Daily Dispatch

CONTROVERS­IAL TACKLE

Lacklustre Boks lose by one point against England

-

England coach Eddie Jones backed Owen Farrell to avoid being cited for a dangerous tackle that could rule him out of next week’s clash with New Zealand as he turned on his critics following a 12-11 win over South Africa on Saturday.

Farrell had kicked an England side missing several senior players into a one-point lead with his third successful penalty seven minutes from time at Twickenham.

But there was drama right at the end when, with 80 minutes on the clock, referee Angus Gardner consulted the television match official to see if flyhalf Farrell had committed an illegal ‘no-arms’ tackle on Springbok replacemen­t Andre Esterhuize­n.

The Australian official could have awarded South Africa a penalty which, had it gone over, would have seen the visitors snatch victory in the opening match of their European tour.

But Gardner, despite World Rugby’s crackdown on dangerous play, eventually decided against penalising Farrell’s challenge, even though it appeared the England co-captain was leading with his shoulder.

That, however, may not be the end of the matter, with citing commission­er Keith Brown – who is himself from New Zealand – having 24 hours from Saturday’s final whistle to decide if further disciplina­ry action should be taken.

However, a sarcastic Jones said: “You can get cited for something you did at a party when you were 15, anything could happen,” the Australian said.

Frustrated Springbok coach Rassie Erasmus was left to bemoan Farrell’s challenge, saying acidly: “If it was all legal – and I didn’t have a good look at the replay – we should start tackling like that.”

England ended a five-Test losing streak with a 25-10 victory over the Springboks last time out in Cape Town in June. But they now head into a clash against the All Blacks at Twickenham on November 10 buoyed by two successive wins.

Jones, however, was in chippy mood when asked if Saturday’s success had been the most important win of his near threeyears in charge of England.

“Most important thing is what we do next,” the Australian said. “I don’t understand this, guys.

“Why has it got to be the most important game?”

This was England’s first match since Jones had brought former All Blacks coach John Mitchell into his backroom staff as defence supremo.

Jones was delighted by the way his team restricted the Springboks to a solitary try from wing Sbu Nkosi, even if they scored none of their own, with fullback Elliot Daly adding a long-range penalty to Farrell’s trio.

England have not played reigning world champions New Zealand since 2014 and next week’s showdown has been eagerly anticipate­d ahead of next year’s World Cup in Japan. –

 ??  ??
 ?? Picture: REUTERS/TOBY MELVILLE ?? WAS IT LEGAL?: England’s Owen Farrell makes a challenge on South Africa’s Andre Esterhuize­n at Twickenham Stadium in London on Saturday. The tackle was referred to the television match official but no action was taken at the time. England won 12-11.
Picture: REUTERS/TOBY MELVILLE WAS IT LEGAL?: England’s Owen Farrell makes a challenge on South Africa’s Andre Esterhuize­n at Twickenham Stadium in London on Saturday. The tackle was referred to the television match official but no action was taken at the time. England won 12-11.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa