Reuters - Sat, 07 Nov 19:30:00 2009
Australia put their dire Tri-Nations season behind them by beating England 18-9 on Saturday to switch attention to their bid for a grand slam of victories over the home unions.
To mark the 25th anniversary of the clean sweep achieved by Nick Farr-Jones's team, arguably the greatest Wallaby side ever, Australia are making their first attempt at a slam since 1984.
The plan looked in danger of falling at the first hurdle on Saturday as England, buoyed by the return of Jonny Wilkinson, were on top from the start and deservedly led 9-5 at halftime.
However, Australia turned things round completely after the break. Young scrum-half Will Genia delivered a man of the match performance, Matt Giteau kicked them into the lead before Adam Ashley-Cooper sealed the turnaround with a late try.
Having lost six of their last seven tests it was an impressive display by the Wallabies, who now face Six Nations champions
"Croke Park is a great venue and it will be very challenging but it's a great opportunity to push on," said Australia coach Robbie Deans.
"It's not dissimilar to today - the first 20 minutes will be full on, very passionate, and we have to weather that."
Deans said he had been particularly impressed by the patience shown by his side Saturday, particularly after they blew two great try-scoring opportunities in the second half.
"I was happy with the way we kept out composure and wore them down," he said.
"The guys didn't become frantic after the missed opportunities and that trust and patience paid off and that's a habit we want to keep."
With Australia a distant third in the Tri-Nations, the way they absorbed England's early threat and then gradually took total control says little about the northern hemisphere threat.
England manager Martin Johnson, who had a baptism of fire with three thrashings by the Tri-Nations teams a year ago, was forced to rely on the old European November chestnut about the touring teams being better prepared.
"Australia have played a lot of tests together and are a bit tighter," said Johnson.
"That doesn't excuse some things but we'll improve from here to next week."
In mitigation Johnson can point to an unprecedented injury list that contributed to a starting team showing just four survivors from last November's corresponding fixture.
And there were huge plus points in the performances of three returning members of the 2003 World Cup-winning side - Wilkinson, Lewis Moody and Steve Thompson.
Wilkinson had a superb game in attack and defence, Moody was a force from open side while hooker Thompson, in his first start for three years, helped establish England's early dominance in the lineout.
"It's great to have them back," said Johnson. "People have asked me all week what Jonny brings to the game and I'd say 'just watch the game' - he's a world class player."
Wilkinson was making his first appearance since the 2008 Six Nations and his first in a November international since 2002.
"The support I've received and the atmosphere here have been amazing," said Wilkinson, who landed two penalties and a drop goal and produced some bone-shaking tackles.
"It's great to be back and I want more of that."
Comment 1 - 7 of 7
Close game, but ireland to win by 3 me reckons, prob a penatly decider.
'Ireland will win'!? possibly if it was a game of tiddlywinks, evry now & then Ireland have a reasonable side, at the moment it's a very ordinary bunch , the Wallabies will see them off at a canter & put them firmly back in their place, England had enough posession to win three or four games, apart from the 'old stagers' they were pathetic,with no real threat, even Wilko struggled to win it by himself, Ned Kelly
Sorry markear, I meant scrum half of course. anything else i can help you with?
Ads A - I'm pretty sure neither O'Leary or Reddan will be plating outhalf and Alan who the hell is Kedney and whoever he is I'm pretty sure he will not be playing at flyhalf next week.
Ads A i agree ROG is not up to it Kedney is by far a better player at the moment.
Still think thae Irish will win by 10 no probs
It'll be a tough one. aus have played a lot of games over the past few months while Irelands last spell together was the 6N (most of them missed the summer tour due to lions duties).
Im not worried about the front row. Healy is ready and Hayes is experienced enough to shake the rust off early.
I only hope Kidney starts Sexton at outhalf instead of ROG. We cant afford to carry him for 40 minutes while a better man sits on the bench. No disrespect to O gara, but his form is poor at the moment and sexton is on fire.
O leary or reddan at outhalf, either or, and bowe and fitz on the wings (earls if required later on).
One way or another, we'll put up a better fight than england did today.
Ireland will win.
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