Saturday, 11 June 2016

14-man Ireland secure first-ever win in SA

A heroic defensive effort propelled Ireland to a first-ever win in South Africa by 26-20, despite a red card in the first half to CJ Stander.

Stander's sending off, midway through the opening half, was the big talking point of this match.  It came after he knocked Springbok fly-half Pat Lambie out cold while attempting to charge down a chip kick from the pivot.

Referee Mathieu Raynal, after consulting the television match official, Jim Yuille, gave the South African-born back-row his marching orders, although television replays showed that it was a harsh decision with a yellow card probably the right call.

But despite playing with 14 men for most of the match, and even with 13 at one stage, when Robbie Henshaw was yellow-carded late in the same half, Ireland kept their structure, dominated for large periods and held on for a deserved victory.

The Boks looked disjointed throughout and committed a plethora of handling errors and conceded several turnovers, while their decision making also left a lot to be desired.

Ireland's fly-half Paddy Jackson deserves plenty of credit for his game-management in this victory.  He was under pressure going into this Test – after getting a place in the starting line-up when first-choice pivot Johnny Sexton withdrew shortly before the tour due to injury – and despite having one of his passes intercepted, from which the Boks scored a try, finished with a 16-point haul via three penalties, two conversions and a drop goal.

The visitors made the brighter start and were on the attack from the kick off when JP Pietersen was penalised for taking Devin Toner out in the air on the edge of the visitors' 22.

Lambie had a chance to open the scoring as early as the fifth minute, however, after Ireland were penalised for an indiscretion at a ruck, but his shot at goal was wide of the target.

Ireland held the upper hand for the next five minutes and although they kept play mostly amongst the forwards they were eventually rewarded when striking out wide with their backs, with Jared Payne crossing for the opening try in the 11th minute when he gathered a Luke Marshall grubber kick behind the Boks' try line.

Jackson added the extras and to add insult to injury for the hosts, Lood de Jager was yellow carded for pulling down a maul in the build-up, after Raynal had penalised the Boks repeatedly for similar offences earlier on.

The Boks eventually opened their account via a Lambie penalty in the 15th minute but Jackson restored parity four minutes later with a three-pointer of his own, from the kicking tee.

Ireland were in the ascendancy, but Stander's red card brought the home side back into the match.  Elton Jantjies came on to replace Lambie, who left the field on a stretcher, and shortly after the Lions fly-half's introduction he slotted his side's second penalty.

The home side were soon camped inside their opponents' half for large periods, but Ireland did well to keep them at bay although it was only a matter of time before the Boks would make their numerical advantage count.

And Jantjies would play a leading role in doing just that, setting up Lwazi Mvovo for the Boks' opening try in the 31st minute with a delightful inside pass to the flyer, who showed a tremendous burst of speed which took him clear of the cover defence before diving over.

Ireland suffered a further setback when they were reduced to 13 men after Henshaw was sent to the sin bin for a high tackle on Jantjies in the build-up.

But despite playing with two extra players, South Africa failed to capitalise and it was Ireland who scored the only points during this period with Jackson landing a drop goal in the 36th minute which meant the sides were deadlocked at 13-13 at half-time.

The visitors continued to dominate and from the restart they were soon inside the Boks' 22.  And after setting up a couple of phases with their forwards, Conor Murray spotted a gap, before burrowing his way over the try-line.

Jackson's conversion meant the visitors were now leading 20-13 and although the next 20 minutes turned into a slugfest, with no points being scored, the situation suited the visitors.

Jackson gave his side a ten-point lead in the 67th minute when he slotted another penalty but from the restart Pieter-Steph du Toit intercepted a pass from the Irish pivot before scoring under the posts.

Jantjies slotted the conversion and with the score at 20-23, the Boks were back in the match, although time was running out on the clock.  They upped the ante on attack but continued to make mistakes and in the 74th minute Jackson added another penalty after Frans Malherbe entered a ruck from the side.

The closing minutes was a frantic affair as the hosts launched several attacks and just before full-time JP Pietersen had a chance to score what could potentially have been the winning try, but he was bundled into touch by three defenders, as Ireland made history.

Man of the Match:  Ireland's entire team deserve credit for this result but the performance of captain Rory Best at the coalface of their forward effort should not be underestimated.  The hooker led from the front and his decison-making, especially after Stander's sending off, helped pave the way to a memorable and historical Irish victory.

Moment of the Match:  One can't look past Stander's red card in the 23rd minute.  But although it meant the visitors were reduced to 14 men for most of the match it had the reverse effect on his team-mates who played like men possessed for the rest of the match to secure a memorable result.

Villain of the Match:  When scratching the surface, Robbie Henshaw deserves this dubious honour for his ill-timed yellow card, especially considering the fact that his side were already down to 14 men.

The scorers:

For South Africa:
Tries:  Mvovo, Du Toit
Cons:  Jantjies 2
Pens:  Lambie, Jantjies
Yellow Card:  De Jager

For Ireland:
Tries:  Payne, Murray
Cons:  Jackson 2
Pens:  Jackson 3
Drop Goal:  Jackson
Yellow Card:  Henshaw
Red Card:  Stander

South Africa:  15 Willie le Roux, 14 JP Pietersen, 13 Lionel Mapoe, 12 Damian de Allende, 11 Lwazi Mvovo, 10 Pat Lambie, 9 Faf de Klerk, 8 Duane Vermeulen, 7 Siya Kolisi, 6 Francois Louw, 5 Lood de Jager, 4 Eben Etzebeth, 3 Frans Malherbe, 2 Adriaan Strauss (c), 1 Beast Mtawarira.
Replacements:  16 Bongi Mbonambi, 17 Trevor Nyakane, 18 Julian Redelinghuys, 19 Pieter-Steph du Toit, 20 Warren Whiteley, 21 Rudy Paige, 22 Elton Jantjies, 23 Jesse Kriel.

Ireland:  15 Jared Payne, 14 Andrew Trimble, 13 Robbie Henshaw, 12 Luke Marshall, 11 Keith Earls, 10 Paddy Jackson, 9 Conor Murray, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 Jordi Murphy, 6 CJ Stander, 5 Devin Toner, 4 Iain Henderson, 3 Mike Ross, Rory Best (c), 1 Jack McGrath.
Replacements:  16 Sean Cronin, 17 Finlay Bealham, 18 Tadgh Furlong, 19 Ultan Dillane, 20 Rhys Ruddock, 21 Kieran Marmion, 22 Ian Madigan, 23 Craig Gilroy.

Referee:  Mathieu Raynal (France)
Assistant Referees:  Angus Gardner (Australia), Matthew Carley (England)

Samoa and Georgia held to draw

Samoa and Georgia couldn't be separated after 80 minutes at Apia Park on Saturday, with both sides forced to settle for a 19-19 draw.

Three penalties apiece from Samoan fly-half Patrick Fa'apale and Georgia full-back Merab Kviriashvili meant that both sides were tied up at 9-9 by half-time.

Samoa though were the first side to break the try line, veteran winger and Samoa captain David Lemi crashing over and Fa'apale converting to make it 16-9.

Credit to Georgia however for responding, the power of their rolling maul allowing them to hit back with their first try as flanker Giorgi Tkhilaishvili was credited with the score, Kvirikashvili converting to level the scores.

Fa'apale and Kvirikashvili traded further kicks to make it 19-19 but a late drop goal chance Lasha Khmaladze went wide, leaving the two sides level on points.

The scorers:

For Samoa:
Try:  Lemi
Con:  Fa'apale
Pens:  Fa'apale 4

For Georgia:
Try:  Tkhilaishvili
Con:  Kvirikashvili
Pens:  Kvirikashvili 4

Samoa:  15 Albert Nikoro, 14 Faatoina Autagavaia, 13 Reynold Lee Lo, 12 Faialaga Afamasaga, 11 David Lemi (c), 10 Patrick Fa'apale, 9 Dwayne Polataivao, 8 Jeff Lepa, 7 TJ Ioane, 6 Alafoti Faosiliva, 5 Teofilo Paulo, 4 Faatiga Lemalu, 3 James Johnston, 2 Motu Matuu, 1 Sam Aiono
Replacements:  16 Seilala Lam, 17 Nuuuli Lene, 18 Jake Grey, 19 Talaga Alofipo, 20 Oneone Faafou, 21 Danny Tusitala, 22 D'Angelo Leuila, 23 Malu Falaniko

Georgia:  15 Merab Kviriashvili, 14 Giorgi Pruidze, 13 David Kacharava, 12 Merab Sharikadze, 11 Sandro Todua, 10 Lasha Khmaladze, 9 Giorgi Begadze, 8 Lasha Lomidze, 7 Giorgi Tkhilaishvili, 6 Shalva Sutiashvili (c), 5 Giorgi Nemsadze, 4 Giorgi Chkhaidze, 3 Irakli Mirtskhulava, 2 Jaba Bregvadze, 1 Karlen Asieshvili
Replacements:  16 Shalva Mamukashvili, 17 Zurab Zhvania, 18 Anton Peikrishvili, 19 Nodar Cheishvili, 20 Saba Shubitidze, 21 Vazha Khutsishvili, 22 Lasha Malaghuradze, 23 Tamaz Mchedlidze

Referee:  Ben O'Keeffe (New Zealand)
Assistant referees:  Andrew Lees (Australia), James Leckie (Australia)

Brave Wales downed by New Zealand

New Zealand recovered from being 15-18 down at the break to win 39-21 in their opening Test against Wales in Auckland on Saturday.

It was almost a shock result in the first international of this series as the All Blacks continued their run of struggling in their June opener.

But in the end they clicked in spells in the second half with tries from Waisake Naholo, Kieran Read and Nathan Harris adding to first-half efforts from Julian Savea and Naholo again.  Aaron Cruden kicked 14 points on the night.

In reply Wales' scorers were Taulupe Faletau and Rhys Webb to go with Dan Biggar's 11 points in an improved effort after losing to England.

It was an open and entertaining first half in Auckland with line breaks aplenty leading to the likes of Liam Williams and Naholo starring.

New Zealand almost took the lead inside two minutes when centurion Alun Wyn Jones was penalised for hands in a ruck, but Cruden struck the upright from distance before Wales held off the ensuing attack.  Cruden though made no mistake three minutes later to put his side in front.

Williams then came to the party as he gave Savea the slip down the right wing before recycled ball to the left saw the basics done well as slick passing shifted the ball out to Faletau, who dived over.  Biggar was wide with the conversion but Welsh fans were smiling at 3-5.

Cue a response from New Zealand, and how.  Wales wing Hallam Amos gave himself some on-the-job training when he showed Naholo too much room down the right wing and the All Black duly took it, racing to the 22.  Cruden would then smartly kick cross-field to Savea who made it 8-5.

They weren't done as then full-back Ben Smith showed his class, claiming Biggar's high kick on his 22 before setting off to the Welsh ten-metre line and finding Naholo on his right.  The Highlanders combination worked and with Naholo racing over, suddenly New Zealand were 15-5 up.

