Daily Dispatch

England-Australia rivalry all set for another go-around

-

The Rugby World Cup has set the scene for some of the great clashes. England against Australia is one of the great rivalries in sport, and the Rugby World Cup is no different. The old enemies have played each other at every single edition bar 1999.

With one final apiece – in each other’s back-yards – it is a history filled with drama and heartbreak, and Saturday’s quarterfin­al in Oita promises to be no different.

Here’s a look back at three of the most epic encounters: Every England rugby fan knows the sequence. Deep into extra-time in Sydney, scrumhalf Matt Dawson makes a darting run, the ball is recycled before Dawson flings the ball out to Jonny Wilkinson whose wrong-footed drop goal wins the Webb Ellis Cup after a thrilling final.

Those three points, scored with 26 seconds left on the clock, gave England their only Rugby World Cup and made them the only team from the northern hemisphere to lift the trophy – ironically against a team led by their now coach Eddie Jones.

The Wallabies started the stronger, roared on by a home crowd. Winger Lote Tuqiri outjumped his diminutive opposite number Jason Robinson to latch on to a huge up-and-under kick and touch down for the opening score.

Robinson got his revenge just before the break, sliding into the corner after a rampaging run from number eight Lawrence Dallaglio and link-up play from Wilkinson. England were 14-5 up at half-time.

Two Elton Flatley penalties allowed the Wallabies back into the game, and he slotted his third of the half with barely any time left on the clock to take the match into overtime.

Wilkinson and Flatley traded penalties again, and just when the game seemed destined for sudden death at 17-17, England’s fly-half struck the blow to break Australian hearts.

The 2003 triumph on Australia soil was seen as revenge for 12 years previously, when the men in gold had snatched the trophy from England at HQ.

After Australia had recorded a shock victory over favourites New Zealand and England had defeated Scotland – helped by Gavin Hastings’ inexplicab­le miss in front of the posts – the two old rivals faced off in the final at Twickenham.

England played a more expansive game in the final, but to little avail. The only try in the match was from an Australian line-out catch and drive.

England argued they should have had a penalty try when Campese deliberate­ly knocked the ball on to prevent a pass to Underwood, who would have had a clear run to the line. However, only a penalty was awarded – one of two kicked by England.

In the end, Australia ran out 12-6 winners.

Never has a host failed to reach the quarterfin­al of a Rugby World Cup, but that was the humiliatin­g fate that befell Engcording

Those three points, scored with 26 seconds left on the clock, gave England their only Rugby World Cup

land in 2015 and, to their great joy, it was Australia that delivered the killer blow.

Stuart Lancaster’s England were drawn in a ‘group of death’ with the Wallabies and Wales inflicted the first damage in the second pool game, Dan Biggar’s penalty from half-way giving them a nailbiting 28-25 victory and making the Australia game a must-win.

But the Wallabies ran riot at Twickenham, fly-alf Bernard Foley scoring two tries in the first half to give Australia a handy lead which they never relinquish­ed.

An Anthony Watson try on 56 minutes gave England a glimmer of hope, but this was extinguish­ed when flyhalf Owen Farrell received a yellow card for a dangerous tackle with 10 minutes to go, and a late Matt Giteau try sealed the Wallaby win.–

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa