Sunday People

AUTUMN INTERNATIO­NALS 2018 VIDEO GA-GA! England pain as telly referee rules out their ‘match-winning’ try

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Alex Spink EDDIE JONES told of his devastatio­n after Lady Luck shunned his England rugby heroes at Twickenham.

A week after escaping to victory on the back of a hugely controvers­ial call in their favour against South Africa, their good fortune ran out against the champions of the world.

“Sometimes the game loves you and some times it doesn’t,” cursed Jones, after Sam Underhill’s late ‘winning’ try was chalked off for a marginal offside.

“It loved us last week, it didn’t love us so much this week. We’re obviously devastated but we take the good with the bad. We’ll get some love from the game further down the track, don’t worry.”

The contrast in emotion among a sell-out 82,149 Twickenham crowd couldn’t have been greater from last week.

Against the Springboks an explosion of joy greeted the referee’s decision to allow Owen Farrell’s patently ‘no-arms’ hit – rather than give the Boks a deserved shot at glory.

Cruel

French referee Jerome Garces (right) waited, then there was a cacophony of boos as South African TMO Marius Jonker ruled that Courtney Lawes had strayed offside as he charged down the kick which led to Underhill’s score.

“There was no doubt he was offside,” scoffed All Blacks boss Steve Hansen. “He was just about in the halfback’s back pocket.

“What was going through my mind was: ‘Will they be brave enough to make the decision?’ And they were, which was good.” The decision was cruel on Underhill, superb throughout an epic contest, who turned world player of the year Beauden Barrett inside out with a feint and step on his way to the line.

He would have been able to dine out on that for ever more. Instead, he and his team will rue what might have been.

England, 14-point no-hopers in the eyes of the bookies, had stunned the All Blacks by racing into a 15-0 lead. Chris Ashton, chomping at the bit to make up for lost time on his first start for four years, opened the scoring after just 106 seconds.

Dylan Hartley doubled the lead shortly before the half-hour mark, driven over by his pack and half the three-quarter line after Maro Itoje won clean lineout ball.

But big decisions win matches and New Zealand got theirs right on the stroke of half-time when captain Kieran Read bravely turned down a shot at goal for a scrum and was rewarded with a try through fullback Damian Mckenzie.

Whereas England paid for taking captain Hartley off at half-time as their lineout fell apart under replacemen­t Jamie George’s stewardshi­p.

And following Underhill’s unlucky break, they failed to engineer a drop goal opportunit­y to win the match. Jones refused to point the finger of blame, saying: “We endorse every decision the players make.”

But he will know that his team, heroic for so much of the contest, ultimately blew a golden chance to lay down a marker ahead of next year’s World Cup.

“Test match rugby is about those small opportunit­ies,” sighed the Australian, aware his side have blown leads of 12 points or more three times since June. “They took theirs, we didn’t.

Benchmark

“It was a really good step forward because you benchmark yourself against New Zealand.

“We will get a lot of reward for the work we’ve done. They’ve been together three months, we’ve been together three weeks. They had 800 caps, we had 400 caps. We have to work harder.

“We have to fix things that didn’t work. If we do we are on the way to being the best.”

 ??  ?? SO CLOSE Sam Underhill is covered by Beauden Barrett as he goes over for the ‘try’ that was ruled out by the video ref
SO CLOSE Sam Underhill is covered by Beauden Barrett as he goes over for the ‘try’ that was ruled out by the video ref

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