Credit to Wales though as after Biggar had made it 15-8 and then 15-11 with penalties, it was Williams again causing havoc in New Zealand's defence.  He split through, this time on halfway, and had Webb on his shoulder for the try as they went into the break in front.  Remarkably this was the first time a nation had led against the All Blacks at half-time at Eden Park since the Wallabies way back in 2009.

The big question was whether the Welsh could maintain their lead in the second-half and Steve Hansen was clearly not happy with his side, taking off Savea for Beauden Barrett in the 42nd minute.  That meant Ben Smith moved to the right wing as Barrett slotted in at full-back.

It didn't take long for New Zealand to move level as Cruden kicked a penalty on 48 minutes, but Wales were back ahead soon after when Webb was the recipient of a late hit.  Biggar made no mistake this time after an earlier miss as confidence continued to grow in the Welsh team.

Defence not attack was always going to be critical under the expected All Black onslaught and with front row pair Gethin Jenkins and Ken Owens leading by example, Wales managed to keep New Zealand at bay on the hour mark.  One wondered, however, how long the wall would stand.

Not that long was the answer, as on 63 minutes the hosts turned down a kickable penalty with scrum-half Aaron Smith inviting wing Naholo to barge his way over.  Cruden added the simple extras as New Zealand hit the front at 25-21.  Wales would now need to find a moment of magic.

But it was the All Blacks who put the seal on the come-from-behind victory as replacement lock Patrick Tuipulotu set up Read under the posts on 68 minutes to make it 32-21 with Cruden's successful conversion.

That crucially put Wales two scores behind and it could have been worse but for Wayne Barnes adjudging Cruden's pass to TJ Perenara to be forward.  The television match official argued otherwise, as did the vast majority, but Barnes decided to go with himself.

Wales, still fighting, could have set up a grandstand finish but it was their turn to be denied as Faletau was in front of the kicker before he raced over, with New Zealand then going up the other end to seal the result when Harris finished off wide out ahead of Cruden coolly slotting the extras.

Man of the match:  A few men on both sides put their hand up for this award as Liam Williams and Taulupe Faletau stood out for Wales while Waisake Naholo and Kieran Read were impressive in black.  But we go for Ben Smith, who again showed his importance to this New Zealand side.

Moment of the match:  When the Welsh scored through Taulupe Faletau in the tenth minute, it set the tone for a brilliant game to start this June series.

Villain of the match:  We don't like to pick up on an error in such an entertaining game but Wayne Barnes calling Aaron Cruden's pass to TJ Perenara forward was one for the archives.  Despite several replays and advice from elsewhere Barnes stood by his decision.  An amazing call.

The scorers:

For New Zealand:
Tries:  Savea, Naholo 2, Read, Harris
Cons:  Cruden 4
Pens:  Cruden 2

For Wales:
Tries:  Faletau, Webb
Con:  Biggar
Pens:  Biggar 3

New Zealand:  15 Ben Smith, 14 Waisake Naholo, 13 Malakai Fekitoa, 12 Ryan Crotty, 11 Julian Savea, 10 Aaron Cruden, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read (c), 7 Sam Cane, 6 Jerome Kaino, 5 Brodie Retallick, 4 Luke Romano, 3 Owen Franks, 2 Dane Coles, 1 Joe Moody
Replacements:  16 Nathan Harris, 17 Wyatt Crockett, 18 Charlie Faumuina, 19 Patrick Tuipulotu, 20 Ardie Savea, 21 TJ Perenara, 22 Beauden Barrett, 23 Seta Tamanivalu

Wales:  15 Liam Williams, 14 George North, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 Hallam Amos, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Rhys Webb, 8 Taulupe Faletau, 7 Sam Warburton (c), 6 Ross Moriarty, 5 Alun Wyn Jones, 4 Bradley Davies, 3 Samson Lee, 2 Ken Owens, 1 Gethin Jenkins
Replacements:  16 Scott Baldwin, 17 Rob Evans, 18 Tomas Francis, 19 Jake Ball, 20 Ellis Jenkins, 21 Gareth Davies, 22 Gareth Anscombe, 23 Scott Williams

Referee:  Wayne Barnes (England)
Assistant Referees:  Jaco Peyper (South Africa), Will Houston (Australia)

Friday, 10 June 2016

England Saxons hold off South Africa 'A'

England Saxons outscored South Africa 'A' four tries to three to hang on for a 32-24 win in Bloemfontein on Friday.

The Saxons looked primed to give South Africa 'A' a thrashing based off their clinical first half, leading 22-3 at the break.

Nick Tompkins, Mike Haley, Matt Kvesic and Alec Hepburn were all excellent for the visitors as they punished the South Africans on turnover ball.  Their handling and offloading also deserves plenty of credit once they settled into the game.

By contrast South Africa 'A' felt completely disjointed.  Time and again the carelessly tried to attack from the wrong areas of the pitch and when the ball consequently went loose, they were punished.

A better second half from the hosts turned a one-sided affair into an actual contest, tries from Francois Brummer, Piet Van Zyl and Sikhumbuzo Notshe trimming England's lead to just a point with the clock running out.

Ollie Devoto's try though sealed the win for England in the final few minutes.  The two sides will meet again in George next Friday.

Several scrums within the opening ten minutes highlighted the number of handling errors coughed up by both sides as they tried to build some familiarity between combinations.

England's forwards wasted no time in getting acquainted with Garth April, the rising star with the Sharks taking some heavy tackles early on.  However he stepped up to land a long-range penalty attempt off the kicking tee to put the hosts ahead 3-0.

Half breaks for Nic Groom and Nizaam Carr for South Africa 'A' went to waste but they remained well in control of possession and territory as England's penalty and tackle counts continued to rise.

The first try though went to the Saxons.  Tompkins and Danny Cipriani tore up the the ground after an interception from the outside centre, made by Semesa Rokoduguni's pressure in defence, and recycling from the ruck Dan Robson's flat pass to Alex Lewington gave England the space for prop Hepburn to finish.  Cipriani converted to make it 7-3.

Turning down a kickable penalty after the Saxons went offside, Scarra Ntubeni then overthrew at the lineout to throw away another big chance.

England were less frivolous, Francois Venter tackling a man without the ball for Cipriani to knock over a penalty and make the score 10-3.

Robson came so close to following those points up with a wonder try, created by Cipriani's flat pass to Rokoduguni to make the break, but in the process of chasing his own kick ahead he appeared to pull up.

There was no catching Rokoduguni a few minutes later though, released down the outside after England attacked on turnover ball, won by Kvesic, before his sublime chip and chase left Leolin Zas trailing behind.

Just as South Africa 'A' thought they were putting something together through Travis Ismaiel they were ripped open again, Robson showing remarkable patience and footwork to dance rings around Venter for England's third try.  Cipriani couldn't convert, but England held a commanding lead at 22-3.

Robson, already struggling, then limped off to be replaced by Micky Young, but England barely seemed to lose a step.  With their back row dominating the breakdown and South Africa 'A' showing little in attack, the visitors comfortably led at half-time.

Seeking a spark Johan Ackermann hauled off April and the entire SA 'A' front row, minutes before the hosts grabbed their first try after returning to the corner before Brummer crashed over, which he converted to make it 10-22.

Cipriani responded with a second penalty to stretch the gap on the scoreboard to 15 points.

Twice the hosts turned down kickable penalties and twice they came up with nothing, allowing England's tiring pack to move away from their own 22 in the process.

South Africa 'A', steadily improving in the second half, were soon over again through replacement scrum-half Van Zyl as he sniped around the edge of the ruck, Brummer's extra two points making it then 17-25.

However getting on top of replacement loosehead Ross Harrison the South African scrum began to play more of a role.

The hosts also had far more steam, finishing off a brilliant counter-attack from well within their own 22 through the excellent Notshe, who started it all with a chip and chase deep in his half and had the pace to finish it off after the final pass from Carr.

Brummer's conversion meant England's 19-point advantage from half-time had been trimmed to just one, and based off the momentum of the second half the game looked like the South Africans' for the taking.

England though came through, Cipriani's low kick and the flick on from Christian Wade setting up an offload off the ground for Devoto to score their fourth try, and the winner, which Cipriani converted to make it 32-24.

South Africa 'A' did their best to fashion a consolation try, but England once more turned it over to secure a deserved win.

The scorers:

For South Africa ‘A’:
Tries:  Brummer, Van Zyl, Notshe
Cons:  Brummer 3
Pen:  April

For England Saxons:
Tries:  Hepburn, Rokoduguni, Robson, Devoto
Cons:  Cipriani 3
Pens:  Cipriani 2

South Africa ‘A’:  15 Leolin Zas, 14 Travis Ismaiel, 13 Francois Venter, 12 Howard Mnisi, 11 Courtnall Skosan, 10 Garth April, 9 Nic Groom, 8 Nizaam Carr, 7 Oupa Mohoje (c), 6 Sikhumbuzo Notshe, 5 Stephan Lewies, 4 JD Schickerling, 3 Vincent Koch, 2 Scarra Ntubeni, 1 Thomas du Toit
Replacements:  16 Malcolm Marx, 17 Lizo Gqoboka, 18 Coenie Oosthuizen, 19 RG Snyman, 20 Jean-Luc du Preez, 21 Piet van Zyl, 22 Francois Brummer, 23 Lukhanyo Am

England Saxons:  15 Mike Haley, 14 Semesa Rokoduguni, 13 Nick Tompkins, 12 Ollie Devoto, 11 Alex Lewington, 10 Danny Cipriani, 9 Dan Robson, 8 Sam Jones, 7 Matt Kvesic, 6 Don Armand, 5 Charlie Ewels, 4 Dave Attwood (c), 3 Kieran Brookes, 2 Tommy Taylor, 1 Alec Hepburn
Replacements:  16 George McGuigan, 17 Ross Harrison, 18 Jake Cooper-Woolley, 19 Mitch Lees, 20 Dave Ewers, 21 Micky Young, 22 Sam James, 23 Christian Wade

Referee:  Rasta Rasivhenge (South Africa)
Assistant Referees:  Lourens van der Merwe (South Africa), Jaco Kotze (South Africa)
TMO:  Marius Jonker (South Africa)

Sunday, 29 May 2016

Five-try England put Wales away

England saw off Wales at Twickenham by scoring five tries in a 27-13 win on Sunday ahead of both sides' respective tours to Australia and New Zealand.

Rob Evans' try and two penalties from Dan Biggar handed Wales a 13-10 half-time advantage, despite England crossing twice through Luther Burrell and Anthony Watson.

But the match turned through two quick tries by Ben Youngs and Jack Clifford, the latter to the dismay of Wales after a possible knock-on was dismissed by the TMO, before Marland Yarde's score gave England a sizeable lead which they never surrendered.

Concern was equally shared between both camps – Wales watching captain for the day Dan Lydiate go off in the first half with an injury, while George Ford stumbled his way through an unconvincing afternoon with missed kicks off the tee and poor execution.  He finished with one from seven attempts.

