 Tawera Kerr-Barlow, 22 Lima Sopoaga, 23 Ngani Laumape

Argentina:  15 Joaquin Tuculet, 14 Santiago Cordero, 13 Matias Moroni, 12 Jeronimo de la Fuente, 11 Emiliano Boffelli, 10 Nicolas Sanchez, 9 Tomas Cubelli, 8 Benjamin Macome, 7 Javier Ortega Desio, 6 Pablo Matera, 5 Matias Alemanno, 4 Guido Petti, 3 Nahuel Tetaz Chaparro, 2 Agustin Creevy (c), 1 Lucas Noguera Paz
Replacements:  16 Julian Montoya, 17 Santiago Garcia Botta, 18 Enrique Pieretto Heilan, 19 Marcos Kremer, 20 Tomas Lezana, 21 Martin Landajo, 22 Santiago Gonzalez Iglesias, 23 Matias Orlando

Referee:  Angus Gardner (Australia)
Assistant referees:  Nigel Owens (Wales), Matthew Carley (England)
TMO:  George Ayoub (Australia)