Saturday, 26 July 2003

Canada 27 NZ Maori 65

The New Zealand Maori began their three-match tour of Canada with a comprehensive 65-27 win over the Canadian national team in Calgary.

The home team began strongly, with centre Nik Witkowski scoring an early, which was converted by fly-half Bob Ross, before the tourists hit back with unconverted tries by forward Troy Flavell and back Rico Gear.

A penalty from Ross tied the scores at 10-all, but a double from Canterbury winger Joe Maddock and a try by Shayne Austin saw the NZ Maori run into a useful 31-15 half-time lead.

Hurricanes halfback Brendan Haami, who replaced Aucklander Dave Gibson after the break, ran in an early second-half try, but a try from Canadian loosehead prop Kevin Tkachuk cut the scoreline to 39-22 before the New Zealanders turned it on, scoring another four tries, with Canada replying with one from Ross.

Austin and Haami completed their doubles, with replacement first five-eighth Glen Jackson getting over for a try, along with former All Black No.8 Ron Cribb.

"We're rapt with that [the result]," NZ Maori coach Matt Te Pou told NZPA.

"We had a lot of young guys in the side and we all had to cope with the altitude; it's 3500 feet [above sea level] and the heat and humidity, so to finish so strongly was great."

The New Zealand Maori face a Canadian All Stars XV in Ottawa on Wednesday, with the second "Test" against Canada in Toronto on Saturday, August 2.

The teams:

Canada:  1 Garth Cooke, 2 Mark Lawson, 3 Kevin Tkachuk, 4 Mike James, 5 Colin Yukes, 6 Ryan Banks (c), 7 Adam Van Staveren, 8 Phil Murphy, 9 Morgan Williams, 10 Bobby Ross, 11 Sean Fauth, 12 John Cannon, 13 Nik Witkowski, 14 Winston Stanley, 15 James Pritchard
Reserves:  Marco Di Girolomo, Jim Douglas, Pat Dunkley, Ed Fairhurst, Jeff Reid, Ryan Smith
Unused:  Kevin Wirachowski

New Zealand Maori:  15 Christian Cullen, 14 Shayne Austin, 13 Rico Gear, 12 Norm Berryman, 11 Joe Maddock, 10 Willie Walker, 9 David Gibson, 8 Ron Cribb, 7 Germaine Anaha, 6 Troy Flavell, 5 Kristian Ormsby, 4 Paul Tito (captain), 3 Carl Hayman, 2 Slade McFarland, 1 Joe McDonnell.
Replacements:  16 Scott Linklater, 17 Deacon Manu, 18 Warren Smith, 19 Wayne McEntee, 20 Glen Jackson, 21 Brendan Haami, 22 Justin Wilson.

Attendance:  6500
Referee:  ?

Points Scorers:

Canada
Tries:  Witkowski N. 1, Stanley W.U. 1, Ross R.P. 1, Tkachuk K. 1
Conv:  Ross R.P. 2
Pen K.:  Ross R.P. 1

New Zealand Maori
Tries:  Flavell, Gear, Maddock 2, Austin 2, Haami 2, Jackson, Cribb
Cons:  Walker 4, Jackson 2
Pen:  Walker

Australia 21 New Zealand 50

New Zealand finally laid their recent Sydney bogey to rest with an emphatic 50-21 win over the world champion Wallabies at the Telstra Stadium, the Men in Black outscoring their hosts by seven tries to three in their Tri-Nations and Bledisloe Cup fixture.

The Kiwis were simply awesome as they blew the Wallabies away, much like last week against the Springboks, after recovering from a slow start, which saw the home side run into an early 5-0 lead.

Matthew Burke was the Wallaby try-scorer after a scorching break from outside centre Mat Rogers, who broke through a tackle from Justin Marshall before speeding down the touchline.  The support was there, with Wendell Sailor and Elton Flatley both handling the ball before Burke nipped through a gap from a well-timed Toutai Kefu pass.

Burke missed the conversion, allowing New Zealand to narrow the gap to just two points through a well-struck Carlos Spencer penalty just two minutes later.

Daniel Vickerman conceded a silly penalty soon after the re-start, for holding back an opponent at a line-out, which saw the Kiwis turn up the heat.  A stray line-out throw from the Wallabies saw the ball get out to new wing sensation Joe Rokocoko and he flew past his marker Wendell Sailor, who looked like his feet were stuck in a cement block.

Sailor was obviously keen to make amends for his defensive blunder soon afterwards, but his over-exuberance saw the complexion of the match change completely when he was yellow-carded for a dangerous tackle on All Black fullback Mils Muliaina.

The All Blacks were ahead by 8-5 when Sailor went into the bin and although the Wallabies made a good fist of things initially, with Burke slotting a penalty soon after Sailor's sin-binning, the Kiwis were patient as they slowly began gunning for the jugular.

With just minutes remaining in Sailor's spell off the field Aaron Mauger ripped the Wallaby defence apart when he spotted Pat Noriega in the backline before unloading to Doug Howlett to finish under the uprights.  Spencer converted for a 15-8 lead, but the Kiwis were not done yet as Rokocoko completed his brace, flying down the right-hand touchline with his marker warming up on the sidelines.

Spencer missed the conversion, but at 20-8 the Kiwis had knocked the stuffing out of the bewildered Australians, exactly as they had done to the Springboks last week.

Burke slotted his second penalty of the night to narrow the scoreline to 20-11, but Spencer cancelled that out with a long-range effort on the half-time hooter.  At 23-11 the Australians needed to come out firing after the break.

The start of the second half was muted in comparison with the end of the first period, but when the Kiwis had a chance to add to their scoreline they did, Spencer kicking another penalty to stretch his side's lead to 26-11.

More Kiwi pressure forced the Wallabies back into their 22-metre area, a wonderful kick-ahead from Chris Jack pinning them near their tryline before a failed touch-finder from Stephen Larkham found Rokocoko.  The Blues flyer flung the ball in-field and two long passes later it found Muliaina, who switched inside to Tana Umaga, the veteran Kiwi changing angle slightly and leaving George Smith clutching at thin air as he crashed over for try number four.

Spencer converted and at 33-11 it was game over for the home team, with All Black coach John Mitchell getting Spencer off the field soon afterwards -- a sure sign that it was mission accomplished for the "Men in Black".

Young Daniel Carter -- Spencer's replacement -- got in on the act soon after entering the fray, a show of the ball and a surprising turn of pace taking him to the goalline.  He missed the conversion of his own try, with the ball hitting the left-hand upright, but at 38-11 the Australians were facing a record loss.

Sailor, who missed Rokocoko twice on defence, got one back shortly before the start of the final quarter as he powered through the All Black defence from first receiver to add to his try against the Boks in Cape Town.

Rogers also got in on the act later on, with a superb long-range effort, but Rokocoko had already completed his hat-trick before then, while Mauger danced over from close-range on the final hooter to complete the humiliation.

This was not Australia's biggest-ever Test loss.  That record belongs to the class of '97, going down by 61-22 to the Springboks in Pretoria, while this was also not Australia's biggest-ever loss to New Zealand, with Sean Fitzpatrick's All Blacks handing the Wallabies a 43-6 thrashing in 1996.  It was, however, the biggest-ever score that they have conceded to New Zealand.

The All Blacks already have one hand on the Tri-Nations trophy with their second successive away win, while the Australians would need to play with some authority when they travel to Auckland in August for their return clash against the old enemy.

The Kiwis are a class above South Africa and Australia at present -- any bets for next week's clash in Brisbane? -- and the only team capable of stopping the rampant English side at the Rugby World Cup in Australia later this year.

Man of the Match:  It really is hard to single out one All Black player, with every single "Man in Black" impressing on the night.  For the Wallabies, hooker Brendan Cannon fought a lone battle, while the rest of his team-mates wilted under pressure.  Keven Mealamu and Chris Jack were the best Kiwi forwards and the entire New Zealand backline had the better of their opponents.  But one man in particular that was at the heart of the New Zealand's brilliant performance was second five-eighth Aaron Mauger, who was playing in only his second Test since last year's Tri-Nations series.  He combines so well with Spencer and takes the pressure off the classy Blues No.10 with his decision-making and power.

Moment of the Match:  Every single New Zealand try deserves a mention here, while the two Australian tries were not half-bad either.  But our Moment of the match came from a delightful bit of work from All Black second rower Chris Jack -- a deft kick-ahead off his left boot rolling into touch just metres from the Wallaby goalline in the build-up to Tana Umaga's try.  That kick would have pleased most fly-halves.

Villain of the Match:  Quite an easy one here -- Wallaby wing Wendell Sailor.  The "Big Del" was shown a yellow card for a silly tackle on Mils Muliaina as the All Black fullback was in the air fielding a high kick.  Sailor was guilty of ball-watching and it cost his team dearly.  He was carded in the 24th minute, with the score at 8-8.  When he returned to the field of play New Zealand were leading by 20-8.  Interestingly, Sailor's team-mate, hooker Brendan Cannon, was lucky to escape censure just a few minutes later for exactly the same offence on Muliaina.

Yellow card(s):  Wendell Sailor (Australia, 24)

The Teams:

Australia:  1 Patricio Noriega, 2 Brendan Cannon, 3 Bill Young, 4 David Giffin, 5 Daniel Vickerman, 6 George Smith, 7 Phil Waugh, 8 Toutai Kefu, 9 George Gregan (c), 10 Steve Larkham, 11 Wendell Sailor, 12 Elton Flatley, 13 Mat Rogers, 14 Lote Tuqiri, 15 Matthew Burke
Reserves:  Owen Finegan, Chris Latham, Ben Darwin, Adam Freier, Nathan Sharpe, Steve Kefu
Unused:  Chris Whitaker

New Zealand:  1 David Hewett, 2 Keven Mealamu, 3 Greg Somerville, 4 Chris Jack, 5 Ali Williams, 6 Richard McCaw, 7 Reuben Thorne (c), 8 Jerry Collins, 9 Justin Marshall, 10 Carlos Spencer, 11 Doug Howlett, 12 Aaron Mauger, 13 Tana Umaga, 14 Joe Rokocoko, 15 Mils Muliaina
Reserves:  Daniel Carter, Steve Devine, Marty Holah, Brad Thorn, Mark Hammett, Kees Meeuws, Caleb Ralph

Attendance:  82096
Referee:  Spreadbury t.

Points Scorers:

Australia
Tries:  Burke M.C. 1, Rogers M.S. 1, Sailor W.J. 1
Pen K.:  Burke M.C. 2

New Zealand
Tries:  Carter D.W. 1, Howlett D.C. 1, Mauger A.J.D. 1, Umaga J.F. 1, Rokocoko J. 3
Conv:  Carter D.W. 1, Spencer C.J. 2
Pen K.:  Spencer C.J. 3

Saturday, 19 July 2003

New Zealand 52 South Africa 16

Reuben Thorne's All Blacks, who have been under pressure in New Zealand of late for some poor performances, got their 2003 Tri-Nations campaign off to the best possible start with a record 52-16 win over the Springboks at Securicor Loftus.

All Black coach John Mitchell has received a hammering in New Zealand of late for dropping Anton Oliver and not selecting Taine Randell and Christian Cullen, but this victory would have bought the Kiwi mentor some time as the "Men in Black" plan their assault on the William Webb Ellis trophy later in the year.

In the process the All Blacks also re-wrote a host of records for Test matches against the Springboks, but for Rudolf Straeuli it was the second time in five Test matches that his side has conceded 50 points or more, with England being the most recent nation to do so (at Twickenham last year).