Eddie Jones though will understandably be the happier coach heading to Australasia, especially after Joe Launchbury, the Man of the Match, and Clifford impressed, along with having watched his side finish with five tries.

Wales however on the basis of this outing look set for a torrid time in New Zealand.

Defence coach Shaun Edwards will have been seething at the sight of England getting behind the defensive line time and again and after that impressive opening they never settled into a groove.  They also were scoreless in the second half.

Even stoking up the fire of the Anglo-Welsh rivalry wasn't enough for this Test match to really be taken seriously.  For that to happen both team sheets would need to be as close to first-choice as possible.

But with no Mako Vunipola, Maro Itoje, George Kruis, Chris Robshaw, Billy Vunipola, Owen Farrell or Jack Nowell for England – all starters when the Grand Slam was won in Paris – and no Sam Warburton, Jonathan Davies or Luke Charteris for Wales, something was amiss.  Biggar opting to kick for the corner rather than taking three points after 13 minutes was a good example.

Patience around the fringes from Wales led to the opening try, Evans flopping over off a short pass by Rhys Webb with Dan Biggar converting to put Wales ahead 7-0.

Clear rustiness in England's attack then resulted in Jamie Roberts hacking the ball upfield and Biggar a couple of minutes later adding three more points.

England's response might have been swift had Ford not missed a penalty well inside Welsh territory, keeping the gap at ten points, but after Wales were penalised again less than ten metres from the their line England opted for a maul, sucking in defenders before feeding Burrell to crash up through Biggar's tackle attempt to score.  Ford couldn't convert with a straightforward enough attempt.

Line breaks weren't an issue for either side but with England re-grouping after a Hallam Amos burst Wales butchered an almighty overlap, going instead to the one man on the left who was consequently bundled into touch.

A second penalty from Biggar stretched the gap to 13-5 but it was against the run of play, with England on top in the territory stakes and cutting Wales open only to then lose possession.

A score though was coming, and this time in little space near the touchline Ford and Joseph combined to release Watson, who broke the tackle of Liam Williams and despite losing his footing had the speed to get back up and finish after confirmation from the TMO.

Again, Ford's conversion was wide, bringing his total of missed points for the day to seven.

Wales' time in possession since that first score had been scarce but successive penalties against England presented them with another chance to attack through their rolling maul from five metres out, only for Teimana Harrison to emerge with the ball out the other side, England keeping the gap to 10-13 by half-time.

After an unconvincing first 40 minutes it was Youngs who put England ahead for the first time, scampering his way through the Welsh defence off a lineout for England's third try.

Ford again missed but his nightmare was soon over, a 50-metre break from Clifford seeing the number eight outpace Scott Williams to go over and allowing Ford to convert from right out in front.

Wales were incensed, Biggar confronting referee Marius Mitrea after the TMO review ruled that Dan Cole hadn't knocked on when the ball went loose before Clifford raced away, and awarded the score.

England now led 22-13 and after Yarde rounded Amos to finish another impressive English attack, the contest looked settled.

Handed an opportunity to increase the gap on the scoreboard from a penalty Ford missed again, his total of missed points rising to 14, but it had no impact on the result.

A surprisingly big win then for England, with new caps handed out to Harrison, Tommy Taylor, Ellis Genge and Ollie Devoto in front of a crowd of over 80,000.

The scorers:

For England:
Tries:  Burrell, Watson, Youngs, Clifford, Yarde
Con:  Ford

For Wales:
Try:  Evans
Con:  Biggar
Pen:  Biggar 2

England:  15 Mike Brown, 14 Anthony Watson, 13 Jonathan Joseph, 12 Luther Burrell, 11 Marland Yarde, 10 George Ford, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Jack Clifford, 7 James Haskell, 6 Teimana Harrison, 5 Courtney Lawes, 4 Joe Launchbury, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Dylan Hartley (c), 1 Matt Mullan
Replacements:  16 Tommy Taylor, 17 Ellis Genge, 18 Paul Hill, 19 Dave Attwood, 20 Matt Kvesic, 21 Danny Care, 22 Ollie Devoto, 23 Elliot Daly

Wales:  15 Liam Williams, 14 George North, 13 Scott Williams, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 Hallam Amos, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Rhys Webb, 8 Taulupe Faletau, 7 Dan Lydiate (c), 6 Ross Moriarty, 5 Alun Wyn Jones, 4 Jake Ball, 3 Samson Lee, 2 Scott Baldwin, Rob Evans
Replacements:  16 Kristian Dacey, 17 Gethin Jenkins, 18 Rhodri Jones, 19 Josh Turnbull, 20 James King, 21 Lloyd Williams, 22 Rhys Priestland, 23 Gareth Anscombe

Referee:  Marius Mitrea (Italy)
Assistant Referees:  John Lacey (Ireland), George Clancy (Ireland)
TMO:  Simon McDowell (Ireland)

Saturday, 19 March 2016

Grand Slam glory for England

England ended a 13-year wait for a Grand Slam by coming out on top of their battle with France in Paris, winning 31-21.

Outscoring their hosts by three tries to none, England held their nerve when it has let them down so often in the past.  The best side in this year's Six Nations now have a Grand Slam to their name.

France were kept in the contest both by their willingness to play, typified by Virimi Vakatawa and Scott Spedding, and the metronomic boot of Maxime Machenaud who scored all of their 21 points.

For the first time in the Eddie Jones era England were made to sweat for a full 80 minutes, and as they have been throughout the tournament, they were good — in fact very good — but never quite excellent.

The missed tackles will have irritated defence coach Paul Gustard, while their penalty count is bound to have rattled Jones as it has all tournament.

But those are the negatives.  England were more clinical.  They hounded France at the lineout with steals from Maro Itoje and George Kruis, with both locks outstanding.  And now they have won five games out of five.

France produced their best half of the tournament in the first 40 minutes but still went in trailing, not capitalising on the holes they found in the English defence as Vakatawa's moments of promise ended without points.

Two quick penalties against Anthony Watson and Itoje set Machenaud up to knock over the first points, as France took a 3-0 lead.

Farrell responded instantly after Watson was taken around the neck from the restart, knocking over his penalty off the post.

France's rolling maul looked effective, just like the flying Vakatawa as he broke a tackle from Jack Nowell on an early charge.

Les Bleus were hungry, a sharp break and pass from Spedding to Vakatawa deserving more than a ball into touch.  Chances such as those had to be taken.

Danny Care was less wasteful.  Spotting the gap around the side of the ruck he always had too much speed for the chasing Jefferson Poirot, fending him off to sprint away for the game's first try.

The loss of François Trinh-Duc rubbed salt in the wound after Care's score, but first blood at the scrum went France's way after Mako Vunipola dropped his bind.  Machenaud obliged, making it 6-10.

With their use of Vakatawa and Spedding from deep France were finding space and making real ground in their own half, and yet again, England were the next try scorers.

This time it was Dan Cole, quite literally rolling his way over the line after not being held as England finished a stint in France's 22 which all started from a cross-field kick by George Ford to Watson.

France and their supporters beseeched referee Nigel Owens to chalk it off for obstruction on Guilhem Guirado, although he had no interest even with the input of the TMO.  A longer look may have produced another outcome, as Farrell's conversion meant England led 6-17.

Guirado responded by winning a kickable penalty at the breakdown for Machenaud to knock over, closing the gap to eight, and another Machenaud penalty, this time against Chris Robshaw, made that 12-17 having denied England down the other end.

England could have had the final say of the half but Farrell pushed a penalty wide to the left of the posts, keeping England ahead by five after missing 15 tackles in the first half.

Forced to turn to their scramble defence England did just enough to hold France out after yet another burst from Vakatawa, as Machenaud moved to five from five with another penalty, but France immediately conceded after giving Farrell a soft penalty to make it 15-20.

But again France reeled the visitors back in, Machenaud with his sixth penalty, as the contest grew chaotic with turnovers on each side.

Momentum for England had been rare when it came to their ball carrying until Vunipola at last began to motor from the back of a scrum.  The damage done from his burst freed up Ben Youngs, a replacement for Care, to scamper ahead, before his delicate grubber kick to the wing was met by Watson who held off Fofana to finish.

Machenaud though wouldn't let England get away, knocking over penalty number seven.

A long stoppage for treatment to Dylan Hartley gave both sides pause for thought with only 12 minutes remaining, England forced to try and finish the job without their captain with their lineout having run at 100 percent.

With a high tackle from Paul Jedrasiak on Youngs, Farrell had a chance to stretch England's lead out to seven again from a long way out, landing it superbly to make it 21-28.

Xavier Chiocci's yellow card and Farrell's subsequent penalty then put the stamp on the win England have craved for so long.

England are not just Six Nations champions, but Grand Slam winners too.  Deserved?  Absolutely.

Man of the Match:  So often France looked likely to score, and then George Kruis would pop up with a crucial steal.  He has come of age in this tournament.

Moment of the Match:  Owen Farrell's kicking wasn't perfect on the night but his long-range strike to make it 28-21 was absolutely vital.

Villain of the Match:  Nothing nasty to report.

The scorers:

For France:
Pens:  Machenaud 7
Yellow Card:  Chiocci

For England:
Tries:  Care, Cole, Watson
Cons:  Farrell 2
Pens:  Farrell 4

France:  15 Scott Spedding, 14 Wesley Fofana, 13 Gaël Fickou, 12 Maxime Mermoz, 11 Virimi Vakatawa, 10 François Trinh-Duc, 9 Maxime Machenaud, 8 Loann Goujon, 7 Bernard le Roux, 6 Damien Chouly, 5 Yoann Maestri, 4 Alexandre Flanquart, 3 Rabah Slimani, 2 Guilhem Guirado (c), 1 Jefferson Poirot
Replacements:  16 Camille Chat, 17 Uini Atonio, 18 Xavier Chiocci, 19 Paul Jedrasiak, 20 Wenceslas Lauret, 21 Sébastien Bézy, 22 Jules Plisson, Maxime Médard

England:  15 Mike Brown, 14 Anthony Watson, 13 Jonathan Joseph, 12 Owen Farrell, 11 Jack Nowell, 10 George Ford, 9 Danny Care, 8 Billy Vunipola, 7 James Haskell, 6 Chris Robshaw, 5 George Kruis, 4 Maro Itoje, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Dylan Hartley (c), 1 Mako Vunipola
Replacements:  16 Luke Cowan-Dickie, 17 Joe Marler, 18 Kieran Brookes, 19 Joe Launchbury, 20 Jack Clifford, 21 Ben Youngs, 22 Manu Tuilagi, 23 Elliot Daly

Referee:  Nigel Owens (Wales)
Assistant Referees:  John Lacey (Ireland), Leighton Hodges (Wales)
TMO:  Ben Skeen (New Zealand)

Ireland end Six Nations on a high

Ireland ended the 2016 Six Nations with a second win after overcoming Scotland in Dublin with a 35-25 victory.

