Lee Grant
John Eales (66)
Well done lads says he who is having one glass extra of red over the limit to celebrate.
I thought the Poms had the psychic energy, as Mexted would say, at one point for about 15 minutes and when they took the lead I thought: it's the same old shit, different day, of getting a lead and losing the game. But they re-established themselves and fought back.
This feature and the dominance in the scrum were the two big improvements for the Wallabies in this match. When we got the first scrum free kick against us when we engaged when the ref said to and Fat Cat drove through and wheeled the scrum - and the Pom scrummie didn't put the ball in on time - I thought it was going to be an "if in doubt ping the Wallabies" day.
But to his credit Jonkers judged the scrums on merit and generally gave the Wallabies the rub of the green. He should have had the whistle in Hong Kong.
The defence over the park was dynamite especially after we got the lead back. Tipoki will be going to the dentist to get his fillings checked come Monday. The Oz midfield terrorized the Kiwi and Noon all night and although Tippie got a couple of breaks with his trademark jink, the Pom midfield was outpointed on the night.
Give or take a blunder or two Mortlock and Cross had marvellous matches.
The same cannot be said for Luke Burgess, who had his worst game of his professional career. Defenders seemed to have their hands on him all the time. Excellent Pom counter-rucking causing bad ball was responsible for part of it, but most of his dithering was self-inflicted.
Did anybody get the name of the Wallaby who had the blue headgear and the number 5 on his back? Geez, he bore an uncanny resemblance to Nathan Sharpe but it couldn't have been because he was hitting rucks, making tackles and played for 80 minutes. Scrummaging aside I thought he was our best forward.
Smith didn't dominate as I thought he might and the Oz players weren't as quick to the breakdown as the Poms were except in the last quarter. Whilst they didn't win too many hits in the scrum they often won the hit in the ruck by being there earlier and having more intent, especially in 2nd efforts on our ball.
I don't know who was man of the match. Giteau may have got it for his penalties and fielding crap ball from Burgess with surety, but I would give it to Al Baxter, who had the best scrum result of his life. No doubt Fat Cat and Moore had a lot to do with the scrum performance and maybe the 2nd row contributed for a change, but I would give the gong to Big Al.
The Wallabies looked buggered towards the end after a significant tackle count against them and to their credit they held on and defended aggressively, but the bench should have been used earlier.
The Poms were even more inexperienced than the Wallabies and it showed in their lack of composure and the number of unforced turnovers and penalties they surrendered.
Their scrum and lineout were problematic but they earned better quality ball on other occasions than the Wallabies did. They had a dominant period and whereas the old Roses would have stretched that out for the rest of the game, the new team couldn't do that.
Care played well, Cipriani made a couple of flashing breaks, the wingers hardly got the pill in their hands, but it was fullback Armitage again who took my eye as the classiest Pom player. He's not a specialist 15 but he is shaping up well.
It's good to see Oz winning a match whilst not playing that well and it was particularly good to win it by the way the Poms have dished it out to us in the past - by doing a Jonnie on them and kicking the goals.
I haven't seen Wales and France play this weekend as I write this and Wales didn't play their main team anyway, but if the Wallabies play as they did for much of the 2nd half and Burgess lifts his game, we are a chance to get out of Europe undefeated.
I thought the Poms had the psychic energy, as Mexted would say, at one point for about 15 minutes and when they took the lead I thought: it's the same old shit, different day, of getting a lead and losing the game. But they re-established themselves and fought back.
This feature and the dominance in the scrum were the two big improvements for the Wallabies in this match. When we got the first scrum free kick against us when we engaged when the ref said to and Fat Cat drove through and wheeled the scrum - and the Pom scrummie didn't put the ball in on time - I thought it was going to be an "if in doubt ping the Wallabies" day.
But to his credit Jonkers judged the scrums on merit and generally gave the Wallabies the rub of the green. He should have had the whistle in Hong Kong.
The defence over the park was dynamite especially after we got the lead back. Tipoki will be going to the dentist to get his fillings checked come Monday. The Oz midfield terrorized the Kiwi and Noon all night and although Tippie got a couple of breaks with his trademark jink, the Pom midfield was outpointed on the night.
Give or take a blunder or two Mortlock and Cross had marvellous matches.
The same cannot be said for Luke Burgess, who had his worst game of his professional career. Defenders seemed to have their hands on him all the time. Excellent Pom counter-rucking causing bad ball was responsible for part of it, but most of his dithering was self-inflicted.
Did anybody get the name of the Wallaby who had the blue headgear and the number 5 on his back? Geez, he bore an uncanny resemblance to Nathan Sharpe but it couldn't have been because he was hitting rucks, making tackles and played for 80 minutes. Scrummaging aside I thought he was our best forward.
Smith didn't dominate as I thought he might and the Oz players weren't as quick to the breakdown as the Poms were except in the last quarter. Whilst they didn't win too many hits in the scrum they often won the hit in the ruck by being there earlier and having more intent, especially in 2nd efforts on our ball.
I don't know who was man of the match. Giteau may have got it for his penalties and fielding crap ball from Burgess with surety, but I would give it to Al Baxter, who had the best scrum result of his life. No doubt Fat Cat and Moore had a lot to do with the scrum performance and maybe the 2nd row contributed for a change, but I would give the gong to Big Al.
The Wallabies looked buggered towards the end after a significant tackle count against them and to their credit they held on and defended aggressively, but the bench should have been used earlier.
The Poms were even more inexperienced than the Wallabies and it showed in their lack of composure and the number of unforced turnovers and penalties they surrendered.
Their scrum and lineout were problematic but they earned better quality ball on other occasions than the Wallabies did. They had a dominant period and whereas the old Roses would have stretched that out for the rest of the game, the new team couldn't do that.
Care played well, Cipriani made a couple of flashing breaks, the wingers hardly got the pill in their hands, but it was fullback Armitage again who took my eye as the classiest Pom player. He's not a specialist 15 but he is shaping up well.
It's good to see Oz winning a match whilst not playing that well and it was particularly good to win it by the way the Poms have dished it out to us in the past - by doing a Jonnie on them and kicking the goals.
I haven't seen Wales and France play this weekend as I write this and Wales didn't play their main team anyway, but if the Wallabies play as they did for much of the 2nd half and Burgess lifts his game, we are a chance to get out of Europe undefeated.