Not only was this New Zealand's biggest-ever win over the Springboks -- both home and away -- surpassing the 28-nil scoreline in Dunedin in 1999, but it was also South Africa's biggest-ever loss in the Tri-Nations, while New Zealand's record of seven tries on the day equalled their previous record of tries against the Boks in a single game.

Both wingers Joe Rokocoko -- on his Tri-Nations debut -- and Doug Howlett scored two tries, joining Christian Cullen, Jeff Wilson, Frank Bunce, Ben Tune, Joe Roff and Chris Latham as players to have done so in Tri-Nations Tests against South Africa.

The Springboks began the game like the proverbial house on fire, but a 15-minute try-scoring blitz from the New Zealanders shortly after the 10-minute mark shut the Boks out, with the "Men in Black" weighing in with tries from Carlos Spencer, Howlett and Rokocoko, with the visitors' superior skill proving too much for the home team.

Spencer's try came after a wonderful burst from lock Chris Jack, who spotted the smallest of gaps around a ruck in the Bok half.  He simply leant down, picked the ball up and ran ahead before powering through a tackle from Brent Russell.

The ball was re-cycled and Spencer went left, showed the ball to Stefan Terblanché and then coasted in.  Spencer missed the conversion -- after missing an earlier penalty attempt -- but the Kiwis were in the lead at 5-3 after 11 minutes.

But New Zealand's lead was to be short-lived, with Koen succeeding with a well-struck drop-goal from the All Blacks' 10-metre line, after the home side had come close to scoring their first try of the day -- only for Brent Russell, the hero from last week, to knock-on with an open tryline after the initial break from Koen and a superb assist from skipper Corné Krige.

Then the All Blacks stepped into over-drive, with their highly-skilled backs either punching holes or creating holes in SA's brittle defence through their superior power and pace.

New Zealand's second try came off a simple backline move, with Spencer passing to Aaron Mauger, who had drifted down the backline past his marker André Snyman, before unloading to a flying Howlett, who sped over.  Spencer finally converted and the visitors led by 15-6.

The Kiwis then began attacking from their own territory, with fullback Mils Muliaina exploiting some space down the blindside before Rokocoko got in on the act.

Russell managed to half-stop the powerful Kiwi wing and the ball eventually went loose when Richie McCaw could not control it, but a wild inside pass from Russell found the All Black No.11 again, instead of Krige, Russell's intended target, and Rokocoko ran over unopposed.

Spencer converted and suddenly the Boks were staring down the barrel at 22-6, which soon became 22-9 after Koen's second successful penalty attempt.

Any hopes of a Springbok comeback were dashed early in the second stanza when Spencer slotted a penalty soon after the break, while, crucially, just minutes later Stefan Terblanché somehow contrived to lose the ball as he dived for the corner with Thorne in close attendance.

The build-up to Terblanché's try -- courtesy of a strong run from De Wet Barry -- suggested that the Boks had some fight left, but his silly error, and the Kiwi's subsequent scrambling on defence, took them back into enemy territory where Spencer's boot earned them another three points.

A flood of replacements from both sides saw the game lose a bit of shape and structure, but when it returned some delightful handling from Spencer, Jerry Collins and Tana Umaga led to Rokocoko's second try -- which, it must be said, was not as easy as his first five-pointer.  Although his first score was like taking candy from a baby ...

Three more All Black tries -- and two Spencer conversions -- took their score past the 50-point mark, while South Africa's best back on the day, greenhorn left-wing Ashwin Willemse, scrambled over for his team's only try of the day.  Not that it mattered for much.

Amazingly, Willemse's try -- in the 72nd minute -- signalled South Africa's first points since a Koen penalty in the 33rd minute.

The Kiwis, who still need to brush up their forward play, can take a lot of confidence from this win -- their sixth out of a possible eight on South African soil in the Tri-Nations -- while South Africa must be wishing that these 80 minutes were nothing but a dream.

The truth is, the Boks can pinch themselves well into the night, but the sooner they realise their shortcomings the better, with some individuals -- Joost van der Westhuizen, André Snyman and Stefan Terblanché in particular -- just not up to the required standard of Test rugby, especially when compared to their awesome All Black opponents on the day.

Man of the match:  Just about all 15 of the New Zealanders deserve a look-in here, while for the home team, only Juan Smith and Ashwin Willemse can look back at this game with any pride at all.  The three key men in the All Black machine were back rowers Richie McCaw and Jerry Collins and first five-eighth Carlos Spencer, who recovered from a nervy start to control the game superbly from the No.10 position.  But, in the end we opted for Collins for his powerful defence and strong ball-carrying on attack, with the Hurricanes No.8 slowly, but surely, making a name for himself at the back of the All Black scrum.

Moment of the Match:  Joe Rokocoko's second try was a prime example of wonderful handling from the New Zealanders and the patience required to putting points on the board at the highest level.  Spencer timed his pass well, past two Bok defenders, Collins flung the "hot potato" out to Tana Umaga, who went inside, before flicking the ball out to the newest All Black wing sensation, who simply dived over for the try.

Villain of the Match:  The bumbling Boks were all headed for this award, but All Black replacement prop Kees Meeuws wins this award for his silly elbow in the face of Springbok front rower Robbie Kempson.  Meeuws had just scored a try, Kempson's hand fell on his face and Meeuws responded with a swift elbow into Kempson's nose.  Why do that when your team is winning?

Yellow card(s):  Kees Meeuws (New Zealand, 66)

The Teams:

New Zealand:  1 David Hewett, 2 Keven Mealamu, 3 Greg Somerville, 4 Chris Jack, 5 Ali Williams, 6 Richie McCaw, 7 Reuben Thorne (c), 8 Jerry Collins, 9 Steve Devine, 10 Carlos Spencer, 11 Doug Howlett, 12 Aaron Mauger, 13 Tana Umaga, 14 Joe Rokocoko, 15 Mils Muliaina
Reserves:  Rodney So'oialo, Brad Thorn, Mark Hammett, Justin Marshall, Kees Meeuws
Unused:  Daniel Carter, Caleb Ralph

South Africa:  1 Richard Bands, 2 Danie Coetzee, 3 Lawrence Sephaka, 4 Victor Matfield, 5 Bakkies Botha, 6 Wikus Van Heerden, 7 Corne Krige (c), 8 Juan Smith, 9 Joost Van Der Westhuizen, 10 Louis Koen, 11 Ashwin Willemse, 12 De Wet Barry, 13 Andre Snyman, 14 Stefan Terblanche, 15 Brent Russell
Reserves:  Craig Davidson, Selborne Boome, Robbie Kempson, Andre Pretorius, Dale Santon, Pedrie Wannenburg
Unused:  Gcobani Bobo

Attendance:  50000
Referee:  Rolland a.

Points Scorers:

New Zealand
Tries:  Howlett D.C. 2, Mauger A.J.D. 1, Rokocoko J. 2, Spencer C.J. 1, Meeuws K.J. 1
Conv:  Spencer C.J. 4
Pen K.:  Spencer C.J. 3

South Africa
Tries:  Willemse A.K. 1
Conv:  Koen L.J. 1
Pen K.:  Koen L.J. 2
Drop G.:  Koen L.J. 1

Saturday, 12 July 2003

Australia 22 South Africa 26

The Springboks were always going to need something special to pull off a win in their Tri-Nations opener against the Wallabies.  Brent Russell provided that bit of magic as South Africa maintained their good record at home against Australia, with a 26-22 win over the world champions.

Russell, an early replacement for injured fullback Jaco van der Westhuyzen, helped himself to a try, while he also set up SA's second five-pointer, a crucial score in the final analysis.

The match started off well enough for the Springboks when Van der Westhuyzen fielded a high ball from the Wallabies, but that simple act could have destroyed his World Cup dream, with the Bok No.15 limping off immediately afterwards.

It was confirmed at half-time that Van der Westhuyzen tore the ligaments in his left knee, ruling him out of action for at least three months.

But Van der Westhuyzen's departure did not have an affect on the home side, with the energetic Russell breathing life into the Bok side just minutes after his arrival.

He ran with purpose and verve, teasing the Wallaby defence with every step he took, and with his forwards controlling the ball well through a series of phases, he was on hand just two minutes after he replaced Van der Westhuyzen, to round off the first try-scoring movement of the day.

Fly-half Louis Koen added the conversion and the Boks held a handy 7-3 lead – after an early Matthew Burke drop-goal.

The home side continued to pressurise the Wallabies, who were battling in the line-outs, with three throws going astray, but when former Cape Town boy Daniel Vickerman claimed some clean line-out ball the Wallabies put Wendell Sailor over for a try off a clever inside ball from his fellow Rugby League convert Mat Rogers.

Burke added the extras to put his side ahead by 10-7, but Koen equalised soon afterwards with his first penalty attempt in the 28th minute.

Another Koen penalty saw the Boks creep ahead at 13-10 before another moment of Russell brilliance led to their second try of the afternoon.

Sailor had made some ground down the right-hand touchline and after getting past Thinus Delport he chipped the ball in-field to his team-mates.  While it seemed like a clever enough move at the time, Sailor managed only to kick the ball straight to Russell on his own 22-metre line.

The little Sharks utility set off immediately, leaving a trail of Wallabies on the ground, before finding support from De Wet Barry.  The Bok No.12 found Russell in support again, who in turn found Stefan Terblanché, before the final pass going to lock Victor Matfield, who was up in support.

Koen, predictably, added the two points, but he missed a penalty on the stroke of half-time to leave his side ahead by 20-10.

The Wallabies got into their stride in the second half, outscoring the Boks by 12-6, but the home team managed to hold on after their rousing first-half display.

Interestingly, as with the start of the match, the Boks once again lost a player to injury, with centre Marius Joubert not returning after the first half.  He was replaced by Gcobani Bobo, with the Lions man having a solid half alongside the big hitting De Wet Barry.

Barry, recalled to the side after an absence of nearly one year, rattled the Wallabies' cages with some ferocious hits in the crucial inside centre position, and that helped unsettle his opposite number, rookie Steve Kefu.  Barry did, however, blot his copy-book when he was yellow-carded early in the second period for a foul at the tackle.

The Wallabies ran in two second-half tries, through Phil Waugh -- in Barry's absence -- and Joe Roff, but Koen's boot kept his team ahead at crucial moments, with the visitors continually having to chase a try in the latter stages of the match, instead of just a penalty, many of which were in kicking distance.

As it turns out, Matthew Burke did not have one penalty attempt at goal, with the much-talked about Bok discipline holding out at key moments -- except for Barry's 10 minutes in the sin bin, despite some huge pressure from the Wallabies.

For Wallaby coach Eddie Jones his team's line-out and ball control will be of major concern, while Bok coach Rudolf Straeuli and his charges will be full of confidence after this win, with the All Blacks in wait in Pretoria next week.

The Boks, however, have not beaten the Kiwis since 2000 -- something they will be keen to rectify next week, with this win coming at just the right time after uninspiring victories over Scotland (twice) and Argentina in June.

Man of the Match:  A host of contenders here, with the passionate Springboks providing most of them.  There was Lawrence Sephaka's work-rate, Victor Matfield's line-out prowess, Corné Krige's defence, Louis Koen's boot, De Wet Barry's punishing defence and Russell's running from the back.  For the Wallabies, hard-working flank Phil Waugh stood out, powerhouse No.8 Toutai Kefu and the clever Mat Rogers.  But our final vote goes to Brent Russell for his match-winning effort on attack and defence.  Yes, the little man can tackle, with a try-saving tackle on Toutai Kefu in the 22nd minute.