Four tries from last year's champions built upon 15 points from the boot of Jonathan Sexton as Ireland ensured a tough tournament would end on a high.

A battle for mid-table dominance had an extra edge with Scotland eyeing up three straight Six Nations wins, but aside from a brief period after Stuart Hogg's special try they were always chasing the scoreboard.

Their frustrations too with the officating by the end began to boil over in a spiky finish.

Following on from their thrashing of Italy the week before Ireland were full of running and Sexton, off the back of a fine tournament, shone with the ball in hand or on his boot, but drew heavy criticism for appealing for a card after he was flipped on his back by Alex Dunbar, and also finished his Six Nations in the sin-bin.

Scotland were full of energy and have certainly made strides in this Six Nations, but yellow cards for John Barclay and Dunbar in each half proved incredibly costly on each occasion as their game management left something to be desired.

Having 81 percent possession in the first half only produced an eight-point advantage for Ireland by the break, with Scotland having been penalised incessantly at the breakdown by referee Pascal Gauzère.

It was Sexton's boot after Scotland strayed offside which opened the scoring, although he oddly missed a straightforward effort minutes later.

That first penalty however moved him into second in Ireland's all-time points scoring rankings ahead of David Humphreys, with only Ronan O'Gara ahead of him.

Sexton made no mistake with his third kick after Scotland were penalised for a high tackle, all within the first 12 minutes, before Laidlaw finally put Scotland on the board at 6-3.  Sexton struck once more to restore the six-point gap before Ireland were stunned by a magical solo score from Hogg.

Arguably the premier full-back in this Six Nations, Hogg spotted a gap between Rory Best and Mike Ross before cantering through it into space and hitting the accelerator to score a magnificent solo try.

Laidlaw's conversion put Scotland ahead for the first time at 10-9 but Scotland paid for their earlier indiscipline with the loss of Barclay, on his 50th cap, to the sin-bin for coming in at the side.

In Barclay's absence Ireland pummelled the Scottish defensive line, eventually breaking it, through CJ Stander for his second Test try in a week, and Ireland were over again almost instantly.

Sexton's clever kick, off his left foot, found a gap in the defence and a calamitous mix-up from the Scottish defence allowed Keith Earls, also celebrating his half century, to gratefully scoop up and score.

Sexton couldn't convert and Scotland captain Laidlaw had the final say of the half with a penalty to make it 21-13.

Turning to their maul after the break Ireland notched up try number four, Conor Murray with a trademark snipe from close range catching out the tired Scottish defence as Ireland built an imposing 28-13 lead.

A response from the visitors was needed fast and it came through Richie Gray, the towering lock hitting the right line as he found a sizeable gap in Ireland's defence after Scotland had sucked in the tacklers to one corner, Laidlaw converting to close the gap to eight.

Scotland noticeably tried to lift the tempo but they were hamstrung by Dunbar's daft moment of indiscipline flipping Sexton over the horizontal, for which he saw yellow.

Ireland went to the corner from the resulting penalty and eventually Devin Toner crashed over for try number four before a scrap off the ball afterwards.

Scotland's frustrating afternoon was starting to spill over but a persistent stint in Ireland's 22, with Sexton yellow carded for coming in at the side, ended eventually with a try for Dunbar.

It was too late though for a fightback, Ireland rounding out a chippy contest with another victory as each side looks forward for better fortunes on their overseas tours later this year.

Man of the Match:  Jamie Heaslip again impressed but his back-row colleague CJ Stander will be waking up pretty sore on Sunday after a remarkable number of carries.  What a find he has been for Joe Schmidt.

Moment of the Match:  One of the tournament's top tries from Stuart Hogg, who once again showed his class with a special break to put his side ahead in the first half.

Villain of the Match:  Really poor from Alex Dunbar flipping Jonathan Sexton onto his back at the ruck at a pivotal moment, for which he was yellow carded, although the reaction from Sexton was also poor.

The scorers:

For Ireland:
Tries:  Stander, Earls, Murray, Toner
Cons:  Sexton 3
Pens:  Sexton 3
Yellow Card:  Sexton

For Scotland:
Tries:  Hogg, Gray, Dunbar
Cons:  Laidlaw 2
Pens:  Laidlaw 2
Yellow Card:  Barclay

Ireland:  15 Simon Zebo, 14 Andrew Trimble, 13 Jared Payne, 12 Robbie Henshaw, 11 Keith Earls, 10 Jonathan Sexton, 9 Conor Murray, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 Tommy O'Donnell, 6 CJ Stander, 5 Devin Toner, 4 Donnacha Ryan, 3 Mike Ross, 2 Rory Best (c), 1 Jack McGrath
Replacements:  16 Richardt Strauss, 17 Cian Healy, 18 Nathan White, 19 Ultan Dillane, 20 Rhys Ruddock, 21 Eoin Reddan, 22 Ian Madigan, 23 Fergus McFadden

Scotland:  15 Stuart Hogg, 14 Tommy Seymour, 13 Duncan Taylor, 12 Alex Dunbar, 11 Tim Visser, 10 Duncan Weir, 9 Greig Laidlaw (c), 8 Ryan Wilson, 7 John Hardie, 6 John Barclay, 5 Tim Swinson, 4 Richie Gray, 3 Willem Nel, 2 Ross Ford, 1 Alasdair Dickinson
Replacements:  16 Stuart McInally, 17 Rory Sutherland, 18 Moray Low, 19 Rob Harley, 20 Josh Strauss, 21 Henry Pyrgos, 22 Pete Horne, 23 Sean Lamont

Referee:  Pascal Gauzère (France)
Assistant referees:  Craig Joubert (South Africa), Alexandre Ruiz (France)

TMO:  Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)

Nine-try Wales dispatch Italy

Wales made sure of second place in the Six Nations with a high-scoring demolition of Italy, winning 67-14 in Cardiff.

Still dissecting their oddly subdued first 50 minutes at Twickenham and trying to put a week spilling over with off-field distractions behind them, Wales started fast and never looked back in an open game where they offloaded perhaps more than throughout all of the four previous games in this year's Six Nations.

Italy, hampered by injuries, lacked the discipline and consistency to keep Wales at bay on a long afternoon where they rarely controlled possession and were outscored nine tries to two.

Jacques Brunel's last game in charge was a grim one.  His counterpart Warren Gatland meanwhile will have taken note of the performances of a returning Rhys Webb and early replacement Ross Moriarty as he begins to plan for Wales' tour to New Zealand later this year.

His side were never troubled, despite the absence of key leaders in Alun Wyn Jones and regular captain Sam Warburton.

For a contest with nothing riding on it — Wales unable to win the title, Italy unable to avoid the Wooden Spoon — this certainly wasn't dull.

Wales should never have had their first try allowed given their backs were offside ahead of the kick through by Dan Biggar, leading to a lineout from which Rhys Webb sniped over from close range to close the circle on his own personal nightmare.

It was against Italy on the same pitch that Webb suffered the injury which ruled him out of the Rugby World Cup, and despite Gareth Davies impressing his return is certainly welcome.

The visitors tried to fire back from a kick to the corner only to fail with their execution, Wales instead marching back up the field and adding three points through Biggar's boot.

Italy were labouring under Welsh pressure on their defence and set-piece, eventually paying the price when promising scrum-half Guglielmo Palazzani was sin-binned.  Rather than turn the screw, Wales surprisingly opted to kick three more points through Biggar.

Through a combination of Wales' failure to execute and some impressive defence Italy held out with Palazzani off the field, only for Wales to strike immediately on his return.

A one-two from Dan Biggar and Jamie Roberts, after Davide Giazzon's missed tackle put Biggar through a gap, allowed the fly-half to run under the posts for his first Test try, adding the conversion, before a length-of-the-field move starting in Wales' 22 produced the best try so far as Jonathan Davies finished off a sweeping passage of play with Wales putting the ball through the hands.

Biggar's conversion made it 27-0, and it should have been more, while injuries for Italy to Mattia Bellini and Andrea Pratichetti compounded a horrible first half for the Azzurri.

Patient build-up in Italy's 22 then ended with a try for Roberts out wide, from a nice offload by George North, for a simple finish.

North went from provider to scorer not long after, pinning his ears back to tear through a gaping hole in Italy's defence before cutting in superbly to finish by the posts.

Italy at last had something to smile about through a try for Palazzani off the back of his pack's good work with the rolling maul but it was only a small reprieve, with Liam Williams adding to the Welsh tally with try number six.

Gonzalo Garcia, one of Italy's best players in the tournament, added more respectability to the scoreboard with his converted try to make it 46-14, but in truth the next try from Wales was never far away.

Having replaced the injured Justin Tipuric early on Moriarty finished off a driving maul attack for Wales to produce their next score, as Italy looked weary.

A second for Moriaty and final score from Gareth Davies, with the clock red, rounded off a record win for Wales in the Six Nations.  Not enough to make up for last week perhaps, but a fine performance.

Man of the Match:  A world-class finish for his try and George North was the pick of the Wales backs.  His fourth straight try after scoring against Scotland, England and France equalled the record set by Shane Williams.  Immense.

Moment of the Match:  Having ridden out the sin-bin period Italy conceded instantly through Dan Biggar's try to open the floodgates.

Villain of the Match:  Nothing nasty to report.

The scorers:

For Wales:
Tries:  Webb, Biggar, J Davies, Roberts, North, L Williams, Moriaty 2, G Davies
Cons:  Biggar 5, Priestland 3
Pens:  Biggar 2

For Italy:
Tries:  Palazzani, Garcia
Cons:  Haimona 2
Yellow Card:  Palazzani

Wales:  15 Liam Williams, 14 George North, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 Hallam Amos, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Rhys Webb, 8 Taulupe Faletau, 7 Justin Tipuric, 6 Dan Lydiate (c), 5 Luke Charteris, 4 Bradley Davies, 3 Samson Lee, 2 Scott Baldwin, 1 Rob Evans
Replacements:  16 Ken Owens, 17 Gethin Jenkins, 18 Aaron Jarvis, 19 Jake Ball, 20 Ross Moriarty, 21 Gareth Davies, 22 Rhys Priestland, 23 Gareth Anscombe

Italy:  15 David Odiete, 14 Mattia Bellini, 13 Andrea Pratichetti, 12 Gonzalo Garcia, 11 Leonardo Sarto, 10 Tommaso Allan, 9 Guglielmo Palazzani, 8 Sergio Parisse (c), 7 Alessandro Zanni, 6 Francesco Minto, 5 Valerio Bernabo, 4 Quintin Geldenhuys, 3 Martin Castrogiovanni, 2 Davide Giazzon, 1 Andrea Lovotti
Replacements:  16 Oliviero Fabiani, 17 Matteo Zanusso, 18 Dario Chistolini, 19 Jacopo Sarto, 20 Abraham Steyn, 21 Alberto Lucchese, 22 Kelly Haimona, 23 Luke McLean

Referee:  Romain Poite (France)
Assistant Referees:  Wayne Barnes (England), Marius van der Westhuizen (South Africa)
TMO:  Graham Hughes (England)

Sunday, 13 March 2016

England win Six Nations after Scotland beat France

Scotland's 29-18 win over France at Murrayfield means that England have won the 2016 Six Nations with one round to go.

