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17 minutes: Better commotion from England, this time from Nowell, Wright who got in touch after a magnificent box exit on the right. However, off the ball, Genge catches the TMO’s attention for being too aggressive after the play on the whites. It will not be an England line-up, it will be an Australian penalty. Costly and unnecessary indiscipline.
PENAL! Australia 0-13 England (Farrell, 15)
From the right of the uprights this time Farrell caresses his third of the night. England flying.
14 minutes: Valetini does well under pressure, but England is attacking with its defensive line, drowning all the ball bearers with gold. These are intimidating things from the rugby league. Then Tupou is penalized for starting contact without his arms, and England have another shot on goal.
13 minutes: The first scrum of the night quickly ends with a free kick penalty against Tupou and England throw by territory.
12 minutes: Australia with their first dangerous run through Koroibete throwing from the left, but no phase play, and almost an expensive interception, but Hill can not stand with the dreams of an attempt 60 m clouding his vision.
PENAL! Australia 0-10 England (Farrell, 11)
Farrell, just outside the 22 m, 15 m from the touch, is not wrong.
10 minutes: England with a kickable penalty shortly after fighting the ball away from a Wallaby lineup.
Jordan Petaia has failed his HIA.
9 minutes: Australia wins their first lineout thrown halfway before Lolesio makes chips and chases down the aisle. England face off, before a kick-off set that seems to favor the Steward, who shoots dangerously and chases hard, but Wright does well to get out of jail on the lime and then the tourists award a penalty for failure to keep the Wallabies off the track. hook.
7 minutes: England have accepted the match on almost every occasion so far tonight. The whole group has played the line to the beat and their backs have shown quick hands. Brilliant start.
CONVERTED TEST! Australia 0-7 England (Vunipola, 5)
England marks seconds after the restart! A simple 5 m line throw, captured by Lawes, was unloaded at Vunipola, and the maul swarmed over the line in the blink of an eye. Blitzkrieg stuff from tourists.
Farrell screws up very well from the left side line.
4 minutes: England are ahead early, working in phases and hitting the line to the beat. George and Vunipola cross the winning line, then the ball comes out to the left through hands at a pace, including an ingenious touch from Porter I think. Just when the momentum starts to increase, there is a turnover near the line and the Wallabies are eliminated.
Not good for Australia, but with Petaia staggering a bit after getting the wrong head position in an entry. This will be an HIA.
3 minutes: England win their first line-up throw, but they can’t do it long after the Wallabies piss in midfield on the breakdown. He soon returns to the white hands, but with Smith going to heaven forcing Petaia to score.
2 minutes: Australia secures the kick-off near their 22nd, establishes a strong base and White starts the line. In response, England is excited and Genge breaks the line, knocking Hooper to the ground. For some reason, England are trying to get rid of it despite the numbers on the left and the Australian boot clear.
Ellis Genge dodges the tackle. Photography: Cameron Spencer / Getty Images
Updated at 11.21 BST
Home!
Owen Farrell launches the action in Brisbane.
The Wallabies sing Advance Australia Fair twice, first in the Yugambeh language, with support from the Yugambeh Youth Choir. Excellent work from Rugby Australia this week.
The traditional Welcome to Country has become a rally back home. 10 minutes after the scheduled start, Suncorp Stadium is being run in a shrill rendition of “Aussie Aussie Aussie, hey, hey, hey.” To be fair, it’s a damn better vision than the love that is God Save The Queen that follows immediately after.
He knew even less about rugby then than he does now, but it was obvious that Mark Ella was a separate player, a man who played on a different plane than the mere mortals around him, a supernatural balance that gave him time to make perfect decisions. and run them @JPHowcroft
– Gary Naylor (@ garynaylor999) July 9, 2022
A name worthy of the trophy.
And now the Wallabies, hitting the Suncorp Stadium turf at a brisk pace and cheering the crowd with their excellent golden shirts with green artistic detail.
Here come the visitors in their ice-white uniforms. About 50,000 Queenslanders are not impressed.
The lights have been turned off at Suncorp Stadium while Mitch Tambo goes out on the field to sing “You’re the Voice” in Gamilaraay language, with the support of other indigenous artists. It is rad.
Sam Underhill did not appear in Perth, but he will be vital to England’s chances in Brisbane, especially if he can beat Michael Hooper. Rob Kitson has more.