Moment of the Match:  Sailor's try was impressive, so, too, Russell's, but our moment was Victor Matfield's try, started, of course, by the Bok pocket-rocket from the edge of his 22.  The Boks showed good skill and composure when the move could so easily have broken down, but it was down to Russell, who did the initial running.

Villain of the Match:  Wallaby replacement Lote Tuqiri gets our vote here for his "little" flurry of kicks and/or punches on Springbok hard man Rob Kempson.  Sure, Kempson is no angel, but Tuqiri was lucky to escape any censure.

The Teams:

Australia:  1 Patricio Noriega, 2 Brendan Cannon, 3 Bill Young, 4 David Giffin, 5 Daniel Vickerman, 6 David Lyons, 7 Phil Waugh, 8 Toutai Kefu, 9 George Gregan (c), 10 Elton Flatley, 11 Joe Roff, 12 Mat Rogers, 13 Steve Kefu, 14 Wendell Sailor, 15 Matthew Burke
Reserves:  Owen Finegan, Steve Larkham, Ben Darwin, Adam Freier, Nathan Sharpe, Lote Tuqiri
Unused:  Chris Whitaker

South Africa:  1 Richard Bands, 2 Danie Coetzee, 3 Lawrence Sephaka, 4 Victor Matfield, 5 Bakkies Botha, 6 Wikus Van Heerden, 7 Corne Krige (c), 8 Juan Smith, 9 Joost Van Der Westhuizen, 10 Louis Koen, 11 Thinus Delport, 12 De Wet Barry, 13 Marius Joubert, 14 Stefan Terblanche, 15 Jaco Van Der Westhuyzen
Reserves:  Gcobani Bobo, Selborne Boome, Robbie Kempson, Brent Russell, Dale Santon, Pedrie Wannenburg
Unused:  Craig Davidson

Attendance:  48678
Referee:  Walsh s.r.

Points Scorers:

Australia
Tries:  Sailor W.J. 1, Roff J.W.C. 1, Waugh P.R. 1
Conv:  Burke M.C. 2
Drop G.:  Burke M.C. 1

South Africa
Tries:  Matfield V. 1, Russell R.B. 1
Conv:  Koen L.J. 2
Pen K.:  Koen L.J. 4

Sunday, 6 July 2003

England A 55 Japan 20

The England XV completed their tour of the Far East with a convincing 55-20 victory over Japan at Tokyo's National Stadium, with Bath fullback Iain Balshaw sending a timely reminder to England senior coach Clive Woodward with a pair of tries.

New Harlequins prop Mike Worsley scored the tourists' first try of the day early on when he crossed the line from short range, ensuring that England were never behind their hosts on the scoreboard, leading 24-10 at the interval.

A try from Namba for the Japanese after some good forward work in the tight kept the game open as a contest, but the intervention of Balshaw from fullback saw the visitors accelerate away.

He intercepted and ran nearly the whole length of the pitch for one of his scores, as well as setting up a try for prop Will Green with a well-judged kick.

England ran in nine tries in total as their strength told late on, with three of them coming from props -- Neal Hatley adding to Green and Worsley's tries.

New Bath scrum-half Martyn Wood helped himself to a pair of tries as the field opened up in hot and humid conditions.

Gloucester wing James Simpson-Daniel and Saracens centre Ben Johnston were the other try-scorers in a game which showed the growing strength in the English game.

The England side was based on the same second-string outfit which claimed the Churchill Cup title in Canada last month, as well as getting the better of a Japan Select XV on Thursday.

But Japan dug in and never gave up, their effort being rewarded right at the end when replacement Takashi Yoshida crossed the line -- Hirose converting for the second time after previously strikng two penalties.

The Teams:

Japan:  T Kurihara (Suntory), D Ohata (Montferrand), H Namba (Toyota Motor), Y Motoki (Kobe Steel), H Onozawa (Suntory), K Hirose (Toyota Motor), Y Sonoda (Kobe Steel), S Hasegawa (Suntory), M Amino (NEC), M Toyoyama (Toyota Motor), H Kiso (Yamaha Motor), A Parker (Toshiba Fuchu), T Ito (Kobe Steel), T Miuchi (capt, NEC), Y Saito (Colomiers).
Reps:  M Yamamoto (Toyota Motor), H Matsuo (Toshiba Fuchu), K Kubo (Yamaha Motor), Y Watanabe (Toshiba Fuchu), W Murata (Yamaha Motor), R Parkinson (Sanix), T Yoshida (Suntory).

England:  I Balshaw (Bath), M Cueto (Sale Sharks, D Scarbrough Leeds Tykes 67), B Johnston (Saracens), H Paul (Gloucester), J Simpson-Daniel (Gloucester), D Walder (Newcastle Falcons, O Barkley Bath 73), M Wood (Bath), M Worsley (NEC Harlequins, N Hatley London Irish 58), P Greening (London Wasps, A Titterrell Sale Sharks 65), W Green (London Wasps), A Codling (Saracens, P Volley London Wasps 27), C Jones (A Sheridan 58 both Sale Sharks), P Anglesea (Sale Sharks), A Hazell (Gloucester, D Hyde Leeds Tykes 60), H Vyvyan (capt, Newcastle Falcons).

Points Scorers:

For Japan:
Tries:  Yoshida, Namba
Cons:  Hirose 2
Pens:  Hirose 2

For England:
Tries:  Balshaw 2, Wood 2, Simpson-Daniel, Johnston, Worsley, Green, Hatley
Cons:  Walder 5

Attendance:  20000
Referee:  Deaker k.

Saturday, 28 June 2003

United States 6 England XV (non-cap) 43

England confirmed their standing as the top side in the world as their A-side romped to glory in the Churchill Cup Final, beating the USA Eagles by 43-6 at the Thunderbird Stadium in Vancouver.

First-half tries from powerful centre Ben Johnston and skipper and No.8 Hugh Vyvyan, all of which were converted by fly-half Dave Walder, put England into a useful 17-6 half-time lead, with the visitors scoring another four tries in the second half.

Back rower Pete Anglesea, inside back Henry Paul, mobile hooker Phil Greening and starting fullback Iain Balshaw scored England's second-half tries, with Walder kicking another two conversions and Olly Barkley adding one conversion.

However, it wasn't plain sailing early on, with flanker Kort Schubert signalling USA's ambition in an early charge to the posts.  That resulted in a Link Wilfley penalty and Johnston finally put England on the scoresheet in the 24th minute.  The Saracens centre was first to Walder's chip over the Eagles' defence for an easy run-in.

Walder converted and then traded penalties with Wilfley for a 10-6 lead before Vyvyan picked up the ball from Paul's long pass and galloped in.

Pete Anglesea scored England's third try in the second half when he crashed over next to the flag from James Simpson-Daniel's pass and Walder's extras gave them some daylight at 24-6.

The Newcastle Falcon, relishing some game time after missing most of the season with a broken leg, created Paul's try with a dribbled drop-out on his own 22, Vyvyan provided the link and the Gloucester centre beat David Fee to the corner.

There was still time for Phil Greening and Martyn Wood to employ a one-two at the front of the line-out for the hooker to go over, while Iain Balshaw had the last word with a try from Simpson-Daniel's feed.

"English rugby is on a real high at the moment," said Paul after the match.  "It doesn't matter whether you're in New Zealand and Australia or over here -- it's all about playing well as a squad.

"We have done a job here and hopefully we will be good enough if we have to step up.  It's good that England has a pool of around 60 players to chose from rather than just 20 or so."

Paul also saluted Mallinder and assistant Steve Diamond, saying:  "The coaching staff have really fired us.  We have learnt a lot from Jim and Steve and they have done a good job of keeping everyone tight."

England now travel to Tokyo for two games against a Japan Select XV (Thursday, July 3) and Japan (Sunday, July 6) and for Mallinder the job is only half done.

"Three from three -- you can't ask for anything more than that but we set out our goals from the outset and that's winning all five games; that is our No.1 priority.  We have got two tough games in difficult humid conditions; we don't know much about Japan so the challenge is there for us."

The Teams:

United States:  1 Dan Dorsey, 2 Kirk Khasigian, 3 Mike MacDonald, 4 Luke Gross, 5 Brian Surgener, 6 Conrad Hodgson, 7 Kort Schubert, 8 Dan Lyle (c), 9 Kimball Kjar, 10 Matt Sherman, 11 David Fee, 12 Kain Cross, 13 Phillip Eloff, 14 Riaan Van Zyl, 15 Link Wilfley
Reserves:  Jason Keyter, Mark Griffin, Kevin Dalzell, Olo Fifita, Jurie Gouws, John Tarpoff, Mose Timoteo

Referee:  Deluca p.

Points Scorers:

United States
Pen K.:  Wilfley L.M. 2

South Africa 26 Argentina 25

Louis Koen's boot once again saved some blushes for the Springboks as they recorded a lucky 26-25 win over Argentina at the Eastern Province Rugby Football Union (EPRFU) Stadium in Port Elizabeth.

Koen struck a penalty goal from just outside the Puma 22 only seconds before the final whistle was sounded by Welsh referee Nigel Williams to secure a win that could very easily have gone the other way after the visitors led by 25-16 going into the final five minutes.

A try from replacement back Brent Russell -- and Koen's conversion from in front of the uprights -- put the Boks within striking distance before Koen's final penalty burgled the win for South Africa after a Pedrie Wannenburg dash down the right-hand side touchline had won the favourable field position for the home side.

After South Africa's less-than-convincing two-Test triumph over Scotland earlier this month, more questions remain unanswered despite the Boks' unbeaten record this year.

Despite his 100 percent kicking record, is Koen the right man for the fly-half spot given his hesitancy on attack?  Why were the Puma forwards so efficient at hitting rucks and mauls, with the Bok pack lumbering around the park?

And lastly, why was Russell given just seven minutes to weave his magic, when, clearly, he is the only back in South Africa with the pace and vision to test opposition defences?

The Pumas preyed on the Boks' poor hands and option-taking at crucial moments, with the visitors scoring three wonderfully-constructed tries from long-range, with the hapless home team managing one try off a Puma error in the first period and Russell's effort after finally taking the ball through enough phases to tire the Puma defence.

Before Russell's score, Argentina were well in control at 25-16, but they would be kicking themselves for trying to protect their lead at that stage instead of trying to build on it.

A sensational try from young fullback Juan Martín Hernández -- and Gonzalo Quesada's conversion -- had given them a nine-point lead, but they could well have enjoyed a bigger advantage at that stage had an earlier try not been disallowed.

Argentina inside centre Felipe Contepomi scored what looked to be a legitimate intercept try in the 64th minute, only for referee Williams to disallow it on the advice of one of his touch judges.

Lock Rimas Álvarez, who was yellow-carded in the first half, was the man fingered for punching, although the Pumas did not have to wait too long for their third try, with Hernández's effort coming less than five minutes later.

It all began when Puma right-wing José Maria Núñez Piossek got past his marker Pieter Rossouw, replacement lock Patricio Albacete took the ball further and Hernández's pace saw him over the tryline.

Rossouw seemed set to make up for his defensive lapse from the re-start when he chased and re-gathered his own kick-ahead, only to go for the tryline himself, despite having the necessary support on his outside.

