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England player ratings vs New Zealand

Tom Curry

England booked their ticket to a fourth World Cup final on Saturday in Yokohama, beating reigning champions New Zealand 19-7 in the semi-final.

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It was undoubtedly the biggest win of Eddie Jones’ tenure as England head coach and despite his team having recorded more convincing victories in terms of scoreline over the last four years, it was perhaps the most complete performance that has been seen from them.

RugbyPass rates their players below on what was a memorable night in Japan:

  1. Elliot Daly7

Not the most eye-catching display Daly will ever have for England, though his work doing the unglamorous elements of the game was impressive. His chasing of kicks was effective, New Zealand weren’t able to trouble him in the kicking game and his ruck work was vital, particularly when Anthony Watson broke off his trademark incisive runs.

  1. Anthony Watson8

Watson’s work in defence was exceptional, as the wing denied New Zealand in a number of two-on-one scenarios thanks to his decision-making and tackling technique. In attack, he was consistently able to evade the first one or two defenders and drew in multiple players to stop him, creating space elsewhere on the pitch.

(Continue reading below…)

  1. Manu Tuilagi8

The centre started the game in punishing fashion, burrowing over for an early try and making the right defensive read to grab an interception that should have led to a try. His impact was lower key after that, although he was a valuable source of gain line successes in attack and his defence was stout in the midfield, especially in the second half.

  1. Owen Farrell7.5

A first half injury limited Farrell to just one kick at goal, although his kicking from hand was effective and his handling skills and ball-carrying at No12 helped take the pressure off of George Ford at fly-half. It was a positive performance, although he did cough up a few turnovers, whether through isolating himself as a carrier or throwing an offload that wasn’t on.

  1. Jonny May7

May’s footwork and ability in the air were both on show to good effect, although it did look as though his top-end pace was affected by the hamstring injury he had been suffering from. He didn’t put a foot wrong, although his game was curtailed early in the second half with what looked like a reoccurrence of the injury.

https://twitter.com/rugbyworldcup/status/1188003991831101440

  1. George Ford8

It was another strong performance in defence from Ford, who has been actively dispelling the notion of his weaknesses in that area. As an attacking influence, his silky handling and link play allowed England to shift the point of contact and put their power carriers through holes in the New Zealand defence. Nailed four of his five kicks.

  1. Ben Youngs7

One or two early box-kicks went slightly short or slightly long, though for the most part he found space and English chasers were ready to compete and/or tackle. Defensively, too, he was solid. His distribution was accurate and quick whenever New Zealand’s counter-ruck allowed it to be.

  1. Mako Vunipola8

In addition to giving England a solid platform at the scrum, as well as working a penalty out of New Zealand at the set-piece, Vunipola got through a mountain of work as a one-out carrier and first receiver.

https://twitter.com/RugbyPass/status/1188053205441224704

  1. Jamie George8

George excelled for the most part with his throwing at the lineout, successfully connecting with 16 of his 18 throws, while England’s scrum held up well. He was probably more active as a ball-carrier and raiding down the wide channels in this game than he was at any other at this World Cup.

  1. Kyle Sinckler7.5

There were only a handful of scrums for Sinckler to negotiate during his time on the pitch, where he was solid. As ever, though, it was his playmaking skills that really stood out, as he prospered as a first receiver with his passing and touches. One knock-on was the only blot on his copybook.

  1. Maro Itoje9

The lock called an excellent lineout against the All Blacks and in addition to being an efficient attacking option, he was a persistent pest in defence. He won four turnovers at a combination of the lineout, maul and breakdown, while his quickness to the ruck helped deliver safe ball for England. He also took a game-high eight lineouts catches.

 

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  1. Courtney Lawes7.5

Lawes was the primary option at attacking lineouts in the first half, as he claimed six, while he was also able to disrupt New Zealand’s throw and grab a steal. His power and precision in the tackle was vital in stymying the All Backs, in particular in that first half.

  1. Tom Curry8

The blindside stepped up as the third lineout option and combined it with a strong carrying performance and being a turnover menace at the breakdown, winning two for his side. It was an effective outing, although an overrun line, which was pinged for crossing and denied a try, and an intercepted pass held his rating back slightly.

