The Irish Mail on Sunday

EDDIE’S GREAT ESCAPE

Relief for Jones and agony for Wales as Daly delivers late to keep England’s victory run going

- By Sam Peters

ELLIOT DALY was England’s tryscoring hero as Eddie Jones’s men left it late for the second week running to maintain their unbeaten run with a truly extraordin­ary win.

England will have left Cardiff last night barely knowing how they clawed victory back from the jaws of defeat. Jonathan Davies, whose missed touch led directly to Daly’s last-gasp try, will be having nightmares for years to come.

With his side trailing 16-14 with barely four minutes on the clock, the England left winger took advantage of Davies’s missed touch to score a sensationa­l try down the left hand side that broke Welsh hearts.

Owen Farrell converted in front of a stunned Principali­ty Stadium crowd as England recorded a 16th straight wins, 15 of them coming under Jones.

But this was skin of their teeth stuff again. Wales looked destined to prevail, but England are made of sterner stuff under Jones, and Daly, on only his fourth start, scored a memorable try to seal a staggering victory in a truly astonishin­g game.

This is an England team that seemingly do not know how to lose. They were not at their best again here but found a way to win.

Rob Howley named George North in the Wales starting line-up, despite the winger suffering a hamstring strain in his last week’s win over Italy, and the 24-year-old withdrew an hour and a half before kick off, with Alex Cuthbert replacing him.

As is the visiting team’s prerogativ­e, England opted for the roof at in Cardiff to be kept open in a bid to reduce the crowd’s effect. With Wales keen to have the roof closed, Jones’s call was seen as a provocativ­e gesture in some quarters and a pragmatic one in others.

With Jones naming the inexperien­ced back-row trio of Jack Clifford, Nathan Hughes and Maro Itoje, England needed a strong start to settle their nerves. But it was Wales who struck the first blow when Courtney Lawes was penalised for not rolling away and Wales full back Leigh Halfpenny landed a third-minute penalty from 35 metres.

England struck back when Scott Williams was penalised for a high tackle on Jack Nowell and Farrell slotted a penalty from the right.

Daly had a chance to put England ahead but he missed a long-range penalty two minutes later as the visitors began to gain a foothold in the game. England forwards Hughes and Lawes were both prominent in the loose with No8 Hughes carrying superbly throughout the half.

Fly-half George Ford pulled the strings impressive­ly, delaying his passes on the gain-line as England camped close to Wales try-line. The visitors went through 26 phases in the build-up to Ben Youngs’s opening try, created by some superb interplay between Jonathan Joseph, Daly and Mike Brown.

Farrell missed the conversion and Wales responded as Dan Cole was penalised for slowing the ball down and Halfpenny kicked his second penalty to make it 8-6 on 23 minutes.

Wales grew in confidence and flyhalf Dan Biggar went close when he gathered a loose ball and kicked ahead, only for Nowell to intervene.

Rhys Webb also went close but television replays showed that the ball had been grounded short of the line. Referee Jerome Garces penalised Wales at the resulting scrum and England were able to clear.

But Wales kept coming and England were forced to soak up wave after wave of attack, their forwards putting in a superb defensive shift.

Finally the pressure told on England when Liam Williams crossed after a move from the base of a fivemetre scrum which saw Farrell and Clifford both left flat-footed as the blindside winger swept behind his own three-quarters before cutting a superb line off Webb.

Halfpenny’s conversion made it 138 at half time. Game on.

Ross Moriarty put his side on the front foot with a huge hit on Farrell early in the second half. Another massive Moriarty hit, this time on Itoje, sparked a counter-attack involving Davies and Halfpenny almost led to a try for Biggar, but Webb’s pass was adjudged forward.

Jones replaced captain Dylan Hartley with Jamie George on 46 minutes and James Haskell replaced Clifford two minutes later. Wales replaced both their props, while Moriarty was unfortunat­e to be replaced on 52 minutes by Taulupe Faletau.

Wales held the upper hand but England hung on and closed the gap to two points when Farrell kicked his second penalty on 56 minutes.

Haskell was fortunate to escape a yellow card when he was penalised under the posts for not rolling away and Halfpenny was able to kick a simple penalty to make it 16-11.

Just as England were pressing, Youngs threw an awful pass which Biggar intercepte­d before sprinting 50 metres and hacking the ball forward, forcing Daly to clear into touch deep in England’s half.

England, however, battled back upfield and Farrell kicked his third penalty on 70 minutes, and then a scything run from Ben Te’o — last week’s try-scoring hero — almost led to a try for Danny Care before Davies missed touch with a clearance.

It was to prove a tragic moment for Wales, as Ford whipped the ball to Farrell who fed Daly to scream over in the left corner.

This England team simply refuse to lose.

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 ??  ?? CLINCHER: Owen Farrell celebrates with Elliot Daly after the winning try
CLINCHER: Owen Farrell celebrates with Elliot Daly after the winning try

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