The Pumas did well to snuff out any of SA's try-scoring chances in those final frantic minutes, but Russell's fresh legs and try-scoring appetite eventually foiled them.

Earlier, the visitors went into the dressing-room with a slender 15-13 half-time lead after South Africa had run into an early 10-nil lead.

A try from hooker Danie Coetzee, after scrum-half Craig Davidson charged down his opposite number's clearance kick, together with the conversion and a penalty goal from Koen seemingly put the home side in control.

But the visitors were merely waiting for their chance and when Bok lock Quinton Davids coughed up possession in the Puma 22, they counter-attacked, with Contepomi eventually emerging from a maul on the SA line with ball in hand.

Surprisingly, Quesada missed the conversion, but he was on song less than five minutes later when the Pumas worked an innocent looking line-out ball down the short-side through back rowers Lucas Ostiglia and Rolando Martin -- right-wing Núñez Piossek having enough pace to go all the way.

Koen also kicked a penalty at the end of the first half, with the Bok fly-half also having the final say at the end of the second period as the Boks rounded off preparations for the Tri-Nations.

It could be a long few months for Bok supporters ...

Man of the match:  Not many contenders from the home side, although Pedrie Wannenburg should be commended for his non-stop display, despite some unforced errors at the back of the Springbok scrum.  Brent Russell was a handful in his seven-minute cameo, while Jaco van der Westhuyzen was good under the high ball.  For Argentina, captain and No.8 Gonzalo Longo, scrum-half Nicolás Fernández Miranda and inside centre Felipe Contepomi all impressed, with the latter eventually winning Planet Rugby's vote.  His forwards laid the platform, but his decisive play from the No.12 position -- on attack and defence -- very nearly gave his side the edge at the end of the day.

Moment of the match:  One moment stands out -- Contepomi's disallowed try in the 64th minute, which was cancelled out when second rower Rimas Álvarez was spotted landing a few punches on Boks Corné Krige and hooker Danie Coetzee.  Fullback Hernández scored his team's third try shortly afterwards, but if the visitors had scored two tries in that short space of time the home team would have battled to fight back from that deficit.

Villain of the match:  Most of the Springboks' discipline was poor, and their ball-retention in the tackle-situation was once again way below-par.  But they won, and the man that could quite easily be blamed for Argentina's loss is Álvarez, who spent 10 minutes in the sin bin in the first half and had Contepomi's second-half try disallowed for punching.

The Teams:

South Africa:  1 Robbie Kempson, 2 Danie Coetzee, 3 Cobus Visagie, 4 Victor Matfield, 5 Quinton Davids, 6 A.J. Venter, 7 Corne Krige (c), 8 Pedrie Wannenburg, 9 Craig Davidson, 10 Louis Koen, 11 Pieter Rossouw, 12 Gcobani Bobo, 13 Marius Joubert, 14 Stefan Terblanche, 15 Jaco Van Der Westhuyzen
Reserves:  Richard Bands, Selborne Boome, Brent Russell, Bobby Skinstad
Unused:  Trevor Halstead, Lawrence Sephaka, Joost Van Der Westhuizen

Argentina:  1 Roberto Grau, 2 Mario Ledesma Arocena, 3 Mauricio Reggiardo, 4 Rimas Alvarez Kairelis, 5 Ignacio Fernandez Lobbe, 6 Rolando Martin, 7 Lucas Ostiglia, 8 Gonzalo Longo Elia (c), 9 Nicolas Fernandez Miranda, 10 Gonzalo Quesada, 11 Diego Albanese, 12 Felipe Contepomi, 13 Jose Orengo, 14 Jose Nunez Piossek, 15 Juan Martin Hernandez
Reserves:  Patricio Albacete, Santiago Gonzalez Bonorino, Federico Mendez, Santiago Phelan, Hernan Senillosa
Unused:  Matias Albina, Bernardo Stortoni

Attendance:  34000
Referee:  Williams n.

Points Scorers:

South Africa
Tries:  Coetzee D. 1, Russell R.B. 1
Conv:  Koen L.J. 2
Pen K.:  Koen L.J. 4

Argentina
Tries:  Hernandez J.M. 1, Nunez Piossek J.M. 1, Contepomi F. 1
Conv:  Quesada G. 2
Pen K.:  Quesada G. 2

New Zealand 31 France 23

The All Blacks managed to hold on for a narrow eight-point 31-23 win against a resurgent French team in their one-off Test at the Jade Stadium in Christchurch.

It was a match full of excitement and some really high quality rugby, which produced five sparkling tries.  In the end it was a hat-trick by winger Joe Rokocoko that sealed the win for the Kiwis.

But it will be the French, far more so than the All Blacks, who will take most of the positives out of this match, with the Kiwis made to work very hard for the win.

In the end they showed good character to hold on, especially in the last 10 minutes, when they were reduced to 14 men after captain Reuben Thorne was yellow-carded for punching an opponent.

But the French showed that they should not be written off as World Cup prospects, after producing a spirited and sometimes very entertaining display against the highly-rated All Blacks.

What makes the French performance so noteworthy is that it follows their two-match series whitewash against Argentina, which ended in a heart-breaking 33-32 defeat in Buenos Aires last week.

But in Christchurch on Saturday they resembled the French one had come to expect over the years -- efficient and almost dominant up front, and very creative in the backline.

In fact they showed up some serious flaws in the Kiwi pack, often putting them under pressure in the scrums and stealing more than just a handful of line-outs on the All Blacks' throw.

As for the New Zealanders, they showed just how dangerous they can be when they get quick ball out wide.  With flyers like fullback Mils Muliaina, wing Doug Howlett and in particular Rokocoko, they have one of fastest back threes in the world.

Unfortunately, and this was particularly true in the second half, the Kiwis did not always managed to get the ball out wide quickly enough.  Maybe the French defenders also deserve some credit here, even if they did give away a number of goalable penalties after the break.

The game opened at a frenetic pace, with the first passage of play lasting all of three minutes as referee André Watson played advantage on several occasions.  It ended with a penalty to the French, from an All Black hand in the ruck.  But fly-half Frédérick Michalak fluffed his penalty shot from 25 metres out.

The next passage of play also last well over two minutes, with the Kiwis eventually getting their hands on the ball and taking the ball to within three metres of the French tryline -- through 11 phases -- before they lost control.

The first points came in the seventh minute, when the French worked their way up-field and Michalak made amends for his earlier miss by slotting a well-timed drop-goal.

The Kiwis, despite not seeing much of the ball in the early stages, kept their composure and managed to start putting some phases together again.

Their first points came after 15 minutes, when winger Joe Rokocoko went over in the left corner.  It started with a break in the midfield, at a ruck, by No.8 Jerry Collins.  At the next ruck the ball came quickly, with Carlos Spencer off-loading brilliantly to Rokocoko.  Daniel Carter added the conversion for a 7-3 lead.

It was another seven minutes before the All Blacks scored again, with Rokocoko there to finish off another fine move.  It started at a line-out, with first five-eighth Carlos Spencer timing his inside pass to Rokocoko brilliantly.  The French cover defence could not get to the All Blacks' flying Fijian and he scored his second five-pointer.

Carter's conversion made it 14-3.

Rokocoko completed his hat-trick in the 27th minute, at a time when it seemed the All Blacks would run away with the game.  Carter made the initial midfield break, the Kiwis took it through a number of phases and then it went wide quickly where Rokocoko went over.  Carter missed the conversion, but the score had moved to 19-3.

The French slowly started to fight their way back into the game, with Michalak kicking a penalty in the 31st minute, before Sylvain Marconnet went over for France's first try in the 38th minute.

It proved to be a crucial score, as the French won a line-out deep inside All Black territory, took it to the midfield where the ball went quickly through the hands, before a well-timed inside pass to Marconnet saw the prop going over under the posts.  Michalak added the conversion to narrow the gap to 19-13 at the break.

Some of the most interesting statistics that came out of the first half is the low penalty-count, with referee André Watson needing to award only six penalties (two against France and four against the All Blacks).  The referee's control of the match seemed far superior to some other performances by match officials in internationals this year.

Also the All Blacks had conceded their first try of the year, despite dominating possession -- a great compliment to the French.

The second half was probably not as exciting as the first, with mistakes starting to creep in as the players tired.  Also, the French conceded a few more penalties -- five in this half -- which allowed Carter to slot penalties in the 56th, 60th, 64th and 79th minutes.

The last of those was very crucial, with the French having narrowed the gap to just five points -- 28-23.

Following the first three of Carter's second-half penalties, it was French centre Yannick Jauzion who scored his team's second try in the 70th minute.  It came from a scrum and a midfield break.  Gérald Merceron, who had come on as replacement for Michalak, added the conversion.

A long-range Damien Traille penalty in the 76th minute narrowed the gap to just five points, before Carter's final strike.

Man of the match:  There is only one candidate, and a runaway winner.  Joe Rokocoko's hat-trick seals it for him.

Moment of the match:  Obviously anyone of Rokocoko's three tries would qualify, they were certainly of a high enough quality.  But French prop Sylvain Marconnet's try in the 38th minute gets our award.  Not only was it a crucial score, which brought the French back into striking-distance, but it showed how forwards should play -- not trying to be centres or wings, but taking the ball up hard at close quarters from great passes by backline players who can create.

Villain of the match:  Just one candidate and the winner -- All Black captain Reuben Thorne, who was shown a yellow card in the 69th minute for a silly punch when his team was on the attack.  It almost cost his team the game, with the French scoring 10 points and almost stealing a win.

The scorers:

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Rokocoko 3
Cons:  Carter 2
Pens:  Carter 4

For France:
Tries:  Jauzion, Marconnet
Cons:  Michalak, Merceron
Pens:  Traille, Michalak
Drop:  Michalak

The teams:

New Zealand:  15 Mils Muliaina, 14 Joe Rokocoko, 13 Tana Umaga, 12 Daniel Carter, 11 Doug Howlett, 10 Carlos Spencer, 9 Steve Devine, 8 Jerry Collins, 7 Reuben Thorne (c), 6 Richie McCaw, 5 Ali Williams, 4 Chris Jack, 3 Greg Somerville, 2 Anton Oliver, 1 David Hewett
Reserves:  Keven Mealamu, Marty Holah, Brad Thorn, Byron Kelleher, Kees Meeuws
Unused:  Aaron Mauger, Caleb Ralph

France:  15 Clement Poitreneaud, 14 Aurelien Rougerie, 13 Damien Traille, 12 Yannick Jauzion, 11 Vincent Clerc, 10 Frederic Michalak, 9 Fabien Galthie (c), 8 Elvis Vermeulen, 7 Patrick Tabacco, 6 Imanol Harinordoquy, 5 Jerome Thion, 4 Lionel Nallet, 3 Nicolas Mas, 2 Yannick Bru, 1 Sylvain Marconnet
Reserves:  David Auradou, Pieter De Villiers, Gerald Merceron, Sebastien Chabal, Christian Labit
Unused:  Jean-Baptiste Rue, Pepito Elhorga

Attendance:  36500
Referee:  Watson a.

Saturday, 21 June 2003

New Zealand 55 Wales 3

New Zealand recorded their biggest-ever win over Wales in their one-off Test at the Waikato Stadium in Hamilton, with the All Blacks winning by 55-3.  The victory was every bit as compelling as the scoreline suggests, with the Kiwis outscoring the opposition by eight tries to none.

The previous biggest defeat suffered by Wales against the All Blacks was in Christchurch back in 1988, when they lost 52-3.  The 55 points scored by the All Blacks are also more than the 54 they conceded in their 54-9 defeat in Auckland two weeks after the 49-point hammering in Christchurch.

