England 19 Oz 8
Some more thoughts on the game.
• The young Poms were well drilled and looked a couple of years ahead of the Aussies in coaching though they were a year younger and lost nothing in physicality. Unfortunately two of their lads were badly hurt and had to be assisted off.
• The Oz players were badly disciplined and suffered in points, possession and territory when they were penalised – often in favourable positions. The Poms were always challenging the offside line at the rucks and adjusted when they had to. The Aussies tended to stand around to wait, see and react.
• As a rugby lover it was good to see the level to which U/18 lads can be coached. Unfortunately they were wearing black jerseys. [Yes, the same as the England RWC away strip.]
• The Aussie strength was when the ball was whipped out wide or otherwise when the outside backs got the pill but poor handling, supports running in front of the ball carrier and wingers repeatedly stepping outside touch, after their mates crabbed across the park, put paid to a lot of promising moves. The forwards were also guilty of clumsiness near the England goal line.
• Oz was free-kicked and penalised repeatedly in the scrums although they did well at the beginning of the game. It was a windy day but Oz had more not straight throws than England and it would have been better to throw shorter. Also, the Pom lineout jumpers were routinely lifted higher than the Oz boys when either side was defending.
• It was only one try each but England kicked 4 penalty kicks to 1 taking advantage of Oz indiscipline. Oz left 6 and possibly 9 points on the park by eschewing penalty kicks at goal to go for the try. All that makes it seem a close run thing, but you had to be there.
• Oz got a yellow card early in the 2nd half for repeated infringments, but when Oz went down to the Pom goal line after that the Poms infringed cynically against an Oz maul. There could have been a card against the Poms as the Oz maul was almost running forward for the goal line. But they were rewarded by their earlier better discipline. Oz went for another 5M lineout but the ball squirted out and the better coached Poms pounced on the pill.
• The Poms forwards were like NZ Schools at the breakdown always trying to get “their” ball back. They dominated the ruck and unlike the Aussies didn't stop at the ball, but drove past.
• When I say the Poms were better coached, I don't mean in the last two weeks or so. It was obvious that they had a backlog of fine coaching in their young lives. Just like their seniors, the Pom juniors controlled the game as though they were born to it.
• It wasn't all gloom and doom for Oz: they defended well and they had some good players and good moments. But one always felt that something promising would break down, and apart from their first try early in the game in a goal line siege, it did. With the coaching that the young England players had obviously had they would have done a lot better.