Bristol Post

Women’s rugby England skipper so proud of her ‘special group’

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ENGLAND captain Sarah Hunter saluted a “special group” of Red Roses after the heartbreak of World Cup final defeat against New Zealand.

England went down 34-31, having played more than an hour with 14 on the field after Lydia Thompson was sent off in the 18th minute.

Despite facing the tournament hosts in front of a sold-out Eden Park a player down, Hunter was convinced her side, who led for much of the match, would find a way to come out on top.

She said: “I had absolute belief that they would do it. There was never any doubt that we wouldn’t find a way to win. There was no panic, we just had absolute faith in what we were doing. Unfortunat­ely it didn’t work out our way.

“We’re as one. We win together and lose together. There is no blame culture in this team. We’re all accountabl­e for whether we win or lose.

“We can be proud of the squad we have become. The girls left everything out on the field. Our backs against the wall for 60 minutes of the game. To be in with a shot of winning right at the end...

“This is a very special group and we can be immensely proud of what we have done as a team over these last eight weeks. One game doesn’t define you.”

A frantic first half saw seven tries and England led 26-19 at the break.

Second-half tries from Stacey Fluhler and Krystal Murray fired the Black Ferns ahead and, although Amy Cokayne’s hat-trick try edged England back in front, Ayesha Leti-I’iga finished off a fine move late in the game for what proved to be the match-winning try.

England coach Simon Middleton said: “It was a great game. Fitting of a World Cup final. Great occasion and a final to match.”

England had an opportunit­y from the line-out at the death and he said: “I thought, ‘someone is going to have a great 30 seconds here’ but it didn’t happen. Sometimes things are written in the stars and I think it has been for the Black Ferns in this tournament.”

On Thompson’s 18th-minute red card for a high tackle on Portia Woodman, Middleton said: “She is pretty upset. She is devastated. It is just an unfortunat­e clash of heads. There was no malice in it whatsoever. It took two of the best players in the world out of the game.

“We looked at how we could adapt in attack and defence. We adapted as we went along. The game was challengin­g enough as it was and then there were a few more things thrown in there. But I could not be more proud of the players.”

 ?? Picture: Phil Walter/Getty ?? England’s Sarah Hunter tackles New Zealand’s Charmaine McMenamin
Picture: Phil Walter/Getty England’s Sarah Hunter tackles New Zealand’s Charmaine McMenamin

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