Scotland scored three tries, and secured consecutive Six Nations victories for only the third time in history, with a belligerent triumph over France in Edinburgh.

The visitors were largely beleaguered, errors stifling their attacking play, but crossed early through Guilhelm Guirado, and again when Gaël Fickou scored with the clock red at half-time.

On his 50th cap, skipper Greig Laidlaw kicked 11 points, but it was Stuart Hogg who stole the show.

The full-back bagged a neat try, a sublime assist, and boomed over a long-range penalty with Duncan Taylor and Tim Visser also touching down.

Everywhere you look in the championship, this Scotland team battles desperate statistics.  Victory in Rome arrested one barren run of defeats, a solitary loss short of their all-time record.

This time, having never in the tournament's 133-year tenure lost eight successive home matches, having not beaten France in ten years, and only once in the last 18 meetings, and having failed to win back-to-back Six Nations matches in all but two from 16 attempts, the burden of history remained.

In the opposition camp, for too long have France employed a monotonous bludgeoning approach, perpetuated by players capable of such magnificence.  It's akin to buying a luxury Rolls Royce and driving it like a tractor.

Their opening try though was an exercise in timing and flair, Virimi Vakatawa striding up the touchline into Scotland's 22, finding Wesley Fofana on his inside shoulder, who flipped on to captain Guirado in turn to plunge over.

Finn Russell, the Scots' cherished young pivot, was concussed in the build-up, and as François Trinh-Duc hooked the conversion wide, Russell was replaced by Peter Horne.

It was Horne who was caught offside from a lineout with 10 minutes gone, allowing Trinh-Duc to line up a straightforward shot at goal.  Again, the fly-half pulled his effort wide.

Alexandre's Flanquart's slowing down of the ball allowed Laidlaw to bang over Scotland's first points.

And as Guirado buckled under the Scottish eight's squeeze in the scrummage, the skipper slotted his second to nudge the hosts ahead.

With Russell gone, the playmaking duties fell to Horne and Stuart Hogg, the gifted full-back.

With seven minutes of the first half remaining, the former stepped and jinked his way towards the French posts, offloading to the towering Richie Gray, and from the next phase, Hogg cut sharply inside Fickou to reach the whitewash.

Laidlaw's conversion attempt faded wide, but then came a moment that saw Murrayfield erupt — as much in surprise as euphoria.

From a tap penalty near halfway, Taylor, the Saracens centre, caught France cold, striding dynamically from Vakatawa's grasp and sprinting all the way home down the right touchline.

Referee Glen Jackson consulted his TMO amid suspicions Laidlaw had tugged back a covering defender.  He allowed the try to stand, and this time, the captain was accurate from the tee.

Scotland ought to have carried the precious 18-5 lead they held into the break.  A maddening ruck transgression, though, stifled their impetus and allowed France one final assault in the home 22.

The hulking French forwards laid the platform with a barrage of punishing carries, Fickou capitalising to arc in at the corner, and Maxime Machenaud, kicking instead of the faltering Trinh-Duc, converted.

Hogg restored Scotland's two-score lead with a thunderous penalty from inside his own half seven minutes after the interval.

Machenaud soon cancelled out that strike when Ross Ford entered a ruck at the side, and failed to stay on his feet.

And the French heavy artillery came within inches of a try after Scott Spedding barrelled down the left flank in pursuit of his own kick.  They earned a penalty, kicked for touch, and again assembled the monsters of the pack.  Scotland held firm.  Machenaud was caught, the ball fumbled, and the hosts cleared.

That wayward handling became a feature of the French attack, but Machenaud cut the gap to three points with another penalty as the final quarter beckoned.

Guy Novès turned to the brutes lurking on his bench.  In this French team, perhaps more so than anywhere else, big is beautiful.  On rumbled Uini Atonio and Sébastien Vahaamahina, over 260kg between them.  But it was a game-breaking intervention from Hogg that wedged Scotland firmly in the driver's seat.

With Scotland deep in French territory, the full-back produced a sumptuous volleyball-style tip over his own head, leaving Visser with a clear dash to the corner.

Laidlaw's conversion fell just short, but Vern Cotter's side harried and pestered France in their own 22, eventually grinding out a penalty Laidlaw decisively curled over.

The French behemoths mobilised for a final raid on the Scottish line with time ticking away, but their maul was infiltrated and the ball cocooned.  There ended their hope.

It's been an awfully long time — 37 months, in fact — since Murrayfield has had a Six Nations victory to savour.  At last, the cavernous bowl rocks to the sweet sound of success.

Man of the Match:  Undoubtedly, Stuart Hogg.  With Russell absent, his involvements were timely and precious.

Moment of the Match:  Tim Visser's try propelled Scotland two scores ahead with ten minutes to play.  Overturning that deficit was a task too great for this embattled French outfit.

Villain of the Match:  Nothing nasty to report.

The scorers:

For Scotland:
Tries:  Hogg, Taylor, Visser
Con:  Laidlaw
Pens:  Laidlaw 3, Hogg

For France:
Tries:  Guirado, Fickou
Con:  Machenaud
Pens:  Machenaud 2

Scotland:  15 Stuart Hogg, 14 Tommy Seymour, 13 Duncan Taylor, 12 Alex Dunbar, 11 Tim Visser, 10 Finn Russell, 9 Greig Laidlaw (c), 8 Josh Strauss, 7 John Hardie, 6 John Barclay, 5 Jonny Gray, 4 Richie Gray, 3 Willem Nel, 2 Ross Ford, 1 Alasdair Dickinson
Replacements:  16 Stuart McInally, 17 Rory Sutherland, 18 Moray Low, 19 Tim Swinson, 20 Ryan Wilson, 21 Sam Hidalgo-Clyne, 22 Pete Horne, 23 Sean Lamont

France:  15 Scott Spedding,14 Virimi Vakatawa, 13 Gaël Fickou, 12 Maxime Mermoz, 11 Wesley Fofana, 10 François Trinh-Duc, 9 Maxime Machenaud, 8 Damien Chouly, 7 Yacouba Camara, 6 Wenceslas Lauret, 5 Alexandre Flanquart, 4 Yoann Maestri, 3 Rabah Slimani, 2 Guilhem Guirado (c), 1 Jefferson Poirot
Replacements:  16 Camille Chat, 17 Vincent Pelo, 18 Uini Atonio, 19 Sebastien Vahaamahina, 20 Loann Goujon, 21 Sébastien Bézy, 22 Jules Plisson, Maxime Médard

Referee:  Glen Jackson (New Zealand)
Assistant Referees:  Wayne Barnes (England), Marius Mitrea (Italy)
TMO:  Ben Skeen (New Zealand)

Saturday, 12 March 2016

England on course for Slam after Wales win

England set their sights on winning a first Grand Slam since 2003 next week in Paris after a 25-21 win over Wales at Twickenham.

Billed as revenge for their World Cup humbling, perhaps no victory could make up for that disappointment, but instead England delivered what had all the makings of an impressive win before a late surge from Wales left them clinging on.

Manu Tuilagi's key tackle into touch on George North made sure of a result that England deserved, but nearly let slip.

Wales for the most part were dire — slipping off tackles, penalised incessantly by referee Craig Joubert at the breakdown and generating little through their one-dimensional attack — until they threatened to suckerpunch England all over again with late tries from George North and Taulupe Faletau.  They turned up all too late.

Their first points in the 53rd minute came from an England error through Dan Biggar's chargedown try rather than anything creative and even that effort could only make it 19-7, before England looked to have pulled away thanks to the boot of Owen Farrell who finished with 20 points.

Maro Itoje, named Man of the Match, produced a truly outstanding display, his first half stats alone worthy of honours after multiple turnover and lineout steals to go with his assist for Anthony Watson's try.

Eddie Jones did his best before his debut to quell the hype around the Saracens 21-year-old lock but good luck to him doing so moving forwards, because the secret is out — he is a very special talent.

Wales by contrast were abject early on, appearing lost with little to no energy about them in one of the worst halves of Warren Gatland's tenure during the first 40 minutes when they missed 19 tackles.

England's attack led to those figures but the hosts should have led by more than 16-0 at half-time given the number of chances they created, twice correctly denied by the TMO.

First blood at the scrum after levels of obscene hype throughout the week went the way of Wales, although against Dan Cole rather than the world's most-watched prop in Joe Marler.

Illegally slowing the ball down at the ruck allowed Farrell to put England ahead with a first penalty.  Dictating territory, England's forwards unleashed a set of short-range drives at the Wales line with Cole ultimately ruled to be held up by the TMO.

Forcing a penalty out of the following five-metre scrum allowed Farrell to double England's tally and the centre made no mistake again after Dan Lydiate failed to release Billy Vunipola to make it 9-0.

England's back three — Jack Nowell, Watson and Mike Brown — continued to skip through tackles suggesting a score wasn't far away, but instead it was Itoje, carrying round the corner and freeing up his arms after sucking in the Welsh defenders who released Brown, in turn giving Watson the time and space to get away from Liam Williams for the game's first try.

Farrell's finely struck conversion from out wide allowed England to take into half-time a 16-0 advantage which they more than deserved, with Wales yet to turn up.

A fourth penalty by Farrell maintained his perfect record after the break prior to Wales at last coming to life.

Spending minutes camped in England's 22 proved fruitless until having done all the hard work, Ben Youngs' poor pass combined with a forced kick under pressure from George Ford allowed Biggar to rush up for a chargedown try as he calmly grounded the ball.  Out of nothing, suddenly Wales had a sniff.

Any comeback was going to have to happen without their captain after Sam Warburton was stretchered off following a lengthy stoppage in play.

Moments of indecision from Ford threatened to cost England again before he was replaced by Manu Tuilagi after 60 minutes, to the an almighty roar from the home supporters before from his first carry he won a penalty, Farrell converting to make it 22-7.

A sixth penalty from Farrell gave England an 18-point cushion but they were left to finish the match with 14 men after a yellow card to Dan Cole having conceded a run of penalties in their own 22.

Wales' next immediate chance of a score was wiped out after a penalty against Tomas Francis for making contact with the eyes of Cole, with a citing no doubt to follow, but they crossed not long after through George North to close the gap at 25-14 after clever handling from Jonathan Davies.

Now bursting with energy Wales crossed again through Taulupe Faletau, Priestland converting as the whole of Twickenham tensed fearing another disaster whilst watching the clock.

Instead a tackle into touch by Tuilagi on North settled it, forcing the winger out with Danny Care booting the ball to touch from the resulting lineout.

England now advance to four wins out of four, and having pocketed the Triple Crown and with their eyes on more silverware next Saturday.

Man of the Match:  Coming-of-age Test for Maro Itoje, whose athleticism offers England something different in their pack.

