The Northern Advocate

RUGBY DETAILS

England coach upbeat after his side push All Blacks hard in thrilling Twickenham test

- Sam Johnston Florence, Italy Edinburgh, Scotland London Bordeaux, France San Sebastian, Spain Dublin Paris Krasnodar, Russia

Although a video review denied his side a statement victory over New Zealand, England’s performanc­e — and lack of fortune — left Eddie Jones full of optimism less than a year out from the Rugby World Cup.

The All Blacks survived a late scare to hold on for a 16-15 comeback victory at Twickenham yesterday in a first matchup with England in four years.

England thought they had secured a rare victory over the world champions when Sam Underhill touched down five minutes from fulltime, but video review revealed Courtney Lawes was offside when he made a chargedown to launch the move.

“Sometimes the game loves you and sometimes the game doesn’t love you,” Jones said. “You’ve got to accept that if you stay in the fight long enough, the game will love you. We’re prepared to stay in the fight so we’ll get some luck from the game further down the track, don’t worry.”

England made a dream start as Chris Ashton and co-captain Dylan Hartley scored tries either side of an Owen Farrell dropped goal for 15-0 after 24 minutes.

New Zealand struck back through fullback Damian McKenzie near halftime, then a kickoff error from Farrell allowed the All Blacks to close the deficit to five points at the break.

Beauden Barrett’s dropped goal and penalty put the All Blacks ahead on the hour mark, setting up a dramatic finale in the rain.

The All Blacks celebrated a sixth straight win against England, and inflicted just the second home defeat of Jones’ three-season tenure.

“We’re obviously devastated,” Jones said. “But you take the good with the bad and we learned a lot.”

There was plenty of good early on as Ashton, making his first start in four years, repaid Jones’ faith with a second-minute try.

England’s backs swung left, taking the All Black defence with them as Ashton held his position on the right wing. The alert Ben Youngs spotted him and sent a long pass for the wing to become the first England player to score three tries against New Zealand.

Farrell missed the conversion, but brought up his 700th England point soon after. An overthrown All Blacks lineout allowed England to attack, and Youngs found Farrell for a dropped goal after 10 minutes.

New Zealand continued to make errors and England, enjoying momentum, chose to kick a penalty to the corner than at the posts. Itoje made the lineout catch, England drove, and Hartley’s try made the All Blacks look completely helpless.

Farrell’s conversion made it 15-0 and the All Blacks were unnerved, Barrett making sloppy kicks.

New Zealand’s resolve was tested further when centre Sonny Bill Williams was forced off with a shoulder injury a half hour in. Yet, they found their groove.

McKenzie, who had been the All Blacks’ biggest threat, ran a smart angle on the inside of Barrett and scored, setting up an easy conversion with halftime near.

Farrell kicked the restart straight into touch, and the All Blacks attacked and earned a penalty in front of the posts. Barrett obliged, and while 15-10 behind, New Zealand carried momentum into the second half.

The All Blacks missed a try when a McKenzie break was wasted by Aaron Smith, but Barrett produced a dropped goal for 15-13.

England came close to responding immediatel­y as they tried another attacking lineout rather than a penalty kick but prop Kyle Sinckler spilled the ball.

“We score points there we win the game,” Jones said.

Another bad throw-in by Jamie George wasted another England chance, but Barrett made no mistake with a penalty to put the All Blacks ahead with 20 minutes remaining.

New Zealand looked like accelerati­ng in the rain as more errors crept into England’s play, but the home side rallied impressive­ly.

“I thought we played the final 20 exceptiona­lly well,” Jones said. “That’s where New Zealand generally run away from teams in that area and they couldn’t break us.”

Lawes charged down replacemen­t halfback TJ Perenara, and Underhill twisted Barrett to score in the left corner. But on TMO advice, referee Jerome Garces made the offside call against Lawes.

“There’s no doubt he’s offside,” Hansen said. “He’s just about in the halfback’s back pocket. What was going through my mind was, ‘Are they going to be brave enough to make the right decision?’ And they were, so that was good.” ●

Italy 28 (Michele Campagnaro, Mattia Bellini, Dean Budd, Tommaso Allan tries; Allan conversion, 2 penalties), Georgia 17 (Tamaz Mchedlidze try; penalty try; Soso Matiashvil­i conversion, penalty). HT: 18-7

Scotland 54 (Tommy Seymour 3, Allan Dell, Fraser Brown, Sean Maitland, Jamie Ritchie, Adam Hastings tries; Greig Laidlaw 5 conversion­s, Finn Russell 2 conversion­s), Fiji 17 (Viliame Mata, Semi Radradra tries; Ben Volavola 2 conversion­s, penalty). HT: 21-17

New Zealand 16 (Damian McKenzie try; Beauden Barrett conversion, 2 penalties, dropped goal), England 15 (Chris Ashton, Dylan Hartley tries; Owen Farrell conversion, dropped goal). HT: 10-15

Tonga 49 (Sonatane Takulua 2, Siegfried Fisi’ihoi, Sione Vailanu, Alaska Taufa, Latiume Fosita, Vunga Lilo tries; Takulua 7 conversion­s), French Barbarians 38 (Thibault Daubagna, Romain Ntamack, Pierre-Louis Barassi, Martin Laveau, Yvan Reilhac, Clement Laporte tries; Louis Carbonel 2 conversion­s; Ntamack conversion, Alexis Bales conversion). HT: 28-7

United States 30 (Cam Dolan 2, Joe Taufete’e, Will Hooley, Hanco Germishuys tries; Hooley conversion, penalty), Samoa 29 (Logovii Mulipola, Ed Fidow, Melani Matavao, JJ Taulagi tries; Tusi Pisi 3 conversion­s, D’Angelo Leuila penalty). HT: 20-21

Ireland 28 (Kieran Marmion, Bundee Aki, Luke McGrath tries; Jonathan Sexton 2 conversion­s, 3 penalties), Argentina 17 (Bautista Delguy try; Nicolas Sanchez 4 penalties). HT: 15-14

South Africa 29 (Sbu Nkosi, Mbongeni Mbonami tries; Handre Pollard 2 conversion­s, 5 penalties), France 26 (Guilhem Guirado, Mathieu Bastareaud tries; Baptiste Serin 2 conversion­s, 3 penalties, Camille Lopez dropped goal). HT: 9-16

Russia 47 Namibia 20 HT:19-6

 ?? Photo / AP ?? Damian McKenzie was a constant threat from fullback for the All Blacks.
Photo / AP Damian McKenzie was a constant threat from fullback for the All Blacks.

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