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Scots bow out to sloppy England

01st October 2011 06:43

England v Scotland James Haskell

Poor showing: England

England were on the verge of facing up to a premature exit from the 2011 RWC until a late flurry saw them edge out rivals Scotland 16-12 on Saturday.

As it was, Scotland are looking at returning from New Zealand early as they await the result of Argentina's fixture against Georgia on Sunday. The Scots need the Lelos to cause an upset of Tongan proportions in Palmerston North.

But despite England's four victories from four Pool record, questions will be asked following this performance, which lacked any real direction. They were flat for most of the first-half and will need to up the ante when they run out for what will be a last-eight date with France next week.

While the nations were warming up, it was almost comical seeing a suited Martin Johnson prowling about on halfway looking at the Scottish back-line. How he must sometimes wish he could roll back the clock and pull on the white jersey once again for what was the 129th meeting between the duo.

Just ten minutes before kick-off, the heavens had opened at Eden Park while Chris Paterson stood alone putting together the final touches to his goal-kicking routine. And that extra practice seemed to pay off as he was on the mark with his first kick, a tough attempt from wide on the left touchline.

Andy Robinson had not held back in bringing in fresh legs for their Pool finale as Joe Ansbro made only his second start of the tournament. But he was forced into making one other tweak moments before Paterson's effort when Ruaridh Jackson's night was ended due to what looked like a hamstring problem.

His replacement was Dan Parks, who in many people's eyes would be more suited to such weather conditions. He proved his worth too on sixteen minutes as his long-range penalty shot, struck with a low trajectory, crept over the crossbar following approval from the Television Match Official. It hadn't been the most memorable 24 hours for assistant referee Nigel Owens, who had thought the ball had not made the necessary distance. 6-0 it was.

What was more impressive from Andy Robinson's outfit was the fact that they were playing against the wind and winning the pivotal battle at scrum-time. Jonny Wilkinson had also missed three penalty attempts from three, with the booing Scotland supporters lapping it up.

That was all soon to change though on 34 minutes when Wilkinson finally found his range from the left touchline to cut the deficit in half. But a rather worrying statistic for England was that they'd not yet made a visit into the Scottish 22. There was plenty of food for thought for Johnson at the break, particularly after Parks had sat back in the pocket to push the advantage back to six points. Scotland were dominating all facets of play in Auckland.

England desperately needed a strong opening to the second-half and that was exactly what they got when Delon Armitage, in for Mark Cueto, raced down the left touchline before forcing a speculator back inside to a Scottish player. These were good signs for the Red Rose though as Ben Youngs was much quicker at the breakdown, Mike Tindall began to look for work and Matt Stevens seemed to had weathered an in-form Euan Murray.

Things were not improving for an out-of-sorts Wilkinson, however, as he missed a point blank drop-goal attempt that cause many Scotland fans to turn and smile at Johnson in the coaching box. England needed leaders to step up which wasn't happening as they walked to line-outs with their heads down. Johnson needed to make changes to liven up his team, the first was enforced though when Nick Easter came on for captain Moody who had to go to the blood-bin for some running repairs. One sensed though that the likes of Toby Flood and Dylan Hartley wouldn't be too far behind in making an appearance from the bench.

In fact is was Tom Palmer who arrived to join Easter just after Paterson had extended the arrears to beyond that golden seven points. If ever the English needed their own golden boy it was now and Wilkinson stepped up when it mattered with a sweetly-struck drop before the hour that eased some of the heat.

That trend continued soon after too when Wilkinson slotted a touchline penalty to bring England back to 9-12 with seventeen minutes remaining. At this stage, Scotland would have to hope that Georgia would do the unthinkable against Argentina on Sunday. And it was not like they had chances to claim that priceless try as Simon Danielli and then Richie Gray, from a Parks cross-field kick, came close to making England sweat further.

But Johnson's side held on and in fact finished with a flourish when Chris Ashton, a virtual ghost for most of the game, crossed to end Scottish hopes. Replacement fly-half Toby Flood's conversion made it 16-12 which was how it stayed at Eden Park.

Man of the match: Euan Murray was a rock for Scotland during the first 40 minutes while Al Kellock led well. But for his wet-weather masterclass, we have to go for Dan Parks. Thrown on minutes after kick-off, Parks took the right options at the right time and had a good day.

Moment of the match: The English had looked to be heading for more than a seven-point defeat due to Jonny Wilkinson's poor kicking early on. But as soon as he found his range their hopes of progressing to a third straight final improved. It was mighty close though.

Villain of the match: None to speak of.

The scorers:

For England:
Try: Ashton
Con: Flood
Pen: Wilkinson 2
Drop: Wilkinson

For Scotland:
Pen: Paterson 2, Parks
Drop: Parks

England: 15 Ben Foden, 14 Chris Ashton, 13 Manu Tuilagi, 12 Mike Tindall, 11 Delon Armitage, 10 Jonny Wilkinson, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 James Haskell, 7 Lewis Moody (capt), 6 Tom Croft, 5 Courtney Lawes, 4 Louis Deacon, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Steve Thompson, 1 Matt Stevens.
Replacements: 16 Dylan Hartley, 17 Alex Corbisiero, 18 Tom Palmer, 19 Nick Easter, 20 Richard Wigglesworth, 21 Toby Flood, 22 Matt Banahan.

