
Rugby
Share
Published 16:28 21 Oct 2019 BST
As Ben Youngs passes out of the ruck, Owen Farrell receives it, with Maro Itoje, Billy Vunipola and Kyle Sinckler outside him in that order. The Australians are highlighted above by number, loosehead Scott Sio, lock Rory Arnold and hooker Tolu Latu all ready for the English attack if they keep it tight.
They do keep it tight. Itoje begins to slip to Farrell's right, a clever bit of movement that attracts Scott Sio, he feels he can't leave the Englishman on that side, despite plenty of cover arriving from the ruck. As a result, Arnold begins to pressure Farrell and rush the pass, while Latu is left with a (as he sees it) simple choice.
The pass is coming, and it's going to Vunipola. Right?
Wrong.
When Latu bites in, the pass is coming. He's perfectly set, or so he believes, to hit Vunipola early and dominate him in the tackle. But Farrell has skipped Vunipola with a bullet of a pass, and Sinckler is already moving into the gap created by Latu's decision to cover Vunipola. Christian Lealiifano is too slow to realise what's happening, and as a result the gap stays the same rather than the outhalf shifting across to cover.
Arnold and Latu complete their hits on Farrell and Vunipola respectively, but both are ultimately useless. Lealiifano scrambles to catch Sinckler but he's far too late, and even Kurtley Beale covering across in the backfield has been anticipating a much narrower move. As a result, it's a straightforward run-in for Sinckler and a much-needed 7-pointer for England at a time when Australia were just back in the game.
Ireland used a similar tactic against Scotland in Murrayfield during the 6 Nations, where they lay Johnny Sexton out like a sacrificial lamb to be hit as Jacob Stockdale was sprung through the gap. Billy Vunipola is already a potent threat with ball in hand, but England have now made him one in attack without actually carrying the ball. It's clever, and you can expect he New Zealand line to be much more on their toes when they face Jones' side on Saturday.James Lowe shares emotional statement after shock Japan move
This comes as a shock! According to the 42.ie, Leinster and Ireland winger, James Lowe, is set to join Japanese club, Tokyo Suntory Sungoliath. Lowe’s contract expires at the end of the season with Leinster, and after a breakdown of negotiations he will leave Irish rugby. The 33-year-old will sign a two-year deal with the […]
Rugby
7h
Fan footage shows real culprit of Leinster vs Stormers tunnel brawl
Absolute scenes! In what was a brutally tough encounter this evening between Leinster and the Stormers, in their URC semi-final at the Aviva Stadium. It ultimately finished 20-11 to Leinster, who will now face the Bulls in the final in Dublin. The discipline of the Stormers proved to be there downfall, with the South African […]
Rugby
2 days ago
James Lowe set to leave Irish rugby as reason for departure is revealed
Rugby