But back to the present and Hamilton on Saturday.

Statistics can sometimes be misleading, but this is one occasion where the match stats tell a story all of its own.  The All Blacks had 70 percent of the possession at the Waikato Stadium and enjoyed a territorial advantage of 76 percent.

Another interesting fact is that New Zealand have not conceded a try in 160 minutes of rugby ... or if you really want to be intricate you can say they have not conceded a try in any of their Test matches all year.

But what is more notable is the way in which the Kiwis overcame a slow start to shut the Welsh out altogether.

The early stages of the game certainly belonged to the Welsh, who managed to get some good possession and also launched a couple of brave counter attacks.

They were rewarded for their bravery and effort with a seventh-minute penalty, which fly-half Stephen Jones duly slotted to give them the lead.

They managed to hold onto that lead for another 13 minutes, despite the All Blacks slowly starting to take control.

By the 20th minute the All Blacks scored their first points, a Doug Howlett try, which saw them move into the lead -- a lead they never conceded.

It came from a scrum inside the Welsh 22-metre area, from where they set up a ruck and then took it wide where they had superior numbers.  Carter added the conversion for a 7-3 lead.

Carter landed a penalty seven minutes later to make it 10-3 as the Kiwis started taking total control of proceedings.

While the Welsh continued to put up brave resistance, with some stern defence, the overwhelming feeling was that the figurative dam wall was about to burst.

It did not happen in the first half, with the All Blacks adding just one more try before the break.  It came in the 33rd minute, when Carlos Spencer slipped over after a movement, which he himself started with a blinding midfield break.  The forwards came into play very quickly and with good quick ball Spencer was able to find a gap to squeeze through.

Carter added the conversion to make it 17-3, which was also the score at the break.

It took the All Blacks just five minutes after the break to start the flood of second-half tries, with Carter going over for his first Test try.  It came after a drive by the Kiwi forwards, some hard running by Tana Umaga to create the gap, a ruck and quick ball to the left where Carter scored after a great hand-off on Mark Taylor.

Carter added the conversion for a 24-3 lead and it was clear that Wales were now reduced to damage control.

The next 10 minutes belonged to the forwards, with prop Kees Meeuws and hooker Kevin Mealamu scoring tries.

Meeuws went over in the 50th minute after a scrum five metres out, with the forwards driving, driving and driving again till Meeuws flopped over.  Mealamu's try came from a line-out five metres out, when they also drove the Welsh defenders back over their own line.

The backs got back into the scoring fray in the 63rd minute, when Umaga went over after a scrum, from which Carter created the half-gap.  Carter converted two of these three tries as the score moved to 43-3.

The 50-points came up in the 67th minute, when Joe Rokocoko scored his first Test try, after a turnover and a counter-attack by the Kiwis.  Rokocoko scored New Zealand's eighth try in the 71st minute, when he charged down an attempted clearance and pounced on the ball.

Man of the match:  There are many candidates, with Kees Meeuws, Keven Mealamu, Jerry Collins, Marty Holah among the forwards all doing well.  Add to that the names of backs like debutant Daniel Carter and wing Joe Rokocoko.  But our vote goes to prop forward Kees Meeuws, who scored one try and came close to another couple.  But it was his overall work-rate which earned him this award.

Moment of the Match:  From an entertainment point of view it is not the best moment, but it was a defining moment when Wales No.8 Colin Charvis was stretchered off with concussion in the 23rd minute -- after a very heavy tackle by Jerry Collins.  It was as if the fight had been knocked out of the entire Welsh team.

Villain(s) of the match:  Our vote goes unanimously to the All Blacks' new tight-fitting jerseys, which just do not seem to be up to international standards.  In fact, it was so bad that at one stage Joe Rokocoko was playing with No.31 (a replacement jersey) and Daniel Carter with a No.26 jumper.  Later on Steve Devine was playing with No.24 as the jumpers kept being ripped apart.

The Teams:

New Zealand:  1 Carl Hoeft, 2 Keven Mealamu, 3 Kees Meeuws, 4 Chris Jack, 5 Ali Williams, 6 Marty Holah, 7 Reuben Thorne (c), 8 Jerry Collins, 9 Steve Devine, 10 Carlos Spencer, 11 Doug Howlett, 12 Daniel Carter, 13 Tana Umaga, 14 Joe Rokocoko, 15 Mils Muliaina
Reserves:  Brad Thorn
Unused:  David Hewett, Aaron Mauger, Richie McCaw, Byron Kelleher, Anton Oliver, Caleb Ralph

Wales:  1 Gethin Jenkins, 2 Robin McBryde, 3 Iestyn Thomas, 4 Robert Sidoli, 5 Gareth Llewellyn, 6 Dafydd Jones, 7 Martyn Williams (c), 8 Colin Charvis, 9 Gareth Cooper, 10 Stephen Jones, 11 Mark Jones, 12 Jamie Robinson, 13 Mark Taylor, 14 Tom Shanklin, 15 Rhys Williams
Reserves:  Mefin Davies, Gavin Henson, Dwayne Peel, Ceri Sweeney, Jonathan Thomas, Chris Wyatt
Unused:  Ben Evans

Attendance:  25200
Referee:  Lewis a.

Points Scorers:

New Zealand
Tries:  Howlett D.C. 1, Umaga J.F. 1, Carter D.W. 1, Rokocoko J. 2, Spencer C.J. 1, Mealamu K.F. 1, Meeuws K.J. 1
Conv:  Carter D.W. 6
Pen K.:  Carter D.W. 1

Wales
Pen K.:  Jones S.M. 1

Australia 14 England 25

England threw down a World Cup gauntlet to the southern hemisphere superpowers as they claimed their first-ever victory on Australian soil, outscoring the Wallabies by three tries to one in a 25-14 win at Melbourne's Telstra Dome.

Having beaten the All Blacks only seven days earlier, coach Clive Woodward's men delivered a timely slap in the face to those who have accused them of "boring" rugby, with all of their tries coming from the backs against a resilient Wallaby side, who gave their all without a host of their recognised stars.

But it is the powerful display of this England team that is the story of world rugby at the moment, with their reputation further strengthened after a performance which saw tries for centres Will Greenwood and Mike Tindall, as well as a second-half effort from wing Ben Cohen.

Fly-half Jonny Wilkinson dictated play with his usual authorativeness, adding two penalties as well as converting all but one of the tries -- only the width of an upright preventing him from a perfect day with the boot as his touchline effort rattled the left post following Tindall's try.

Despite the obvious plus points for the visitors, the match was not a totally wasted exercise for the Wallabies, with wing Wendell Sailor continuing his ascent in standards with a spectacular late consolation try, while makeshift fly-half Nathan Grey gave a gritty demonstration of his skills, playing within his obvious limitations but never being the point of weakness that had been suggested by some pre-match pundits.

Joe Roff kicked three penalties, while openside Phil Waugh was again outstanding for the hosts, but their opponents will go away the happier, having firmly stamped their authority as the team to beat.

The "Red Rose" brigade had heroes all over the park, hooker Steve Thompson being everywhere, captain Martin Johnson again being a huge physical presence, while Jason Robinson, Ben Cohen and Josh Lewsey in the backs never relinquished their duties.

If any criticism is to come following this historic match, then discipline may well be the area, with Irish referee David McHugh letting a host of offences go unpunished, as well as blowing the English continually for off-side and infringements in contact.

Also, the dominance of tigerish Wallaby Waugh at the breakdown showed just how much the English are missing the injured Lewis Moody -- his Leicester team-mate Neil Back having many plus points in his general game, but lacking the extra yard to beat the energetic Waugh to the breakdown.

Right from the off, both teams directly attacked at each other, with tactical subtleties on the backburner as Sailor found himself on the end of a Gregan up-and-under in the corner, being bundled into touch by Cohen.

Dallaglio stole an early Wallaby line-out, and while some of the capacity crowd were still getting to their seats, the visitors scored their first try -- phase after phase of English pressure finally grinding down the home resistance.

It was Greenwood who was the man to touch the ball down, but this try was created by a relentless recycling of the ball at pace, sucking the defenders in before it was finally flung wide -- Greenwood bursting through the tackle of centre Steve Kefu before planting the ball down near the posts for Wilkinson to convert.

England were on the front foot, but suffered a bout of over-confidence when trying to run the ball out of their own 22, the Wallabies forcing a penalty after the attempted move went wrong.

Roff had no trouble from right in front of the posts, bringing the deficit down to four points, but with scrum-half Kyran Bracken and hooker Thompson snapping at the heels of the Wallabies, they were being denied clean ball in open play.

Waugh dominated the English singe-handedly at the breakdown, and with the Wallabies restricted to counter-attacks, a break from Roff down the left-wing nearly saw their first try -- the Brumbies star's pass going to ground as a three-on-two beckoned.

England, for all their pressure, were getting impatient, and Wilkinson kicked the ball away in attack when perhaps more phases in the hands were required, but after a few sloppy handling errors, they were finally rewarded for their persistence.

Centre Tindall was the beneficiary, but the try was created in the 22 after some quick hands from Wilkinson, Thompson and Greenwood, who all released the ball before being tackled to make the space for Tindall's burst for the left corner flag.

Wilkinson hit the post with the conversion, with further breaks from Robinson and Lewsey testing the home defence to the full -- some sound tackling from that man Waugh again saving the day.

Some fairly cynical play from Cohen in defence after a kick and chase nearly saw the Wallabies rein in the visitors after a fleeting run down the left -- Cohen hanging on in the ruck and being penalised while the Australians had a considerable numerical advantage.  But Roff missed the resulting penalty from left of the posts, and his side went into the interval at 12-3 down.

The second half was an altogether messier affair, with off-sides by the England defence earning the wrath of referee McHugh, while some slap-dash handling by the Wallabies when the tryline beckoned showed their lack of composure.

A penalty from Roff just after the interval from near the posts got the Australians to within six points, and when the visitors were yet again whistled for offside in midfield, Roff narrowed the deficit to three.

But with Jeremy Paul caught on the wrong side of a ruck, Wilkinson nudged England ahead again with a penalty, as the superb continuity of the first half was not matched, understandable with so many exhausted bodies on the field after a frantic opening.

Sailor began to play an increasing role with some powerful runs out of defence, but just when it looked that a period of dominance in possession terms might give the Wallabies ammunition to challenge the lead, England wing Cohen stormed through the three-quarter line at break-neck speed for the third try of the game.

The Northampton powerhouse hit the line on a straightening angle, Greenwood's decoy run having taken Turinui out of his immediate running line, and then the small matter of turning on the turbo and stepping his way past last man Latham before going for the line from all of 30 metres-plus not proving to big an obstacle.

Wilkinson converted, and the 13-point lead never looked like being caught.  Late impetus however came with the arrival of Mat Rogers and Lote Tuqiri on to the field, Rogers probing the midfield at fly-half while Tuqiri and Sailor provided ample problems for the England defence.

Rogers nearly scored after a marvellous diagonal break for the left corner -- Robinson tackling his former League opponent just short of the line.

With the clock running down and victory almost guaranteed for England, the last few moments were made all the more anxious when Sailor -- who had threatened to do so all game -- cut through the defence like the proverbial hot knife through butter, turning Matt Dawson inside out before powering past Cohen down the right-wing to slam the ball down.

