The Scottish Mail on Sunday

... AND THRASH AUSSIES Rugby special

Jones unleashes beasts as England muscle their way past Wallabies again

- By Nik Simon

ENGLAND cranked up the power as their heaviest ever backline — all 110st of it — rounded off the autumn campaign with their third victory in four matches.

They saved the best until last, with the muscle of Manu Tuilagi, Joe Cokanasiga and Kyle Sinckler combining in the second half to see off the Wallabies.

Eddie Jones laughed and joked as he reflected on the campaign, warning that Cokanasiga will get even better when he swaps his ‘training pants’ for ‘proper pants’.

‘He’s gone shopping now,’ quipped Jones, having watched his rookie winger split open the Australian defence.

Jones shared a hug with Tuilagi, who made his first Test appearance since 2016, and then issued a ‘bringit-on’ call for next year’s Six Nations.

His sparring partner, Michael Cheika, was not in such high spirits. Australia were level at half-time and they would have snatched a lead were it not for some strange refereeing by Jaco Peyper.

Not for the first time this autumn, the television match official was at the heart of the debate and, once again, questions were asked about Owen Farrell’s tackle technique.

‘Ludicrous,’ blasted Cheika, having watched the No10 escape a yellow card and penalty try for a blatant shoulder charge on Izack Rodda in the 40th minute.

In the grand scheme of the scoreline, the incident made little difference but poor officiatin­g is becoming a frustratin­g theme.

The Wallabies were consigned to their worst year since 1958 and England eventually romped towards a record 37-point haul.

It took only 131 seconds for Jonny May to score the opening try off the back of a powerful scrum but they waited 40 minutes for their second. Jones’ side are masters at delivering 40-minute performanc­es but that will not be good enough when they travel to Ireland in March.

Australia were shorn of Adam Ashley-Cooper and Kurtley Beale, banned for bringing three women back to their hotel room, yet managed to land first-half counter punches.

‘All the shenanigan­s off the field generally brings a side together,’ said Jones. ‘In the first half, we had opportunit­ies to get a bit further ahead but we missed those. We allowed them to regroup.’

In the absence of turnover talisman David Pocock, Australia were hounded at the breakdown and failed to breach the English 22 for almost half an hour.

Their shambolic year was summed up in one first-half moment, with Bernard Foley throwing a no-look pass to nobody, but England fumbled the ball and missed two kicks at goal. Farrell and Matt Toomua exchanged penalties before Australia salvaged their way back onto the scoreboard despite the efforts of Peyper.

After 27 minutes, following trial by the Twickenham mob, Dane Haylett-Petty had a try ruled out. Toomua was already lining up the conversion but, after some help from TV producers, Peyper ruled out the score for a forward pass. Home advantage? Check.

But, out of nowhere, Australia were back in the hunt. Catching the ball off balance, full-back Israel Folau glided between Farrell and Maro Itoje before sidesteppi­ng Ben Youngs to score under the posts.

Minutes later, they pleaded for a penalty try when Farrell struck Rodda but had to settle for a Toomua penalty as Cheika vented his rage.

‘I went to the referee’s meeting in the first week and they referred back to the Farrell tackle against South Africa,’ said Cheika. ‘They hung referee Angus Gardiner out to dry by saying that should have been a penalty in front of all the coaches. If that was a penalty, this was three.’

With Cheika still fuming, Farrell conjured up England’s second try after 44 minutes.

Elliot Daly ran a close support line before weaving around Will Genia and Haylett-Petty to score.

And with that, the Wallabies started to run out of gas.

Training pants and all, Cokanasiga bounced off Haylett-Petty to score from a standing start and then Twickenham watched in awe as its new giant winger almost scored a spectacula­r second in the 64th minute.

Claiming the ball in the air on halfway, the rookie spun away from Bernard Foley and sidesteppe­d Toomua but was hauled down inches short by Michael Hooper.

Jones said: ‘I think I know my 31man squad for the World Cup pretty well but I might switch it up and go and find an average joe on the street to see if he wants to join in as well!’

‘This was today though. Ireland’s a different kettle of fish and we’ll see that when we’re there. We don’t play Ireland until February, so we’ll worry about that then.’

Tuilagi was introduced for an 11-minute cameo his introducti­on drew the loudest cheer of the day but, fittingly, it was Farrell who scored England’s final try.

Folau score a second try at the death — but it couldn’t wipe the smile off the face of Jones’ beasts. SCORERS; England — Tries: May, Daly, Cokanasiga,

Farrell. Cons: Farrell (4). Pens: Farrell (3). Australia — Tries: Folau (2). Cons: Toomua. Pens: Toomua (2). Referee: Jaco Peyper (SA). Attendance: 82,000.

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 ??  ?? POWER PLAY: Farrell (No 10) is hailed by team-mates for scoring England’s fourth try in a convincing win over the Wallabies
POWER PLAY: Farrell (No 10) is hailed by team-mates for scoring England’s fourth try in a convincing win over the Wallabies
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