Perhaps the only bright spot that came out of the first humiliation of the England test was Henry Arundell’s cameo. As Gerard Meagher reports, the challenge now is to keep a lid on the hype.
Australia had the game won when Arundell scored his first try, but nonetheless reduced Andrew Kellaway and Noah Lolesio to the slap, clashing in a way that Laurel and Hardy would have been proud of, before launching into the left corner and evoke. memories of Jason Robinson’s rehearsal for the British and Irish lions in Brisbane, where they are now in England, 21 years ago.
In his weekly column The Breakdown, Rob Kitson laments how rugby follows other sports on a slippery slope towards a discourse focused mainly on controversy, especially online.
Sport is nothing if it only causes anger. As in all best drama, there must also be hats of warm emotional light. Too much flashy negativity and everyone loses. The morale of this sports story? Cut your audience and the path to perdition awaits you.
Good morning @JPHowcroft. I’ve been pretty sad all week about last Saturday and I have low expectations here, but I would also recommend it worth watching this @SquidgeRugby video. It shows that not everything is so bad with England. A little hope for the Smith / Faz axis? Https://t.co/81LCCcffIb
– Guy Hornsby (@GuyHornsby) July 9, 2022
Conditions: The east coast of Australia has been exceptionally wet and cold this winter. Luckily, it’s dry in Brisbane tonight, but the grass at Suncorp Stadium will be pretty heavy. Otherwise, it will be cool and still under the lights.
Learn more about First Nations T-shirts in Australia and their importance.
The Wallabies will wear their magnificent First Nations shirt tonight and sing the national anthem in the local Yugambeh language. Mike Hytner has more information on this excellent initiative to bring rugby closer to Australia’s Indigenous people.
This is a fascinating look at the bottom of Gerard Meagher’s Wallaby Samu Kerevi demolition ball.
“I had a pretty tough upbringing,” Kerevi says. “My mother had us before the wedding, quite young, between 19 and 20. It was a pretty difficult situation. They weren’t in the best area and there was a lot of criminal activity. It was my grandmother’s sister’s family. , I was raised, in Fiji, all the greats are your grandparents. [My grandfather] He worked for the Commonwealth at the time and was assigned to the Solomon Islands. My older brother went with my grandparents, I went with another group of grandparents and my little brother stayed with my parents because financially they couldn’t support all three of us.
Let’s go back to some more pre-match analysis, and Rob Kitson has focused on Eddie Jones and how the future of the England coach could be reduced to the performance of a rookie backline.
Jones ’fundraising selection for the supposedly crucial second test against the Wallabies has raised more than a few eyebrows. Three 21-year-olds, a 19-year-old “apprentice” on the bench and a rookie who used to captain the University of Sydney? If England’s top priority is to win here, right now, the team’s record obviously doesn’t reflect that.
Speaking of Mr. Brace, here he is in charge of the draw. Courtney Lawes called correctly and England will start.
Referee: Former Belgian international Andrew Brace is your complainant tonight. He hopes to have less impact than James Doleman last weekend.
The man in the middle. Photography: Stephen White / CameraSport / Getty Images
More or less what you would expect from Australian players and staff in front of the press.
England did media rounds during the week, and I’m full of admiration for Ellis Genge’s direct contribution. “We have to be better everywhere,” he said. “We have to be better because we lost.” Brilliant. More than that please media agents.
Mako Vunipola deviated further into the banalities of his back against the wall, such as: “Being able to stay in the trenches with your brothers by your side … that’s the feeling you started playing in rugby, being there with your teammates, having fun. “
As Eddie Jones put the cart in front of the horse, saying, “This game is the perfect practice for the World Cup.”
Meanwhile, in Dunedin, Ireland has surprised the All Blacks to secure the first victory of the test in New Zealand! Wowsers.
Australia’s selection analysis begins with the news that Taniela Tupou’s fun 135kg package is back.
The massive prop is one of a series of changes from the first test, mostly caused by injuries, but also, in the case of Darcy Swain, by the suspension.
If you’re looking for an analysis of England’s selections, look no further.
England XV
Eddie Jones has made four changes to his starting XV, led by the debuts of Guy Porter (No. 13) and Tommy Freeman (11), as well as a first outing by Jack van Poortvliet (9). In the group, Sam Underhill (7) replaces injured Tom Curry.
There are more changes on the bench with Will Joseph, a late replacement for Jack …