Moment of the Match:  Turning what seemed an unlikely comeback into a very real one, Taulupe Faletau's try set up a nervous finish for the home supporters.

Villian of the Match:  Nothing nasty to report given that at present we don't know whether Tomas Francis' contact with the eyes of Dan Cole was intentional or not.

The scorers:

For England:
Try:  Watson
Con:  Farrell
Pens:  Farrell 6
Yellow Card:  Cole

For Wales:
Tries:  Biggar, North, Faletau
Cons:  Biggar, Priestland 2

England:  15 Mike Brown, 14 Jack Nowell, 13 Jonathan Joseph, 12 Owen Farrell, 11 Anthony Watson, 10 George Ford, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Billy Vunipola, 7 James Haskell, 6 Chris Robshaw, 5 George Kruis, 4 Maro Itoje, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Dylan Hartley (c), 1 Joe Marler
Replacements:  16 Luke Cowan-Dickie, 17 Mako Vunipola, 18 Kieran Brookes, 19 Joe Launchbury, 20 Jack Clifford, 21 Danny Care, 22 Manu Tuilagi, 23 Elliot Daly

Wales:  15 Liam Williams, 14 Alex Cuthbert, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 George North, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Gareth Davies, 8 Taulupe Faletau, 7 Sam Warburton (c), 6 Dan Lydiate, 5 Alun Wyn Jones, 4 Bradley Davies, 3 Samson Lee, 2 Scott Baldwin, 1 Rob Evans
Replacements:  16 Ken Owens, 17 Paul James, 18 Tomas Francis, 19 Luke Charteris, 20 Justin Tipuric, 21 Rhys Webb, 22 Rhys Priestland, 23 Gareth Anscombe

Referee:  Craig Joubert (South Africa)
Assistant Referees:  Jérôme Garcès (France), Mathieu Raynal (France)
TMO:  Ben Skeen (New Zealand)

Ireland run Italy ragged

Ireland delivered a nine-try hammering on Italy in Dublin on Sunday to pick up their first win of the Six Nations with a 58-15 victory.

Ireland's first win of the tournament came all too late with the title set to head elsewhere, but this was a welcome respite after a punishing opening trio of matches.

Italy frankly imploded, producing the kind of performance many feared before the start of the tournament when their squad looked short on quality.

Early optimism after they pushed France close in Paris has now completely gone.  This really was a shambles.

Operating at a faster tempo and producing more offloads than we've seen so far in the tournament enabled Ireland to pick Italy apart at will, and their head coach Joe Schmidt will have been happy to watch Ireland play with plenty of confidence after coming up short at Twickenham.

The result truthfully looked like a certainty well before half-time.

Gonzalo Garcia's drag of a foot across the touchline prevented Italy from getting the perfect start as Ireland's scrambling defence reached the centre before he could cross the line.

Garcia couldn't make the hosts pay for a slow start and they responded well, Leonardo Sarto's mad decision to bat the ball backwards after a high kick being pounced upon by Payne, before Ireland recycled to put away Andrew Trimble for a score in the corner.

All the momentum now was Ireland's, as a Robbie Henshaw grubber kick handed Ireland the territory which ultimately led to their second try through Jack McGrath from a short pick-and-go, Sexton converting for a 12-0 advantage.

A breakdown penalty enabled Edoardo Padovani to knock over three points on his first start for his country but it was Ireland, full of running, who always looked poised to score the next try with Sexton in full flow.

The fly-half released Keith Earls into space off an inside ball to position Ireland five metres out, before CJ Stander did the rest from close range.

Italy were on the verge of being cut adrift down 20-3 prior to half-time but their efforts were thwarted, with Ireland going up the other end to produce the try of the tournament so far.

All starting from Zebo's break inside his own half, the full-back combined with Sexton and Trimble before Ireland spread the ball to find Heaslip in the corner.

Sexton couldn't convert but Ireland still held a dominant 22-point advantage going into half-time.

Italy didn't exactly help themselves when a gift of a loose pass from Padovani was snapped up by Payne for one of the easiest tries of his career, the returning centre running under the posts for try number five.

Heaslip added to the rout with his second try as Ireland felt comfortable enough up 39-3 to withdraw Sexton before the 50-minute mark.

Sean Cronin, replacing captain Rory Best, sauntered through a gap for Ireland's seventh try through some unacceptably poor tackling as the scoreline ticked over in the hosts' favour.

David Odiete's in the corner offered Italy some consolation although it was only a brief respite, Ian Madigan grabbing Ireland's eighth try to take them over the half century.

Sarto and Fergus McFadden both crossed for late scores as Ireland completed an enormous triumph over an Azzurri outfit who deservedly look set to finish bottom ot the table.

Man of the Match:  All about attitude and Jamie Heaslip backed up his wise words in the week with a two-try performance.

Moment of the Match:  The sublime break by Zebo up the touchline which after going through multiple sets of hands set up Heaslip for a spectacular try in the first half.

Villain of the Match:  Nothing nasty to report.

The scorers:

For Ireland:
Tries:  Trimble, McGrath, Stander, Heaslip 2, Payne, Cronin, Madigan, McFadden
Cons:  Sexton 3, Madigan 2
Pen:  Sexton

For Italy:
Tries:  Odiete, Sarto
Con:  Padovani
Pen:  Padovani

Ireland:  15 Simon Zebo, 14 Andrew Trimble, 13 Jared Payne, 12 Robbie Henshaw, 11 Keith Earls, 10 Jonathan Sexton, 9 Conor Murray, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 Josh van der Flier, 6 CJ Stander, 5 Devin Toner, 4 Donnacha Ryan, 3 Mike Ross, 2 Rory Best (c), 1 Jack McGrath
Replacements:  16 Sean Cronin, 17 Finlay Bealham, 18 Nathan White, 19 Ultan Dillane, 20 Rhys Ruddock, 21 Kieran Marmion, 22 Ian Madigan, 23 Fergus McFadden

Italy:  15 David Odiete, 14 Leonardo Sarto, 13 Michele Campagnaro, 12 Gonzalo Garcia, 11 Mattia Bellini, 10 Edoardo Padovani, 9 Guglielmo Palazzani, 8 Sergio Parisse, 7 Alessandro Zanni, 6 Francesco Minto, 5 Marco Fuser, 4 George Biagi, 3 Lorenzo Cittadini, 2 Davide Giazzon, 1 Andrea Lovotti
Replacements:  16 Oliviero Fabiani, 17 Matteo Zanusso, 18 Dario Chistolini, 19 Quintin Geldenhuys, 20 Abraham Steyn, 21 Alberto Lucchese, 22 Kelly Haimona, 23 Luke McLean

Referee:  Angus Gardner (Australia)
Assistant Referees:  Romain Poite (France), Marius van der Westhuizen (South Africa)
TMO:  George Ayoub (Australia)

Saturday, 27 February 2016

England stay on track with Ireland win

England made it three wins out of three in the Six Nations after coming out on top of their tussle with Ireland at Twickenham with a 21-10 victory.

Two quick tries from Anthony Watson and Mike Brown turned the game in England's favour after Conor Murray had put Ireland ahead following a low-scoring first half.

Prior to that England had failed to convert long periods of pressure into points and looked on the brink of paying for that neglect.  But their composure shone through, cancelling out the threat of an Irish revival, despite England's physicality sometimes crossing the line and them requiring more than one case of last-ditch defending.

Two yellow cards and a hatful of penalties will also have frustrated Eddie Jones, but he was unsurprisingly all smiles come the final whistle after winning his first home game in charge of his adopted country.  His side did however leave points out on the field.

England's 21-10 lead came under real pressure from Ireland in the final quarter but the visitors couldn't find a breakthrough, as the defending champions' title bid slipped away.

Too often Ireland laboured at the lineout and their handling lacked the usual polish.  Despite that Joe Schmidt will have been pleased with an exuberant debut from centre Stuart McCloskey with his collection of impressive carries, along with the good work of two other new caps in Josh van der Flier and Ultan Dillane.

Steve Hansen, the All Blacks head coach watching on in the stands, realistically however won't have been shuffling in his seat after what he saw on the flight back to New Zealand by what he saw from either side.

Jonathan Sexton struck first, turning a penalty win for Ireland at the scrum into a 3-0 lead from 40 metres out, Farrell's response coming not long after to level the scores — redemption after he had been penalised for a neck roll.

Indiscipline was becoming a problem for England — coughing up field position in Irish territory, on another occasion allowing them to kick to the corner — so it came against the run of play when Robbie Henshaw was penalised for obstruction well within Farrell's range.  Farrell though couldn't make him pay, his effort grazing the right post.

Ireland's breakdown work helped them clear their lines but they were struggling to contain the runs of Billy Vunipola.  One blindside break from the number eight took multiple tacklers to bundle him into touch short of the line.

With all of the momentum England's captain Dylan Hartley thought he had done enough to cross the line under the posts, only to be denied by the TMO for double movement.

Having nothing to show from such a long passage in Ireland's 22 would have been unacceptable but England had to take that on the chin, potential try-scoring chances wiped out by the odd loose pass or rash decision.

Frankly, the skills levels were poor.  At the same time Ireland's defence deserved huge credit for weathering the storm.

Smart defence was followed by a clueless attack which set Devin Toner up to be turned over — Farrell's resulting penalty moving England ahead for the first time at 6-3.

Ireland's need for some kind of spark was answered by Henshaw, an angling run promising more than it delivered ahead of half-time.

Boldly the visitors opted against letting Sexton attempt a kickable penalty after the break, initially failing to convert after going to the corner.

Back they came however after James Haskell's yellow card for a high tackle on Murray, with the Irish scrum-half then darting under the attempted cover tackle of Joe Marler to score.  Ireland's gutsy call had paid off, Sexton converting for a 10-6 lead.

Farrell chipped back following an obstruction penalty on Toner to cut the gap to a point, and with handling errors stopping Ireland at source, England finally capitalised.

Jack Nowell's break up the right touchline had the defence back-tracking before an Irish arm colliding with a pass looked to have ended the attack.  The ball instead favourably bounced for Chris Robshaw, whose looping pass found a waiting Anthony Watson ready to finish in the corner.

England's second try wasn't far behind as Farrell's pass gave Mike Brown enough space to race over, two scores in four minutes, as the game threatened to get away from Ireland.

Another Henshaw break silenced that prospect, with only a superb try-saving tackle from Nowell dislodging the ball as the Irish centre dove for the line, preventing a certain score.

Ireland threatened again after a one-two pass from two of the debutants, Van der Flier and Dillane, was illegally stopped short of the line.

What followed was bizarre — with Romain Poite first showing a yellow card to Brown for what looked like reckless use of the boot on Murray, ruled accidental, before consulting with his assistants and instead sin-binning Danny Care for not rolling away.

Van der Flier's impressive second-half continued when he was held up over the line by new England cap Elliot Daly, as Ireland prowled the whitewash, only for a penalty win at the scrum by Dan Cole easing the hosts' nerves and ultimately confirming their third win of the tournament.

