Langthorne
Phil Hardcastle (33)
A few comments from the man himself:
http://www.skysports.com/story/0,19528,12336_6202994,00.html
Deans hails Wallabies' courage
....Wallabies coach Robbie Deans hailed the courage of his side after Australia survived an England fightback to clinch victory in the first Test at Perth.
The hosts raced to a 14-0 half-time lead but England reduced the arrears to 14-10, and then 21-17, before Australia secured a 27-17 triumph.
An injury crisis had forced Deans to field the most inexperienced Australian front row in 27 years, with debutant loosehead prop Ben Daley, hooker Saia Fainga'a and tighthead Salesi Ma'afu boasting just two caps and one Test start between them.
But Deans believed the front row - and his side in general - had acquitted themselves well to claim the victory at the Subiaco Oval...
The Wallabies coach said: "It took an awful lot of courage from our group to win that game.
"Our lineout was very good and when you consider that we had made just nine tackles at the 30 minute mark, that contributed to our ability to defend when we had to.
"It is fair to say our group will be a lot better for the experience.
"I thought the front row did pretty well considering what was asked of them physically and the courage they had to show.
"Given they were on the receiving end at scrum time they didn't go into their shells. They kept coming physically in defence and they had the courage to play when they had the opportunity.
"We got up and that is Test rugby and that is the only thing that matters."
Two points arising:
1. He seems to think the front row did pretty well, and the experience (once their bums stop bleeding) will have done them good.
2. He wants to be judged on wins - because that is the only thing that matters (except the ones they have lost, which are for the experience?).
.
http://www.skysports.com/story/0,19528,12336_6202994,00.html
Deans hails Wallabies' courage
....Wallabies coach Robbie Deans hailed the courage of his side after Australia survived an England fightback to clinch victory in the first Test at Perth.
The hosts raced to a 14-0 half-time lead but England reduced the arrears to 14-10, and then 21-17, before Australia secured a 27-17 triumph.
An injury crisis had forced Deans to field the most inexperienced Australian front row in 27 years, with debutant loosehead prop Ben Daley, hooker Saia Fainga'a and tighthead Salesi Ma'afu boasting just two caps and one Test start between them.
But Deans believed the front row - and his side in general - had acquitted themselves well to claim the victory at the Subiaco Oval...
The Wallabies coach said: "It took an awful lot of courage from our group to win that game.
"Our lineout was very good and when you consider that we had made just nine tackles at the 30 minute mark, that contributed to our ability to defend when we had to.
"It is fair to say our group will be a lot better for the experience.
"I thought the front row did pretty well considering what was asked of them physically and the courage they had to show.
"Given they were on the receiving end at scrum time they didn't go into their shells. They kept coming physically in defence and they had the courage to play when they had the opportunity.
"We got up and that is Test rugby and that is the only thing that matters."
Two points arising:
1. He seems to think the front row did pretty well, and the experience (once their bums stop bleeding) will have done them good.
2. He wants to be judged on wins - because that is the only thing that matters (except the ones they have lost, which are for the experience?).
.