Scotland: 15 Chris Paterson, 14 Max Evans, 13 Joe Ansbro, 12 Sean Lamont, 11 Simon Danielli, 10 Ruaridh Jackson, 9 Mike Blair, 8 Richie Vernon, 7 John Barclay, 6 Ally Strokosch, 5 Alastair Kellock (capt), 4 Richie Gray, 3 Euan Murray, 2 Ross Ford, 1 Allan Jacobsen.
Replacements: 16 Scott Lawson, 17 Alasdair Dickinson, 18 Nathan Hines, 19 Ross Rennie, 20 Chris Cusiter, 21 Dan Parks, 22 Nick de Luca.

Referee: Craig Joubert (RSA)
Assistant referees: Nigel Owens (WAL); Jérôme Garces (FRA)

By Adam Kyriacou at Eden Park

Comments

lawynd says...

I almost wish Scotland had won the game, because at the very least it would have kicked quite a few English players up the backside, and given Johnson more reason to tear into them - heaven knows they need it. I know all of the platitudes that are often levelled at Scotland are applicable - grit, determination, heart, etc. but they were, a dropped ball aside, good value for winning the game and playing well in most facets. England were just going through the motions and even when they did try to up the tempo, the execution was terrible. Some blame has to lay with the coaching team too, because the tactics were all wrong; the try showed that if we select the personnel and game plan to play with width, we can carve open opportunities, and I'd much rather see the ambition to go to the corner than kick for three, especially when it appears that someone's attached lead weights to Wilkinson's boots.

Didn't the substitutions make a difference? Sadly, the depth of the talent pool in Scotland was exposed, as their subs weren't able to have a significant impact on the game whereas Palmer, Flood and Wigglesworth all made huge contributions within minutes of coming on. It's also fairly obvious that Stevens needs some intensive coaching sessions if he is to continue playing at loosehead; even then, I'd rather see Corbisiero as the first-choice. That said, one major gripe I have from the game is that Joubert never once called Murray for binding on Stevens' arm at every single scrum - poor, in what was otherwise an excellent performance from the officials.

I'll be cheering on Georgia even harder tomorrow (why couldn't you have just beaten Argentina last week!), and I'm sure I can find something blue in the wardrobe to wear. I'd say 'congratulations' Scotland, but playing so well is not much consolation when you come away with nothing.

Posted 11:06 01st October 2011

tb032004 says...

That was the worst game I have ever seen. After spending 8 minutes reseting the scrums every time, the ref should have just started awarding penalties the first time it went down. That would force the teams to actually PLAY rugby.

The English scrumhalf should make two changes ...... don't box kick EVERY time and on the rare occasion that he didn't, he stood over the ball for 2 minutes.

Worst game ever.

Posted 10:52 01st October 2011

NHsaints says...

If I were scottish I'd be proud of the performance, in the end it was always going to be Englands game...it was just a matter of how we did it...poor kicking and decision making from our halfbacks held us back today england, bring Flood and wigglesworth up for starting the france game and I think we'll see a much stronger more clinical performance.

Posted 10:44 01st October 2011

Rorschach says...

Well done England! Not pretty, not fancy, not very secure but the result counts. Feel sorry for the Scots (apart from whoever stamped on Moody's face) - they were unlucky to be pipped at the end where I think England's superior fitness told.

It's important to be able to win ugly physical games and that is why teams who may not be considered great contenders do well at the world cup. South Africa know this very well. Australia do not, hence the defeat to Ireland. If they can't win pretty they struggle to adjust their game plan.

What does Flood need to do to start ahead of Wilkinson? More importantly how badly does Wilkinson have to play?

Posted 10:43 01st October 2011

moaman says...

I hope Wilkonson isn't badly injured because with him at the helm England won't get past the quarters.Flood did more in 5 mnutes at 10 than Jonny managed in 60.

Posted 10:33 01st October 2011

hayj05 says...

What a great set of matches played so far in the final weekend of pool stages. Bokke/Samoa, France/Tonga, & England/Scotland have all been intense & enthralling battles. Fiji/Wales & Ireland/Italy still to come. What a brilliant way to build up to the QFs.

Was going for Scotland, but great fightback by England.

Posted 10:30 01st October 2011

ruckman says...

Brave effort by the Scots - England..predicatable and poor - well refereed by Joubert.

Tuilagi, Ashton and Foden are fine players and if we had a decent coaching/managemt setup we would see so much more of what they have to offer.

Posted 10:30 01st October 2011

melkdave says...

A struttering England performance but a win even if ugly .Cant fault Scotland chucked everything at England including the kitchin sink i think and just fell short .If only they had held out against Argentinia whitch was what i hoping for ,just 1 lapse .This tournament can be so cruel One thing i think it proves is England need to start with Flood at 10 even if Jonny eventually clicked.Now if only Georgia can win by 8 points .SO IF YOUR BRITISH ITS COME ON GEORGIA.Not imo beyond the realms of possiabilty.Phew need a tea now to regain my karma lol

Posted 10:25 01st October 2011

Jediboy says...

First thing I want to say - well done Scotland. You should be proud of your effort.

Well done England for getting the result but you should not be so proud.

That was a shocking performance.

Youngs distribution was terrible, poor decision making and kicking from Wilkinson. Far too many basic handling errors. We need to step it up in a massive way.

But we did enough and live to fight another day.

Posted 10:24 01st October 2011

cantyboy says...

I was screaming and yelling at Scotland for a couple of poor options with chip kicks inside Englands 22 that i think cost them in the end,awesome Scots display in 1st half,rugby however is 2 halves and they failed to keep the forward pressure on in the scrums.Game Scotland should have won.

Posted 10:23 01st October 2011

northampton32 says...

i am so relieved, but I feel for Andy Robinson, he must be raging...

Posted 10:18 01st October 2011

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