Man of the Match:  Once again the carrying of Billy Vunipola was pivotal for England, constantly luring in Irish defenders before throwing them off his sizeable frame.

Moment of the Match:  England could have wondered if this would be their day as another attack threatened to stall, but Anthony Watson's try put them on track.

Villain of the Match:  Despite being ruled accidental by the officials Mike Brown should expect a citing for some loose footwork on Conor Murray.

The scorers:

For England:
Tries:  Watson, Brown
Cons:  Farrell
Pens:  Farrell 3
Yellow Cards:  Haskell, Care

For Ireland:
Tries:  Murray
Cons:  Sexton
Pens:  Sexton

England:  15 Mike Brown, 14 Jack Nowell, 13 Jonathan Joseph, 12 Owen Farrell, 11 Anthony Watson, 10 George Ford, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Billy Vunipola, 7 James Haskell, 6 Chris Robshaw, 5 George Kruis, 4 Maro Itoje, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Dylan Hartley (c), 1 Joe Marler
Replacements:  16 Jamie George, 17 Mako Vunipola, 18 Paul Hill, 19 Courtney Lawes, 20 Jack Clifford, 21 Danny Care, 22 Elliot Daly, 23 Alex Goode

Ireland:  15 Rob Kearney, 14 Andrew Trimble, 13 Robbie Henshaw, 12 Stuart McCloskey, 11 Keith Earls, 10 Jonathan Sexton, 9 Conor Murray, 8 Jamie Heaslip, 7 Josh van der Flier, 6 CJ Stander, 5 Devin Toner, 4 Donnacha Ryan, 3 Mike Ross, 2 Rory Best, 1 Jack McGrath
Replacements:  16 Richardt Strauss, 17 Cian Healy, 18 Nathan White, 19 Ultan Dillane, 20 Rhys Ruddock, 21 Eoin Reddan, 22 Ian Madigan, 23 Simon Zebo

Referee:  Romain Poite (France)
Assistant Referees:  Nigel Owens (Wales), Alexandre Ruiz (France)
TMO:  Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)

Scotland get job done in Italy

Scotland claimed their first victory of this year's Six Nations Championship as they saw off Italy 36-20 at the Stadio Olimpico on Saturday.

Tries from back-row duo John Barclay and John Hardie along with a late effort from wing Tommy Seymour saw the Scots come out on top.

But it was the boot of captain Greig Laidlaw that proved decisive as his 21 points from the tee saw him pick up the Man of the Match award.

As for Italy they now have three losses to their name, with their tries coming through hooker Leonardo Ghiraldini and second-row Marco Fuser.

Scotland were 17-10 ahead at the turnaround but in truth the margin should have been greater as they had multiple opportunities to pull clear.

Losing number eight David Denton to injury before kick-off meant a reshuffle for the Scots as Ryan Wilson moved up from the bench while Josh Strauss was called into the 23, despite having played 75 minutes for PRO12 outfit Glasgow Warriors against the Dragons on Thursday.

The late disruption to their starting line-up did not affect Scotland though as after a ninth minute penalty from Italy fly-half Kelly Haimona, the visitors moved through the gears with two tries in six minutes that made it 14-3.

Barclay scored the first effort when full-back Stuart Hogg's break down the left wing led to the flanker collecting the offload for the score.  Captain Laidlaw landed the difficult extras in what turned out to be an impressive day at the office off the tee for the number nine.

Laidlaw would convert Hardie's effort soon after, this time after fly-half Finn Russell split the Azzurri's midfield defence.  It was now 17-3.

Italy though struck back on the half-hour through Ghiraldini after nice offloading between centre Gonzalo Garcia and full-back David Odiete, with Haimona on target from wide out before a 40th minute penalty miss from Laidlaw meant the margin was just seven points at half-time.

Scotland returned from the break and duly fed off Italy's indiscretions, with Laidlaw in excellent form off the tee, starting on 46 minutes.

Italy hit back four minutes later following pressure on the Scottish line but again their discipline then let them down so it was 23-13, with Laidlaw adding his fourth penalty of the game just before the hour, meaning that Scotland had a 13-point cushion for the run-in.

That didn't last long, however, as the Italians capitalised on fly-half Russell's yellow card for hands in the ruck and went for the corner.  Their gamble paid off as Fuser managed to ground the ball over the whitewash, making it 26-20 to set up a grandstand finish in Rome.

Fortunately for Scotland their goalkicker could not miss and made it 29-20 soon after, which helped their fans breathe a little easier when Italy launched a period of promising, sustained pressure on the visitors try-line.

But Scotland survived and would also have a third try to their name before the final whistle as excellent work from Hogg set up Seymour, securing their first win of 2016, with Italy now staring the wooden spoon in the face.

Man of the match:  It has to go to Greig Laidlaw.  Brilliant from the kicking tee and a real leader on a superb day for the Scots.  Every member of Scotland's side did their job though in a real team performance.

Moment of the match:  Let's go for the John Hardie try in the first-half that made it 17-3.  Keeping Italy at an arm's length was always going to be crucial and so it proved as Scotland got the job done in Rome.

Villain of the match:  Despite two yellow cards for Scottish players, there was nothing dirty to report in an enjoyable Six Nations fixture.

The scorers:

For Italy:
Tries:  Ghiraldini, Fuser
Cons:  Haimona 2
Pens:  Haimona 2

For Scotland:
Tries:  Barclay, Hardie, Seymour
Cons:  Laidlaw 3
Pens:  Laidlaw 5
Yellow Cards:  Russell, Nel

Italy:  15 David Odiete, 14 Leonardo Sarto, 13 Michele Campagnaro, 12 Gonzalo Garcia, 11 Mattia Bellini, 10 Kelly Haimona, 9 Edoardo Gori, 8 Sergio Parisse (c), 7 Alessandro Zanni, 6 Francesco Minto, 5 Joshua Furno, 4 Marco Fuser, 3 Lorenzo Cittadini, 2 Leonardo Ghiraldini, 1 Andrea Lovotti
Replacements:  16 Davide Giazzon, 17 Matteo Zanusso, 18 Martin Castrogiovanni, 19 Valerio Bernabo, 20 Andries Van Schalkwyk, 21 Guglielmo Palazzani, 22 Edoardo Padovani, 23 Andrea Pratichetti

Scotland:  15 Stuart Hogg, 14 Tommy Seymour, 13 Mark Bennett, 12 Duncan Taylor, 11 Tim Visser, 10 Finn Russell, 9 Greig Laidlaw (c), 8 Ryan Wilson, 7 John Hardie, 6 John Barclay, 5 Jonny Gray, 4 Richie Gray, 3 Willem Nel, 2 Ross Ford, 1 Alasdair Dickinson
Replacements:  16 Stuart McInally, 17 Rory Sutherland, 18 Moray Low, 19 Tim Swinson, 20 Josh Strauss, 21 Sam Hidalgo-Clyne, 22 Peter Horne, 23 Sean Lamont

Referee:  Jaco Peyper (South Africa)
Assistant Referees:  Pascal Gauzère (France), Nick Briant (New Zealand)
TMO:  Graham Hughes (England)

Wales put away struggling France

Wales moved top of the Six Nations table with a victory to forget over France in Cardiff on Friday, winning 19-10.

George North's comical try in the second-half proved to be the key score as Wales went on to keep an uninspiring French attack at bay.

A Grand Slam is beyond Wales, but another championship?  Whatever happens between England and Ireland on Saturday, the journey to Twickenham for Warren Gatland's troops is already looming large.

Wales were solid in the set-piece, more than competent defensively and even when their execution was far from perfect still won by more than enough points.

Guy Novès can at least move forward without wins glossing over how much work France have left to do to become competitive again.

For starters they need some identity, but that takes time, and Novès deserves all the sympathy he can get after having to watch his players come through a gruelling Top 14 weekend whilst Wales' stars had their feet up.  Shaun Edwards' defence gave France no free opportunities.

This first-half won't exactly be remembered fondly with true chances at a premium.

Two penalties from Dan Biggar outscored one effort from Jules Plisson, but neither were perfect off the tee.

Instead this was a half best remembered for the continued efforts of Wayne Barnes to try and set a scrum which fidgeted prior to almost every engagement, chewing away at both the clock and the enthusiasm of all watching on.

Virimi Vakatawa's break highlighted just how rare a defence-splitting attack had been, with the winger looking this way and that before slipping into a tackle.  Somewhat poignant.

It looked as though Gareth Davies might be the difference as he burst free before the interval, only for Wales to be denied at the breakdown under the French posts to thankfully bring the half to a close.

Jonathan Danty's tip tackle allowed Biggar to make it 9-3 minutes into the second-half as Wales showed a fraction more intent.

What followed naturally was a calamitous try perfectly suited for the occasion.

Haring after a kick from Jonathan Davies, somehow North went to control the ball with his foot and missed, only to watch with glee as a chasing Plisson blunderingly hacked the ball into North's path for a second bite, from which he scored for a commanding 16-3 lead.

A remarkable counter-drive from France short of the line, from which afterwards Dan Lydiate looked offside, halted a driving maul as they responded trying to somehow get back into the contest.

Full of momentum France had to capitalise on a long spell inside the Welsh 22 but on every occasion they dared to go wide they looked aimless, lacking the penetration from a backline which looked undersized in comparison to their opponents.

France in the end were repelled in what was fast becoming a test of character for Novès and his side, facing their first defeat of the year.

A fourth Biggar penalty came after that failed French stint in Welsh territory, which totalled 19 minutes, more or less settling the contest at 19-3.

One saving grace for France was the introduction of François Trinh-Duc.  Judging from the horrorshow Plisson endured it would be no surprise to see Trinh-Duc come in against Scotland based on the direction he added to their attack.

France captain Guilhem Guirado, who deserved better for his efforts, grabbed a late consolation try which meant nothing to the result.

Man of the Match:  Liam Williams and Rob Evans both went well but Gareth Davies always looked a threat when given a half-chance.

Moment of the Match:  After so many phases inside the Welsh 22, France left with nothing as Dan Biggar's fourth penalty killed off the contest.

Villain of the Match:  Nothing nasty to report.

