England certainly got the rub of the green with the officials in this game.
The England LHP was boring in in every scrum as soon as the ball was fed. Finished at 90 degrees to the front row line every time, except for a couple where he went to ground. I don't expect Poite to pull this up any more than Jaco did last night.
A lot of talk here about how poor Vola Vola was, and rightly so. But Ford was really little better at 10 for England. Good kicking game, but was standing exceptionally deep in attack in the first half, didn't once take the line on himself that I saw, and didn't put any of his supports into space. England's attack was simply to send the ball to the wings with an overlap (reminiscent of the Crusaders for a lot of 2015 Super). Fiji was mostly able to cope with that attack by having the winger hit the second last player in line and having a very fast cover defender take the winger, and it worked for most of the game.
Nobody seems to be questioning England's second try. In my view, the lock who intercepted the throw was part of the lineout and left the 15 metre area before the ball crossed that line. Was he not offside?
All in all, despite the cheating in the scrum, England was at least matched by the Fiji scrum and should present little problem for the Aussie pack given fair refereeing. The England backline was almost pedestrian save for May and Brown, and really should be no threat to the Wallabies. Fiji, on the other hand, I thought played with more flair and pace, but as always looked like amateurs against professionals. Always beaten to the loose ball, and the high ball, and susceptible to making basic errors under pressure.