The Scottish Mail on Sunday

A TOTAL ECLIPSE OF THE AUSSIES

All Blacks still to be conquered but it’s still an epic series triumph by rampant England

- From Chris Foy

AS THEY stood on the field with their Cook Cup, their whitewash and their historic glory, England’s players were almost too exhausted to celebrate, let alone take in the magnitude of what they had just done.

Once the dust had settled on a pulsating, record-breaking classic of a Test match, the national team were still seeking in vain to sidestep the spectre of triumphali­sm, despite the sheer scale of their epic feats. Put simply, this was the second greatest achievemen­t in all the years the English have been engaged in this sport.

Only the World Cup victory by Sir Clive Woodward’s immortals in 2003 sits higher in the pantheon.

So although such valiant modesty and perfection­ism serves a purpose in the bigger picture of the Red Rose quest to overhaul the All Blacks as the world’s pre-eminent force, it can be temporaril­y ignored by all those on the outside looking in at this quite staggering salvage operation.

From the depths of the World Cup debacle, it has been a phoenix-fromthe-ashes rise.

Where to start. Nine wins in a row under Jones, to leave England on a run of 10 consecutiv­e victories – only four short of their record, set by Woodward’s icons. The most points they have ever scored against one of the southern hemisphere superpower­s away from home.

The first time the Wallabies have been whitewashe­d since the Springboks did it to them in 1971. A Grand Slam, a rout of the World Cup finalists and a climb to No2 in the global rankings. Dylan Hartley emerging as favourite for the Lions captaincy. Other players nudging towards the elusive world-class category, not least Owen Farrell, Billy Vunipola and Maro Itoje.

On the basis of that large bundle of majestic exploits, all the post-match talk of defensive lapses and individual­s falling short of expectatio­ns can be taken with a colossal pinch of salt. Yet, Jones was determined to set a tone of guarded satisfacti­on.

‘We weren’t at our best, we had a number of players sub-par, but it was a fantastic effort from the squad to beat a very good and determined Australia side,’ said the head coach. ‘We’re pleased with the 3-0 result, but we realise we’ve got a lot of work to do.

‘We’re inconsiste­nt in our defence. We have had two poor games in defence and one very good game.

‘It is a great start for us, but only a start. If we’re going to be the best team in the world, we need to be much more consistent and we’ll work very hard to get that over the next three years. We’re not happy with our performanc­e, even though we’re happy with the result.’

However, Jones did concede that his team had reached an historic peak, just seven months after he took over from Stuart Lancaster and set about launching the revival. ‘Very few sides beat Australia in Australia,’ he said. ‘The All Blacks do but there aren’t too many others.

‘We’ve not only beaten Australia, we’ve beaten them 3-0 and it’s the first time they’ve been whitewashe­d since South Africa did it here in 1971. There have been a few tours since then so it’s a significan­t achievemen­t.’

This was a staggering result in an extraordin­ary encounter; founded in part on another illustrati­on of Jones’ ruthlessne­ss. In the 31st minute, he took off Northampto­n back-rower Teimana Harrison, to unleash another Saints forward, Courtney Lawes, who went on to have a major impact. The same fate had befallen Luther Burrell in Brisbane a fortnight earlier.

This was a fast-and-loose thriller, utterly at odds with the stodgy clash in Melbourne last week. Frankly, it was merry mayhem. The lead changed hands with bewilderin­g regularity. In amongst the chaos, The Vunipola brothers, Mako and Billy, once again brought the visitors clout and momentum, while Dan Cole and Itoje also stood out in a herculean pack effort to quell the Australian resistance.

Farrell rattled up 24 points with nine successful kicks at goal out of 10, but there was also English craft and finesse at times in this series finale — led by a noticeably liberated George Ford. Four tries were testament to greater tempo and precision in attack, although squanderin­g other chances and conceding five tries to the Wallabies handed Jones and his assistants ample ammunition to focus tired minds.

There was no pattern or logic to the turbulent proceeding­s at all from the 11th minute when Cole crossed from close-range for his third Test try. England’s second try on the half-hour stemmed from Anthony Watson’s chip ahead and Mike Brown’s utter determinat­ion to touch down despite being tackled by the mighty Tevita Kuridrani.

In the mean-time, Bernard Foley — the executione­r-in-chief when England were dispatched from their own World Cup last autumn — crossed at the other end to start a 20-point haul. The Wallabies struck again before the break when Foley and Israel Folau combined to tee up Dane Haylett-Petty on the right wing and Michael Cheika’s hosts went into half-time 18-17 up.

After that, the pendulum kept on swinging in front of an enthralled record attendance for Sydney Football Stadium. Billy Vunipola crashed over from a scrum. England led. Michael Hooper scored for the Wallabies and it was all square again.

Matt Toomua set up a try for Folau to suggest that the Australian­s were seizing control. Not so. Farrell’s boot kept it tight then the visitors earned a lucky break as a pass from Danny Care bounced off Jamie George’s leg, over the line and the hooker pounced to touch down.

Farrell’s conversion and last penalty had seemingly settled it, only for Taqele Naiyaravor­o to cross in injury time.

England go home with thunderous momentum and belief. The way the Red Rose juggernaut is rumbling on, there is every chance of an autumn clean sweep against South Africa, Fiji, Argentina and the Wallabies. That would leave them on 14 consecutiv­e wins and complete a 100-per-cent return in the calendar year.

The world-record sequence of 17 victories would then be under grave threat during the next Six Nations. That is a long leap ahead, but English confidence and conviction have been restored to a level not seen since 2003. It almost beggars belief that this has all come so fast, from the rubble of the World Cup.

To hell with caution; what a sixmonth journey, what a coach, what a squad and what an astonishin­g tour.

 ??  ?? THRILL OF THE CHASE: Brown heads for the line, with Hooper and Kuridrani (right) in hot pursuit HOT SHOT: Owen Farrell
THRILL OF THE CHASE: Brown heads for the line, with Hooper and Kuridrani (right) in hot pursuit HOT SHOT: Owen Farrell
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