Roff's conversion could have brought them to within a converted try, but he erred from out wide, and a Wilkinson penalty right on the final hooter brought the game to a close, capping a historic tour for England, while the Wallabies themselves can have gleaned at least some hope from the gutsy spirit of their depleted side.

So, what are the implications for the World Cup?  Who knows?  But one thing is for sure, the odds will have shortened on an England win, while those who have dared to question the adventure of the men in white were well and truly shot down.

Man of the Match:  The influence of England fly-half Jonny Wilkinson was -- as ever -- immense on this game, but for a physically dominant showing we can look no further then England hooker Steve Thompson.  He likes the rough stuff, but can handle a ball, and played a key role in Mike Tindall's try.  For the Wallabies, openside Phil Waugh was the obvious standout, while stand-in fly-half Nathan Grey tested his game to its full limits.  Wing Wendell Sailor drifted in and out of play, but when he's good, boy is he good!

Moment of the Match:  Wendell Sailor's late try runs this mightily close, but for both its importance and its clinical execution, our award goes to England wing Ben Cohen's try.  At six points up in a key stage of the game, Jonny Wilkinson gave a show of the ball to the Wallaby defence, sucked in Morgan Turinui and then unleashed a short pop to Cohen, who straightened his running line magnificently before outgunning fullback Chris Latham with a side-step and a fiercely accelerating run.

Villain of the Match:  In a bits-and-pieces match with a fair bit of niggle, there was never any real villainy of the dastardly sort.  Mat Rogers landed a punch on Josh Lewsey, but the holding antics of Lewsey cancelled out that, before Lewsey wreaked revenge with a bone-crunching but perfectly legitimate tackle.  Persistent off-sides blighted the flow of the second half, but to single out one sole culprit would not be telling the full story of a game generally played in good spirit.

The Teams:

Australia:  1 Patricio Noriega, 2 Jeremy Paul, 3 Bill Young, 4 David Giffin, 5 Nathan Sharpe, 6 David Lyons, 7 Phil Waugh, 8 Toutai Kefu, 9 George Gregan (c), 10 Nathan Grey, 11 Joe Roff, 12 Steve Kefu, 13 Morgan Turinui, 14 Wendell Sailor, 15 Chris Latham
Reserves:  Brendan Cannon, Mat Rogers, Ben Darwin, Daniel Vickerman, Lote Tuqiri
Unused:  Daniel Heenan, Chris Whitaker

England:  1 Phil Vickery, 2 Steve Thompson, 3 Trevor Woodman, 4 Ben Kay, 5 Martin Johnson (c), 6 Neil Back, 7 Richard Hill, 8 Lawrence Dallaglio, 9 Kyran Bracken, 10 Jonny Wilkinson, 11 Jason Robinson, 12 Will Greenwood, 13 Mike Tindall, 14 Ben Cohen, 15 Josh Lewsey
Reserves:  Matt Dawson, Joe Worsley, Steve Borthwick
Unused:  Alex King, Jason Leonard, Dan Luger, Mark Regan

Attendance:  54868
Referee:  Mchugh d.

Points Scorers:

Australia
Tries:  Sailor W.J. 1
Pen K.:  Roff J.W.C. 3

England
Tries:  Greenwood W.J.H. 1, Tindall M.J. 1, Cohen B.C. 1
Conv:  Wilkinson J.P. 2
Pen K.:  Wilkinson J.P. 2

Friday, 20 June 2003

Samoa 14 Ireland 40

Ireland ended their 2003 tour of Australia and the Pacific with a 40-12 win over Manu Samoa at Apia Park, Munster fly-half Ronan O'Gara starring with an impressive 32-point haul.

The win brought down the curtain on their tour and indeed their current season, with a trip that included a 45-16 defeat at the hands of Australia and a 40-19 victory over Tonga.

On Friday, despite being at the end of a long international season, the players managed to keep their minds very sharply focused against Samoa in this their only home game before the World Cup.

Ireland had got off to a slow start, and despite a trio of early O'Gara penalties, it was Samoa wing Ron Fanuatanu who touched down the game's first try, restricting Ireland's half-time lead to 9-7.

Fly-half Earl Va'a converted, but it was to be Irish dominance all the way from there, as captain Reggie Corrigan's men wrapped the game up, thanks in no small part to O'Gara, who was in for Ulster's David Humphreys at fly-half, and gave coach Eddie O'Sullivan a real selection headache ahead of the World Cup.

O'Gara nailed his fourth penalty after the break, before dazzling the crowd with a well-taken dummy to go under the posts for the tourists' opening try.

After another penalty from the Munsterman, back rower Eric Miller charged down a kick and scored their second try, before O'Gara showed great support from a Gordon D'Arcy run to pop up for his own second try of the match.

There was just time for a spectacular drop-goal before the fly-half was replaced by Harlequins' Paul Burke, who kicked a penalty to wrap up the Irish scoring.

Samoa fly-half Va'a grabbed a late consolation try for his side, but the home side had been completely outplayed by the Irish, especially in the latter stages.

Ireland coach Eddie O'Sullivan told Britain's Press Association after the match:  "For me we've had some very good performances this year, but this was right up there with the very good ones, Murrayfield and Australia in Dublin.

"Conditions were appalling, we had two players with heat stroke and to win that game showed tremendous character.

"The defence again was excellent, the first try they got was the first mistake we made in the match, a loose kick over the top and they're the best in the world at that."

The Teams:

Samoa:  1 Jeremy Tomuli, 2 Trevor Leota, 3 Kas Lealamanu'a, 4 Leo Lafaiali'i, 5 Opeta Palepoi, 6 Maurie Fa'asavalu, 7 Kitiona Viliamu, 8 Semo Sititi (c), 9 Denning Tyrell, 10 Earl Va'a, 11 Lome Fa'atau, 12 Brian Lima, 13 Dale Rasmussen, 14 Ron Fanuatanu, 15 Fa'atonu Fili
Reserves:  Des Tuiali'i, Gaolo Elisara, Tamato Leupolu, Jonathan Meredith, Steven So'oialo
Unused:  Dominic Feaunati, Ponali Tapelu

Ireland:  1 Reggie Corrigan (c), 2 Shane Byrne, 3 Marcus Horan, 4 Leo Cullen, 5 Paul O'Connell, 6 Simon Easterby, 7 Aidan McCullen, 8 Eric Miller, 9 Guy Easterby, 10 Ronan O'Gara, 11 Anthony Horgan, 12 Jonathan Bell, 13 Mike Mullins, 14 John Kelly, 15 Girvan Dempsey
Reserves:  Paul Burke, Gordon D'Arcy, Brian O'Meara, David Wallace, Donncha O'Callaghan, Paul Shields
Unused:  Emmet Byrne

Referee:  Honiss p.

Points Scorers:

Samoa
Tries:  Fanuatanu R.  1, Va'a E.V. 1
Conv:  Va'a E.V. 1

Ireland
Tries:  O'Gara R.J.R. 2, Miller E.R.P. 1
Conv:  O'Gara R.J.R. 2
Pen K.:  O'Gara R.J.R. 5, Burke P.A. 1
Drop G.:  O'Gara R.J.R. 1

Ireland smash Samoans in Apia

Winning end to Irish tour

Ireland ended their tour of Australia and the Pacific with a 40-12 win over Manu Samoa at Apia Park on Friday, Munster fly-half Ronan O'Gara starring with an impressive 32-point haul.

The win brought down the curtain on their tour and indeed their current season, with a trip that included a 45-16 defeat at the hands of Australia and a 40-19 victory over Tonga.

On Friday, despite being at the end of a long international season, the players managed to keep their minds very sharply focused against Samoa in this their only home game before the World Cup.

Ireland had got off to a slow start, and despite a trio of early O'Gara penalties, it was Samoa wing Ron Fanuatanu who touched down the game's first try, restricting Ireland's half-time lead to 9-7.

Fly-half Earl Va'a converted, but it was to be Irish dominance all the way from there, as captain Reggie Corrigan's men wrapped the game up, thanks in no small part to O'Gara, who was in for Ulster's David Humphreys at fly-half, and gave coach Eddie O'Sullivan a real selection headache ahead of the World Cup.

O'Gara nailed his fourth penalty after the break, before dazzling the crowd with a well-taken dummy to go under the posts for the tourists' opening try.

After another penalty from the Munsterman, back rower Eric Miller charged down a kick and scored their second try, before O'Gara showed great support from a Gordon D'Arcy run to pop up for his own second try of the match.

There was just time for a spectacular drop-goal before the fly-half was replaced by Harlequins' Paul Burke, who kicked a penalty to wrap up the Irish scoring.

Samoa fly-half Va'a grabbed a late consolation try for his side, but the home side had been completely outplayed by the Irish, especially in the latter stages.

Ireland coach Eddie O'Sullivan told Britain's Press Association after the match:  "For me we've had some very good performances this year, but this was right up there with the very good ones, Murrayfield and Australia in Dublin.

"Conditions were appalling, we had two players with heat stroke and to win that game showed tremendous character.

"The defence again was excellent, the first try they got was the first mistake we made in the match, a loose kick over the top and they're the best in the world at that."

The scorers:

For Samoa:
Tries:  Fanuatanu, Va'a
Con:  Va'a

For Ireland:
Tries:  O'Gara 2, Miller
Cons:  O'Gara 2
Pens:  O'Gara 5, Burke
DG:  O'Gara

The teams:

Samoa:  15 Fa'atonu Fili, 14 Lome Fa'atau, 13 Dale Rasmussen, 12 Brian Lima, 11 Ron Fanuatanu, 10 Earl Va'a, 9 Denning Tyrell, 8 Semo Sititi (captain), 7 Maurie Fa'asavalu, 6 Kitiona Viliamu, 5 Leo Lafaialii, 4 Opeta Palepoi, 3 Jeremy Tomuli, 2 Trevor Leota, 1 Kas Lealamanua.

Ireland:  15 Girvan Dempsey, 14 John Kelly, 13 Mike Mullins, 12 Jonathan Bell, 11 Anthony Horgan, 10 Ronan O'Gara, 9 Guy Easterby, 8 Eric Miller, 7 Alan Quinlan, 6 Simon Easterby, 5 Paul O'Connell, 4 Leo Cullen, 3 Reggie Corrigan (captain), 2 Shane Byrne, 1 Marcus Horan.

Referee:  Paul Honiss (New Zealand)
Touch judges:  Kelvin Deaker (New Zealand, Lyndon Bray (New Zealand)
Television Match Official:  Sandy MacNeill (Australia)

France 32 Argentina 33

History was made at Estádio de Vélez Sarsfield in Buenos Aires when for the first time ever Argentina won a series against France.  They have shared series in the past but this won they won.  The winning could not have been closer as it took a last-minute drop-goal by Gonzalo Quesada to win them the match 33-32.

Argentina had won a drab first Test 10-6.  This one was not drab -- certainly not the action of injury-time.  First Quesada put Argentina up 30-29.  Then France's replacement fly-half Frédéric Michalak goaled and made it 32-30.

Back came the Pumas and Quesada was well short with his third failed drop-goal attempt.  Pepito Elhorga cleared.  The Pumas just won a shoddy line-out and then they threw everybody into a frantic attack on the French who held their line.

Then came the drama of the end when the light changed and everything seemed to go into slow motion as Quesada lined up for a drop-goal -- at an awkward angle and seeming to face the wrong way, but over it went.

The French raced up, kicked off quickly but the Argentinians kicked the ball into touch and the match into history.

Joy unbounded in Buenos Aires!