The scorers:

For Wales:
Try:  North
Con:  Biggar
Pens:  Biggar 4

For France:
Try:  Guirado
Con:  Trinh-Duc
Pens:  Plisson

Wales:  15 Liam Williams, 14 Alex Cuthbert, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 George North, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Gareth Davies, 8 Taulupe Faletau, 7 Sam Warburton, 6 Dan Lydiate, 5 Alun Wyn Jones, 4 Bradley Davies, 3 Samson Lee, 2 Scott Baldwin, 1 Rob Evans
Replacements:  16 Ken Owens, 17 Gethin Jenkins, 18 Tomas Francis, 19 Jake Ball, 20 Justin Tipuric, 21 Lloyd Williams, 22 Rhys Priestland, 23 Gareth Anscombe

France:  15 Maxime Médard, 14 Virimi Vakatawa, 13 Maxime Mermoz, 12 Jonathan Danty, 11 Djibril Camara, 10 Jules Plisson, 9 Maxime Machenaud, 8 Damien Chouly, 7 Antoine Burban, 6 Wenceslas Lauret, 5 Alexandre Flanquart, 4 Paul Jedrasiak, 3 Rabah Slimani, 2 Guilhem Guirado (c), 1 Jefferson Poirot
Replacements:  16 Camille Chat, 17 Vincent Pelo, 18 Uini Atonio, 19 Yoann Maestri, 20 Loann Goujon, 21 Sébastien Bézy, 22 François Trinh-Duc, 23 Gaël Fickou

Referee:  Wayne Barnes (RFU)
Assistant Referees:  JP Doyle (RFU), Luke Pearce (RFU)
TMO:  Shaun Veldsman (SARU)

Sunday, 14 February 2016

Joseph treble inspires England

Three second-half tries from centre Jonathan Joseph helped England brush off the challenge of Italy on Sunday as they won 40-9 in Rome.

Leading by just two points at the interval, the pre-game script went to form after the turnaround as England moved through the gears to claim their second victory in as many rounds, with George Ford and Owen Farrell scoring their other tries in what was ultimately an easy win.

The Six Nations now takes a week's break before a confident England play host to Ireland while Italy take on Scotland at this same venue.

As expected it was a rugged first-half with little given by the Italians, who enjoyed a decent slice of possession and territory in Rome.

In fact they took the lead in the ninth minute when a wayward English line-out led to an offence and Carlo Canna did the rest off the tee.

England soon levelled courtesy of a strong scrum as Farrell stepped up to make it 3-3 in an even opening twelve minutes to the game.

What was noticeable was a fired-up Italian side and centre Michele Campagnaro was leading that hunger in defence, making two massive tackles and one strong carry that lifted the crowd.  As coach Eddie Jones watched on, he might have regretted his pre-game public message.

Fortunately for England they would get back into the Italian red zone on seventeen minutes and when the hosts failed to release a tackled player on the ground, Ford stepped up in the absence of Farrell, who was off for a Head Injury Assessment, to nudge his team back in front.

It didn't last long though as soon after England lock George Kruis was caught doing the same offence, Canna making it 6-6 off the tee.

The first-half looked like being try-less until the 25th minute when a high testing kick from Ford led to Italy scrum-half Edoardo Gori being put under pressure and turned over.  From there the recycled ball saw Farrell set up his fly-half nicely as Ford ran in on the left sideline.

Farrell struck the post from the resulting conversion so Italy remained very much in touch, however losing inside centre Gonzalo Garcia to a leg injury was a worry.  A Canna penalty before the break helped cushion that, coming from Ben Youngs' high tackle on Sergio Parisse.

Italy withstood a strong English start to the second-half and could have moved in front had Canna landed a penalty.  But it was to be England who opened the account in fortuitist fashion when centre Joseph intercepted Leonardo Sarto's pass for a clean run-in to the try-line.

Farrell added the simple extras to make it 18-9 and it was 25-9 before the hour mark when replacement scrum-half Danny Care's nice grubber through found Joseph for his brace.  That try arrived after the English crowd had cheered the arrival of Maro Itoje in place of James Haskell.

More was to the come from England, who had now thrown on their bench for the remaining fifteen minutes, as Joseph powered over on the left for his hat-trick.  Farrell could not land the difficult conversion but at 33-9 the game was done as England looked for more five-pointers.

One more did arrive when replacement hooker Jamie George offloaded to Farrell for a walkover under the posts, as the English march into Round Three sitting pretty at the Six Nations summit, leading France on points difference.

Man of the match:  It's tough to look past Jonathan Joseph as his treble will take the headlines in Rome.  After a difficult first segment of the season, England will be delighted to see him in this kind of form.

Moment of the match:  Italy were trailing by just two points until minute 53 when a loose pass from Leonardo Sarto gifted England a try.  From there the visitors did not look back as they cruised to victory.

Villain of the match:  Nothing unsavoury to report.

The scorers:

For Italy:
Pen:  Canna 3

For England:
Tries:  Ford, Joseph 3, Farrell
Con:  Farrell 3
Pen:  Farrell 2, Ford

Italy:  15 Luke McLean, 14 Leonardo Sarto, 13 Michele Campagnaro, 12 Gonzalo Garcia, 11 Mattia Bellini, 10 Carlo Canna, 9 Edoardo Gori, 8 Sergio Parisse (c), 7 Alessandro Zanni, 6 Francesco Minto, 5 Marco Fuser, 4 George Fabio Biagi, 3 Lorenzo Cittadini, 2 Ornel Gega, 1 Andrea Lovotti
Replacements:  16 Davide Giazzon, 17 Matteo Zanusso, 18 Martin Castrogiovanni, 19 Valerio Bernabo, 20 Andries van Schalkwyk, 21 Guglielmo Palazzani, 22 Edoardo Padovani, 23 Andrea Pratichetti

England:  15 Mike Brown, 14 Anthony Watson, 13 Jonathan Joseph, 12 Owen Farrell, 11 Jack Nowell, 10 George Ford, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Billy Vunipola, 7 James Haskell, 6 Chris Robshaw, 5 George Kruis, 4 Courtney Lawes, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Dylan Hartley (c), 1 Mako Vunipola
Replacements:  16 Jamie George, 17 Joe Marler, 18 Paul Hill, 19 Joe Launchbury, 20 Maro Itoje, 21 Jack Clifford, 22 Danny Care, 23 Alex Goode

Referee:  Glen Jackson (New Zealand)
Assistant Referees:  Jérôme Garcès (France), Ben O'Keeffe (New Zealand)
TMO:  George Ayoub (Australia)

Saturday, 13 February 2016

Wales rally to edge Scotland

Tries in the second half from Jamie Roberts and George North secured a 27-23 win for Wales over Scotland at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff.

The most entertaining game of the 2016 Six Nations to date was far from flawless but Wales kept faith in Warrenball over width to get back to winning ways after that draw in Dublin, before North's solo effort — his first try in six Tests — took the game away from the visitors.  Duncan Taylor's consolation score came too late to change the outcome.

Wales though were behind at the break thanks to the boot of Greig Laidlaw, the Scotland captain, trying to propel his side to victory after they hadn't won in Cardiff since 2002.  It was also nine long years since their last triumph over Wales, a scoop of extra motivation if any was needed after fluffing their lines against England.  This was a vast improvement but in the end an almighty opportunity missed as Vern Cotter's side faded.

Broken field of course is Gareth Davies' best friend and the scrum-half sped into it for the game's first points.  From Dan Biggar's short chip over the top the ball rebounded perfectly into the hands of the livewire scrum-half, who turned Tommy Seymour inside out on a superb 50-metre sprint to the try line.

Scotland's response was more a less instant — patient build-up controlled by Laidlaw and the Scottish carriers reaching 21 phases, before Finn Russell chipped over the top of the defence to the corner where Tommy Seymour was ready and waiting.  Laidlaw's conversion from the touchline made it 7-7.

Line breaks were at a premium, John Barclay's burst a moment of promise that ended by the flanker opting to kick — just as Russell did the week before against England — when a pass was the better option.

Wales' preference to test Seymour under the high ball ended without success, the winger rising to the challenge in a brilliant first half an hour.

Scotland though were hit by the early loss of Stuart Hogg to injury shortly before Laidlaw's first penalty put the visitors ahead for the first time, after John Hardie's success at the breakdown.

On top at the scrum, the Welsh pack squeezed another penalty out of Scotland for Biggar to tie the score again at 10-10.  Their visitors however had the final say of the half, winning another kickable penalty for Laidlaw as the captain sent Scotland into the break ahead at 13-10.

Thanks to the brilliant break of North it was the hosts who responded first after the interval, a second Biggar penalty levelling the scores.

Seeking more energy from his tight five Warren Gatland brought on Gethin Jenkins, Ken Owens and Bradley Davies only seven minutes into the second half, as Scotland continued to pressure Gareth Davies on his clearance kicks.

A contest seemingly destined to hinge on one mistake, Liam Williams' knock-on under the high ball presented Scotland with a vital opportunity and their scrum delivered, winning a penalty for Laidlaw to restore the lead at 13-16.

A break however from Tom James up the touchline threatened to turn the tide, stopped only by Taylor's covering tackle, as Scotland rallied initially before coughing up a five-metre scrum from which Wales eventually scored.

It took multiple resets before Roberts fulfilled his objective by crashing over from short range for a second Welsh try.

After Roberts had battered down the door North ran through it, ending his Test match drought.  Cutting back on the angle onto an inside ball from Biggar, the wing hit an outstanding line and had too much pace for the defence to catch him.

And while Taylor held off the defence to go over for Scotland shortly before full-time, his efforts were in vain — Wales doing enough to secure their first win of the Championship.

Man of the Match:  One of Tommy Seymour's best games for Scotland but Jamie Roberts capped off another productive, if unglamourous, afternoon with a key try to flip the lead in the second half.

Moment of the Match:  We've waited for a glimpse of George North at full flight for some time and he delivered with an outstanding solo score to put Wales out of reach.

Villain of the Match:  Nothing nasty to report.

The scorers:

For Wales:
Tries:  G Davies, Roberts, North
Cons:  Biggar 3
Pens:  Biggar 2

For Scotland:
Tries:  Seymour, Taylor
Cons:  Laidlaw, Weir
Pens:  Laidlaw 3

Wales:  15 Liam Williams, 14 George North, 13 Jonathan Davies, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 Tom James, 10 Dan Biggar, 9 Gareth Davies, 8 Taulupe Faletau, 7 Justin Tipuric, 6 Sam Warburton (c), 5 Alun Wyn Jones, 4 Luke Charteris, 3 Samson Lee, 2 Scott Baldwin, 1 Rob Evans
Replacements:  16 Ken Owens, 17 Gethin Jenkins, 18 Tomas Francis, 19 Bradley Davies, 20 Dan Lydiate, 21 Lloyd Williams, 22 Rhys Priestland, 23 Gareth Anscombe

Scotland:  15 Stuart Hogg, 14 Sean Maitland, 13 Mark Bennett, 12 Duncan Taylor, 11 Tommy Seymour, 10 Finn Russell, 9 Greig Laidlaw (c), 8 David Denton, 7 John Hardie, 6 John Barclay, 5 Jonny Gray, 4 Richie Gray, 3 Willem Nel, 2 Ross Ford, 1 Alasdair Dickinson.
Replacements:  16 Stuart McInally, 17 Gordon Reid, 18 Zander Fagerson, 19 Tim Swinson, 20 Blair Cowan, 21 Sam Hidalgo-Clyne, 22 Duncan Weir, 23 Sean Lamont

Referee:  George Clancy (Ireland)
Assistant Referees:  John Lacey (Ireland), Federico Anselmi (Argentina)
TMO:  Graham Hughes (England)