Mercury (Hobart)

Uruguay talk up hot attack on Wallabies

- DANIEL GILHOOLY

URUGUAY has moved into phase two of its World Cup campaign with a vow to make life as uncomforta­ble as possible for the Wallabies.

The darlings of the opening week courtesy of their 30-27 upset of Fiji in Kamaishi, Los Teros crashed back to reality with a 33-7 loss to Georgia.

With just two tier-one opponents remaining — Australia in Oita today and Wales next week — before a likely group exit, they have recalibrat­ed their approach.

Assistant coach Joaquim Pastore said pride and a desire to showcase their improvemen­ts against strong opposition was driving his team.

At the last World Cup they were thrashed 65-3 by the Wallabies in Birmingham, a result that stings former internatio­nal back Pastore because of the progress he believes they have made.

“We came to this World Cup to shock the world,” he told journalist­s yesterday.

“After Fiji we were very happy. After the Georgia match, we have to [rediscover] the height of this team.

“We want to show the rest of the world our rugby has developed enough to be competitiv­e against teams such as Australia and Wales.”

Wallabies captain Michael Hooper said Uruguay has developed a distinct style which they’ve reviewed as closely as if they were playing a powerhouse nation.

“Breakdown, they’ll come hard there and they have really good kicking halves, they kick a lot and are good at contesting those areas,” Hooper said.

“Also, physically, particular­ly in the Fiji game, they were very strong.”

Meanwhile, Uruguay confirmed it would continue to be powered by a traditiona­l South American caffeine drink, called mate, after several players consumed it during their final training run yesterday.

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