Each side scored two tries.  In the end a drop-goal beat a conversion and won the match.

The first half was much better than either half of the first Test -- more structured and constructive.  The second half had a scruffy bit but not much can compensate for that ending.

As in the first Test, the Pumas were the first to score.  This time it took a minute longer for it to happen -- after two and a half minutes!

The half's scoring promised to go with kick-off.  Argentina kicked off and scored first.

After the initial kick-about Argentina won a line-out and drove.  The ball came back sweetly and Gonzalo Quesada gave to centre José Orengo who popped it up in the tackle to fullback -- Juan Martín Hernández, the glamourboy of Argentinian rugby.

Hernández easily beat a tottering Pepito Elhorga with a swerve and went over as Yannick Jauzion and Aurélien Rougerie tried to tackle him.  Surprisingly the matter was refereed to the Television Match Official who took surprisingly long in awarding the try.  Quesada converted, 7-0.

France kicked off and the Puma backs were penalised for being off-side.  Yann Delaigue goaled from in front.  Argentina kicked off and Sébastien Chabal, playing No.8, was penalised for using his hands in a tackle/ruck.  Quesada goaled.

France kicked off, but the score did not come immediately.  They forced a scrum in the middle of the Puma 22 and attacked right and left and right again.  Then the penalty came and Delaigue made it 10-6.

Inevitably in this match, the Pumas scored next.  Hernández countered well.  The ball was chipped ahead.  Elhorga made a rickety clearance, which Nicolás Fernández Miranda ran back from just inside the French half.  Lisandro Arbizu got himself into a good position to break and fed fellow-centre José Orengo with a flat pass and the strong young player surged over for a try.  Quesada missed the conversion, but it was 15-6 after 15 minutes.

France kicked off and should have scored, but Delaigue hit the upright from straight in front.  That was his last act of significance as Damien Traille took over the kicking till Michalak replaced Delaigue.  Traille's penalty goal was from about three metres inside the Argentinian half and he goaled it to keep France in touch at 15-9.

Now it was the Pumas' turn, though France had the first opportunity when they worked an overlap for flank Imanol Harinordoquy, but Hernán Senillosa mowed him down and in fact Argentina scored.  They attacked with a will.  Quesada missed a drop.  They attacked again and Arbizu goaled a drop -- 18-9.

That meant that France would score next and they did for two bits of Pumas silliness.  In the same bit of play prop Martín Scelzo hit -- in retaliation to be fair to him -- Fabien Galthié and was sent to the sin bin and fullback Hernández obstructed Elhorga late.  From an awkward angle Michalak goaled.  That made it 18-12 after two minutes of injury time.

There was still time for Argentina to kick off and score.  They duly did so when France were penalised at a tackle and Quesada goaled from in front.

That made the half-time score 21-12.

France looked as if they would run away with it in the second half as they started working many short passes and hard bursts.  They scored their first try in two hours of rugby against Argentina after 45 seconds of the second half.  First big Yannick Jauzion broke clean through.  Sébastien Labit carried it on.  Back the ball came and Michalak going right swivelled a pass infield to Jauzion who burst over.  The game was on at 21-19.

After young Hernández had hurt his leg and been replaced, Traille burst through and France went over in a heap.  The Television Match Official could not decide on a try and it became a five-metre scrum to France.  Scelzo was penalised at the scrum and Michalak lobbed the penalty over.

The Pumas kicked off, the touch judge reported David Auradou for obstruction and Quesada made it 24-22.

The pattern of scoring changed at this stage as the Pumas scored next -- again a penalty by Quesada -- 27-22 with 16 minutes left to play.

France attacked.  Michalak hit the upright with a penalty and lock Rimas Álvarez carried over.  From the five-metre scrum France did the 8-9-15 and 15 scored.  In fact Elhorga went through with consummate ease and round to the posts.  So France led by 29-27 with time exhausting itself.

Then came that frantic finish as the Pumas grabbed back the lead.  Then France grabbed back the lead.  Then -- for the last time -- the Pumas grabbed the lead -- and won!

Man of the match:  It's just not easy as team-work ruled.  Juan Martín Hernández was wonderful but was not around for long enough.  Diego Albanese was brave and energetic.  Gonzalo Quesada proved he could be as balanced as the next fly-half.  Nicolás Fernández Miranda and Fabien Galthié both did well even when the ball was untidy.  Damien Traille was a steadying influence, but for Planet Rugby it was the man who played with every bit of strength and energy he had and won that untidy ball to set up that historic drop -- indestructible veteran Rolando Martín.

Moment of the match:  There was that sweet pass from Frédéric Michalak for Yannick Jauzion's try.  There was Lisandro Arbizu's pass for José Orengo's try and Orengo's pop to Juan Martín Hernández.  But there was no moment to equal that dropped goal, that historic dropped goal when the world stood still and Gonzalo Quesada won the match for the Pumas.

Villain of the match:  Sadly it was Martín Scelzo.  All right, he was hit first, but he retaliated.  Any player who retaliates in this day of many watching eyes is silly.  It deprived his side of his services for 10 minutes.

The Teams:

France:  1 Pieter De Villiers, 2 Yannick Bru, 3 Sylvain Marconnet, 4 David Auradou, 5 Jerome Thion, 6 Sebastien Chabal, 7 Imanol Harinordoquy, 8 Christian Labit, 9 Fabien Galthie (c), 10 Yann Delaigue, 11 Vincent Clerc, 12 Yannick Jauzion, 13 Damien Traille, 14 Aurelien Rougerie, 15 Pepito Elhorga
Reserves:  Jean-Baptiste Rue, Frederic Michalak
Unused:  Thomas Castaignede, Olivier Milloud, Lionel Nallet, Clement Poitreneaud, Elvis Vermeulen

Argentina:  1 Roberto Grau, 2 Federico Mendez, 3 Martin Scelzo, 4 Rimas Alvarez Kairelis, 5 Ignacio Fernandez Lobbe, 6 Rolando Martin, 7 Lucas Ostiglia, 8 Gonzalo Longo Elia, 9 Nicolas Fernandez Miranda, 10 Gonzalo Quesada, 11 Diego Albanese, 12 Lisandro Arbizu (c), 13 Jose Orengo, 14 Hernan Senillosa, 15 Juan Martin Hernandez
Reserves:  Felipe Contepomi, Bernardo Stortoni
Unused:  Matias Albina, Mario Ledesma Arocena, Santiago Phelan, Mauricio Reggiardo, Pedro Sporleder

Referee:  Cole a.

Points Scorers:

France
Tries:  Elhorga P. 1, Jauzion Y. 1
Conv:  Michalak F. 2
Pen K.:  Traille D. 1, Delaigue Y. 2, Michalak F. 3

Argentina
Tries:  Hernandez J.M. 1, Orengo J.R. 1
Conv:  Quesada G. 1
Pen K.:  Quesada G. 5
Drop G.:  Arbizu L. 1, Quesada G. 1

Wednesday, 18 June 2003

Canada 11 United States 16

The USA Eagles beat Canada by 16-11 in an ill-tempered Churchill Cup clash in Vancouver, to claim only their third win in 20 matches on Canadian soil and their first win over their higher ranked North American rivals in three years.

The Eagles had Link Wilfley to thank with 11 points coming off his boot, the USA fullback kicking three penalties and a conversion of centre Phil Eloff's try in a game which saw five yellow cards, three for Canada and two for the USA as well as a late, disallowed Canadian try from referee Roy Maybank.

Canada were first out of the blocks when fullback Quentin Fyffe rounded off a neat backline movement to score his first Test try after just four minutes but fly-half Bob Ross was unable to convert.

The veteran Canadian fly-half did, however, manage a penalty just before half-time to send the home side into the break 8-3 in the lead but Wilfley narrowed the deficit to just two points soon after the break.

The USA then took the lead on 64 minutes thanks to Eloff's try and although Canada pulled a penalty back and pressed hard late on, it was the staunch defence of the Eagles which prevented the Canadians from driving over in the last few minutes when their lock James Cudmore was judged to have been held up at the try-line.

Eagles coach Tom Billups was ecstatic with his team's performance, saying:  "We studied hard and prepared well as a team, and it showed."

The win will also ring well with the USA's decision to continue with Billups as head coach of the Eagles for the next two years.

The teams:

Canada:  1 Garth Cooke, 2 Mark Lawson, 3 Kevin Tkachuk, 4 Jamie Cudmore, 5 Colin Yukes, 6 Ryan Banks (c), 7 Adam Van Staveren, 8 Phil Murphy, 9 Morgan Williams, 10 Bobby Ross, 11 Sean Fauth, 12 Marco Di Girolomo, 13 Nik Witkowski, 14 Winston Stanley, 15 Quentin Fyffe
Reserves:  Aaron Abrams, John Cannon, Kevin Wirachowski
Unused:  Leif Carlson, Ed Fairhurst, Ed Knaggs

United States:  1 Dan Dorsey, 2 Kirk Khasigian, 3 Mike MacDonald, 4 Dave Hodges (c), 5 Alec Parker, 6 Conrad Hodgson, 7 lanker Kort Schubert, 8 Dan Lyle, 9 Kevin Dalzell, 10 Cayo Nicolau, 11 David Fee, 12 Kain Cross, 13 Phillip Eloff, 14 Riaan Van Zyl, 15 Link Wilfley
Reserves:  Jason Keyter, Luke Gross, John Tarpoff
Unused:  Mark Griffin, John Buchholz, Kimball Kjar, Mose Timoteo

Attendance:  3200
Referee:  Maybank r.

Points Scorers:

Canada
Tries:  Fyffe Q. 1
Pen K.:  Ross R.P. 2

United States
Tries:  Eloff P. 1
Conv:  Wilfley L.M. 1
Pen K.:  Wilfley L.M. 3

Saturday, 14 June 2003

Argentina 10 France 6

Argentina got the better of the Latin dog-fight at the Vélez Sarsfield Stadium in Buenos Aires, battling their way to a 10-6 win over a weakened France side in a game littered by stoppages and errors.

The only try of the game went the way of the Pumas in the first minute, wing José María Nunez Piossek working a good angle to breach the French defence, while coach Bernard Laporte's tourists were left scratching their heads after an incohesive and stop-start display, in this first of two Tests ahead of next weekend's re-match.

Toulouse fly-half Yann Delaigue blew two crucial but easy first-half penalty attempts on his comeback, while their largely untested pack sorely missed the big names who had been spared the trip, with Fabien Pelous, Jean-Jacques Crenca, Raphael Ibanez, Olivier Magne and Serge Betsen all possessing the class which Saturday's eight sadly did not.

In fairness, Toulouse openside Christian Labit made a decent fist of his comeback opportunity with some good breaks and all-round endeavour, and lock David Auradou battled well, but the lightweight front row struggled against the seasoned snarlers in the Pumas pack, who were at their destructive and devious best as they slowed down attack after attack by both foul and fair means.

New Leinster fly-half Felipe Contepomi slotted a penalty and a conversion for his side to guarantee the win, with hooker Mario Ledesma, scrum-half Nicolás Fernández Miranda and wing Diego Albanese all taking the game by the scruff of the neck.

Despite Les Bleus being without a number of their stars up front, their make-up behind the scrum was not light years away from their best mix, the likes of centres Thomas Castaignède and Damien Traille attempting in vain to breach the gainline time and again, while fullback Clément Poitrenaud's attacking pace was not given sufficent exposure.

English referee Steve Lander exerted a big influence on the match with a whole string of penalties to both teams, although the players did little to help with their almost constant offending, as well as the archetypal Latin temperaments boiling over on occasion.

In an unspectacular first half it was the Pumas who had the most of the scoring chances, Piossek making the most of his as early as the first minute to send his side into an early lead with a well-taken try.

It was created by fly-half Felipe Contepomi -- whose brother Manuel was in the centres -- with a miss pass to the right, but it was very much Piossek's timely and clinical execution of a side-step from his right foot at pace which made the gap, Castaignède being wrong-footed as Piossek straightened the angle and dived under the posts spectacularly.

Contepomi converted, but only a minute later the French had a chance to get themselves back in the match with a penalty to the left of the posts, although Delaigue's composure deserted him at the vital moment as he missed to the right.

Some good clearing punts from fullback Ignacio Corleto and the odd break from backs Lisandro Arbizu and Albanese were the bright spots for Los Pumas early on, although messy scrums and a series of penalties from both sides marred the match.

Castaignède and Traille attempted to make forays into Pumas' territory, but their best chance of points was again spurned when Delaigue missed an even easier penalty attempt than his first, from right in front of the posts near the 22.

Just when it looked like Piossek's try would be the only score of the half, Contepomi added a penalty to make the half-time score 10-0 to the hosts, coming back for advantage after narrowly failing to put Piossek in the corner with a grubber kick, fullback Poitrenaud getting in the way at the vital moment.  But Contepomi made no mistake with the penalty from wide on the right wing.

What the first half had lacked in incident, the second also did, with some bruising forward play allowing clear chances in the backs, the French knocking on time and again when the line beckoned, memorably through lock Auradou near the end after a flowing move, Auradou cursing himself for spilling an easy chance right near the line.

But Les Bleus did get on the scoreboard earlier in the second half, with centre Traille taking over the kicking mantle after Delaigue's previous two blunders, striking a firm penalty high and true through the uprights to get his side to within seven points of the hosts.

And they could have drawn level some moments later were it nor for Scottish TMO Iain Ramage, who controversially ruled that wing Aurélien Rugerie had knocked on when touching down his hack ahead in the Pumas' try area after a 50-metre chase down the right flank.

When Les Bleus were handed a penalty in front of the posts soon after, it was back to Delaigue to do the kicking honours, and in his third attempt he finally made a decent connection and sent the simple kick over for three points.

With the clock working against them, France frantically went for the try, although a wonky line-out throw from Jean-Baptiste Rué in the dying minutes right near the Argentine line did not help their cause, to the audible delight of the sizable Buenos Aires crowd.

Contepomi had previously missed a penalty from right of the posts by the slimmest of margins as his own team mounted a foray into French territory, but referee Lander finally brought an end to a tight and unentertaining encounter, leaving many questions unanswered about this weakened French team, while the Pumas again proved that they are a seriously tough not to crack on home soil.

Man of the match:  It might seem odd to choose a back in a game which was so massively influenced by the forwards, so combative Argentina wing Diego Albanese is just beaten to our award by a tough performance by hooker Mario Ledesma, who was all over the field in loose play, solid in the line-outs and huge in the scrums.  On the French side, tighthead Pieter de Villiers made a solid return after his suspension, while Damien Traille was a handful in the centres.

Moment of the match:  In a game short of noteworthy moments, José María Nunez Piossek's splendid try in the opening seconds of the match showed that the Pumas do possess dangerous backs -- if only they could get the ball to them more.

Villain of the match:  Despite the odd bout of Latin fisticuffs there was no real nastiness in the game, leaving French fly-half Yann Delaigue as our villain for his two early shocking penalty misses, which cost his side dear in the end.

The Teams:

Argentina:  1 Mauricio Reggiardo, 2 Mario Ledesma Arocena, 3 Martin Scelzo, 4 Patricio Albacete, 5 Ignacio Fernandez Lobbe, 6 Lucas Ostiglia, 7 Santiago Phelan, 8 Gonzalo Longo Elia, 9 Nicolas Fernandez Miranda, 10 Felipe Contepomi, 11 Diego Albanese, 12 Lisandro Arbizu (c), 13 Manuel Contepomi, 14 Jose Nunez Piossek, 15 Ignacio Corleto
Reserves:  Santiago Bonnorino, Juan Martin Hernandez, Federico Mendez, Pedro Sporleder
Unused:  Rimas Alvarez Kairelis, Matias Albina, Gonzalo Quesada

France:  1 Pieter De Villiers, 2 Jean-Baptiste Rue, 3 Olivier Milloud, 4 David Auradou, 5 Jerome Thion, 6 Christian Labit, 7 Patrick Tabacco, 8 Jean Bouilhou, 9 Fabien Galthie (c), 10 Yann Delaigue, 11 Aurelien Rougerie, 12 Thomas Castaignede, 13 Damien Traille, 14 Christophe Dominici, 15 Clement Poitrenaud
Reserves:  Imanol Harinordoquy, Sylvain Marconnet
Unused:  Yannick Bru, Pepito Elhorga, Yannick Jauzion, Frederic Michalak, Lionel Nallet

Referee:  Lander s.

Points Scorers:

Argentina
Tries:  Nunez Piossek J.M. 1
Conv:  Contepomi F. 1
Pen K.:  Contepomi F. 1

France
Pen K.:  Traille D. 1, Delaigue Y. 1

South Africa 28 Scotland 19

South Africa duly wrapped up a series triumph over Scotland courtesy of a 28-19 victory in the second Test at Johannesburg's Ellis Park on Saturday.  Both sides scored one try each in a bruising contest at altitude.

Unlike last week, the Springboks flew out of the starting blocks, running at their opponents from the word go, and, more importantly, they mixed up their play well.

Fly-half Louis Koen, who weighed in with 23 points, ran the ball well, making an early break, but taking the wrong option -- as he did in the first Test -- at the moment critique.

Koen did, however, set up a try just a few minutes later, but sadly for him it was for the wrong side as an attempted long ball to his outside backs found Scotland No.13 Andy Craig in the bread-basket.

The Orrell three-quarter put on the after-burners and he safely negotiated his dash across the field, with Bok wing Ashwin Willemse too late to stop him.

Right-wing Chris Paterson slotted the simple conversion, and a penalty goal less than five minutes, and suddenly the visitors, who had just been into SA's half on two separate occasions, held a commanding 10-0 lead.

Koen soon began chipping away at Scotland's lead, slotting a penalty from the re-start after Paterson's first three-pointer, while a Koen drop-goal saw the scoreline reduced even more.

At 10-6 the Boks allowed Scotland to add to their lead, with a host of penalties from Koen and Paterson leaving the half-time score at 16-12 in the visitors' favour.

The Boks began the second stanza in exactly the same fashion as the first, except this time they managed to breach Scotland's defence, scoring their opening -- and ultimately only -- try after a wonderful bit of work from fullback Jaco van der Westhuyzen.

Firstly Van der Westhuyzen did well to collect a tricky high ball, before turning it into a counter-attack, with Ashwin Willemse and Joost van der Westhuizen both handling en route to Stefan Terblanché's finish.

Terblanché's try put SA in the lead for the first time, with Koen's conversion putting them ahead by three points at 19-16.

Another Koen penalty stretched the Boks' lead to 22-16, but, typically, the brave Scottish side managed to stay in touch through Paterson's boot and some poor Bok discipline.

The home side conceded silly penalties, all of which were well within Paterson's range, but Koen, who ended up kicking six penalties -- equalling the South African record for penalty goals in a match -- kept his side ahead when it mattered most.

The Springboks enjoyed some great attacking moments in the latter stages of the match, and although Koen had stretched his side's lead to 28-19 just as the final quarter began, that second try eluded the South Africans.

Curiously, Bok coach Rudolf Straeuli left game-breaker Brent Russell on the bench, despite rushing him back into his match-day squad once the little Shark had proved his fitness at the start of the week.

A converted try would have put Scotland right back into the game at that stage, but, and more importantly, a converted try would have put the Boks out of reach.  Russell, who does not need a second invitation to the tryline, could just have been the man to unlock Scotland's tiring defence.

So where does this match leave the two teams in a World Cup year?

Well, Scotland again deserve praise for their approach to the game -- Ian McGeechan's side doing their basics right and minimising contact against their bigger forwards.

For them this tour certainly was an improvement on their dismal RBS Six Nations campaign.  But one just gets the feeling that it won't be enough come World Cup time.

South Africa.

Well, the hosts won again -- as their coach was quick to point out -- but their finishing was poor and they relied on the boot of Koen, whose all-round performance did not convince enough to suggest that he will be the custodian of the No.10 jersey come November this year.

Man of the match:  Not many contenders in this department, but the likes of Victor Matfield, Ashwin Willemse and Jaco van der Westhuyzen stood out for South Africa, with Simon Taylor, Scott Murray, Bryan Redpath and Chris Paterson -- all of whom did well last week -- impressing for the visitors.  In the end, Planet Rugby's vote goes to Jaco van der Westhuyzen for his enterprising play from the fullback position.  Not a first-choice player this year, but given the chance through injury, the Bulls back looked dangerous with ball in hand and he showed wonderful composure under the high ball.  He probably should have made more of his breaks count, but it was his run that set-up his side's only try of the day.

Moment of the match:  The lead-up to Stefan Terblanché's try, the Boks' only score of the day.  Van der Westhuyzen won a high ball before setting off on a strong run, finding support in the shape of young Lions winger Ashwin Willemse, who, in turn, found his captain Joost van der Westhuizen, who did just enough to put Terblanché away.  It was simple, but, yet effective rugby.

Villain of the match:  Springbok front rower Robbie Kempson wins our vote here for his late shoulder charge on Scotland replacement Brendan Laney in the dying moments of the match.  It earned him a yellow card, the first, and only, of the match, although there was not too much in it from the Ulster forward.

The Teams:

South Africa:  1 Richard Bands, 2 Danie Coetzee, 3 Lawrence Sephaka, 4 Victor Matfield, 5 Bakkies Botha, 6 Hendrik Gerber, 7 Wikus Van Heerden, 8 Pedrie Wannenburg, 9 Joost Van Der Westhuizen (c), 10 Louis Koen, 11 Ashwin Willemse, 12 Trevor Halstead, 13 Marius Joubert, 14 Stefan Terblanche, 15 Jaco Van Der Westhuyzen
Reserves:  Juan Smith, Gcobani Bobo, Selborne Boome, Robbie Kempson, Cobus Visagie
Unused:  Craig Davidson, Brent Russell

Scotland:  1 Bruce Douglas, 2 Gordon Bulloch, 3 Gavin Kerr, 4 Nathan Hines, 5 Scott Murray, 6 Andrew Mower, 7 Jason White, 8 Simon Taylor, 9 Bryan Redpath (c), 10 Gregor Townsend, 11 Kenny Logan, 12 Andrew Craig, 13 Andrew Henderson, 14 Chris Paterson, 15 Glenn Metcalfe
Reserves:  Michael Blair, Brendan Laney, Gordon McIlwham, Jon Petrie, Gordon Ross, Martin Leslie, Robbie Russell

Attendance:  55000
Referee:  Young s.

Points Scorers:

South Africa
Tries:  Terblanche C.S. 1
Conv:  Koen L.J. 1
Pen K.:  Koen L.J. 6
Drop G.:  Koen L.J. 1

Scotland
Tries:  Craig A. 1
Conv:  Paterson C.D. 1
Pen K.:  Paterson C.D. 4