Aussies made to fight all the way
The Rugby Paper|July 14, 2024
WALES captain Dewi Lake scored two tries from lineout drives but it wasn't enough to prevent his side crashing to their ninth consecutive defeat and give Australia their first win at a rainy Melbourne since 2017.
ROGER PANTING
Aussies made to fight all the way

Trailing 17-0 after only 24 minutes, Wales showed terrific heart to make the Wallabies fight to the end and probably deserved to finish in front, but that poor start and a few major errors proved crucial.

Lake said: "We gave ourselves a mountain to climb and losing is always a bitter blow to swallow.

Our driving lineout is a massive weapon for us but our little inaccuracies continue to cost us." Little inaccuracies would be an understatement as some of the errors were of seismic proportions. Liam Williams conceded a soft penalty before another morale-shatterer from him gave Australia their crucial fourth try.

A handling mistake from Cam Winnett gifted Australia their second and too often restarts were a problem with both Winnett and James Botham conceding penalties to allow the scoreboard to tick over against them.

Furthermore, with the game in the balance, Lake was replaced by young Evan Lloyd, with the result that Wales lost the next two lineouts.

Despite these errors, it was still an improvement from Wales. Lake led from the front and there were major contributions from Botham and Taine Plumtree, to ensure that the team weren't wholly incapacitated by the absence of their injured talisman, Aaron Wainwright.

Despite miserable conditions, there was still more movement from the Welsh backs with both wings getting on the score sheet although the centre partnership of Owen Watkin and Mason Grady still failed to convince.

Wales began brightly but they were soon stunned by a brilliant breakaway try to give the Wallabies an early lead. Australia were under real pressure in the own 22 with some scrambled passing creating havoc but a piece of magic from Andrew Kellaway brought the game to life in spectacular fashion.

Bu hikaye The Rugby Paper dergisinin July 14, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

Bu hikaye The Rugby Paper dergisinin July 14, 2024 sayısından alınmıştır.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.

THE RUGBY PAPER DERGISINDEN DAHA FAZLA HIKAYETümünü görüntüle
Brough is so Hungary to build on early adventure
The Rugby Paper

Brough is so Hungary to build on early adventure

BIRMINGHAM Moseley winger Daniel Brough says his love for rugby was solidified when he spent two years playing for Portuguese team Lousa alongside Chile international Pablo Casas in what he describes as a \"boy to a man experience\".

time-read
2 dak  |
February 16, 2025
There's more to come from this England pack
The Rugby Paper

There's more to come from this England pack

ENGLAND'S win over France last weekend was a huge confidence booster ahead of Saturday's Calcutta Cup clash against Scotland because of the way the team gave themselves an opportunity to win - and the players seized the moment.

time-read
5 dak  |
February 16, 2025
Ellis was a rock that we'll never forget, vows Old Reds' Dan
The Rugby Paper

Ellis was a rock that we'll never forget, vows Old Reds' Dan

NATIONAL League rugby was rocked last week when Old Redcliffians prop Ellis Joseph passed away aged 27, and captain Dan Fry says the club's focus is to honour his legacy.

time-read
2 dak  |
February 16, 2025
Coach hails his King for the day
The Rugby Paper

Coach hails his King for the day

REDRUTH had to dig deep to see off a physical Cinderford side who deservedly took a losing bonus point back home.

time-read
2 dak  |
February 16, 2025
Flying Falcons hoping to make it six out of six
The Rugby Paper

Flying Falcons hoping to make it six out of six

SON of a pig farmer, Freddie Lockwood has been a headline-hogging act for Newcastle this season.

time-read
2 dak  |
February 16, 2025
England need to be more consistent
The Rugby Paper

England need to be more consistent

THOSE who believe England have turned a big corner following their last-minute fireworks against France are optimists, simply because their record so far under head coach Steve Borthwick suggests there will be more boom-and-bust.

time-read
3 dak  |
February 16, 2025
Too tall to be a pilot, I found lift-off in rugby
The Rugby Paper

Too tall to be a pilot, I found lift-off in rugby

Jon Newcombe talks to Josh McNally who says that, without the RAF, he would not have achieved anything in the game

time-read
5 dak  |
February 16, 2025
Bears on top but Bath go through
The Rugby Paper

Bears on top but Bath go through

BRISTOL looked the stronger side on paper and so it eventually the bonus-point win still wasn't enough for them to secure a place in the knockout stages proved but Bears were left to rue a 78-19 hammering at the Rec and a surprise defeat at Bedford which left them with too much to do on the final weekend of the competition.

time-read
2 dak  |
February 16, 2025
Great that we found a way to win, says Sleightholme
The Rugby Paper

Great that we found a way to win, says Sleightholme

OLLIE Sleightholme insists England have finally broken their glass ceiling but urged them to take a leaf out his club Northampton's book.

time-read
2 dak  |
February 16, 2025
Diamond's war chest for relegation play-off
The Rugby Paper

Diamond's war chest for relegation play-off

STEVE Diamond has built up a war chest as insurance should Newcastle find themselves in an end-ofseason relegation play-off with key players injured, but he does not anticipate dipping into it.

time-read
3 dak  |
February 16, 2025