  1. Sam Underhill9

Underhill was arguably the pick of England’s back row, all of whom had solid games. The openside’s carrying was effective and he was a consistent threat at the breakdown. Although he only won one turnover, he slowed down and disrupted New Zealand’s ball with abandon. His dominant tackles were momentum-changers in the second half.

https://twitter.com/RugbyPass/status/1188039118812528640

  1. Billy Vunipola8

A performance that was every bit as industrious as his brother’s, as the No8 carried his through New Zealand throughout the game. His offloading found space for England, too, while he kept his side’s defence effective with legal big tackles.

Replacements

  1. Luke Cowan-Dickie6

Successfully connected with his only lineout throw and added a carrying option as England saw out the clock.

  1. Joe Marler6

The loosehead was an important part of the late defensive effort from England, most notably with his low, chopping tackles.

  1. Dan Cole6.5

Cole didn’t have any scrummaging to do after coming on but was solid around the fringes in defence and punctured the New Zealand line with a couple of strong carries.

https://twitter.com/rugbyworldcup/status/1188055035990740992

  1. George Kruis6.5

Kruis was physical in the tackle after coming on, as well as replacing Lawes as a lineout option.

  1. Mark Wilson6.5

The flanker won a crucial turnover penalty inside England’s 22 with less than ten minute to play.

  1. Willi Heinz6

Controlled the game well as England saw out the final 15 minutes.

  1. Henry Slade6.5

Made a crucial tackle on Sevu Reece with the try line beckoning. Also popped up with a couple of incisive passes and touches as the game wound down.

  1. Jonathan JosephN/A

Came on too late to really affect the game.

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WATCH: How Jim Hamilton previewed the England versus New Zealand semi-final on Don’t Mess With Jim 

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J
JW 58 minutes ago
Andy Goode: Aussie comments didn't cover them in glory

Yes I was happy with the refs ruling of arrival (and that the tackled player wasn’t obligated to release the ball immediately) but if you see the wide angle you can note how Morgan dives to get there in time.


I don’t mind your (or the refs) view, but what Morgan said is accurate. Both Mils and Beaver agreed on the breakdown, and you will also get the same view from Aotearoa Rugby Pod guys for a pretty unanimous NZ view.

Sometimes when both players are low its a rugby collision and this is one of those times.

Not recently. In the SR finals and AB v Arg series weve seen players clearly bent 90 at the waist still be penalised, only when the attacker does something the ref sees immediate mitigation and rules a rugby incident. Tizzano didn’t offer that he was always in the position Morgan aimed to collect him in.


Happy to not throw the rule book at these situations but the precent is that they are in these situations.

many tries out wide the player is allowed to be tackled while diving

They are diving for the line, not to avoid being tackled.

“In principle, in a try scoring situation, if the action is deemed to be a dive forward for a try, then it should be permitted. If a player is deemed to have left the ground to avoid a tackle; or to jump, or hurdle a potential tackler, then this is dangerous play and should be sanctioned accordingly.”

You can read Nicks article for an updated discourse on this though.

30 Go to comments
J
JW 1 hour ago
New Zealanders may not understand, but in France Test rugby is the 'B movie'

But he was wrong, he had to take back what he said. But maybe this only happened because he came out and was honest with his initial plans?


He’s simply in a position where he should be far more professional.


I don’t really follow much media, especially SM, but again, I’ve not seen anyone complaining. Plenty of ridicule and pointing out things like it being disrespectful to the game, but as far as the English language goes, that’s not complaining. Nick Bishop for instance hasn’t been complaining, he’s simply saying Galthie made a bad decision for France’s prospects (which when the common reply is ‘thats how it is’).


Complaining would be views expressing that the FFR should have put the tour back a week so that all T14 finalists could attend. Complaining would be saying they’ve been robbed of seeing the worlds best stars. Complaining would be saying players can simply take extra weeks off from T14. I’ve only seen advice and suggestions that these are things France need to look-at-for-the-future.


Basically I tried to communicate with French fans because they don’t understand what’s being communicated. ALL reactions I have seen shared here by French supports have all seemed way over the top compared what I’ve seen expressed about this tour.

the players are expected to play in too many matches, for too many minutes, and need more rest and recovery time.

This is the message I have been sharing. So something needs to happen, whether thats France pull out of more Internationals or rest players from more domestic games, who knows, but I also don’t think what they have now is working. It’s obviously much better than 3-4 years ago, but they appear to want to work even harder at it like you say. Personally I’ve only seen LNR be reasonable, I hear much less of their other internationals being denied/influenced not to play, so I imagine that they will give even further (as I can’t really see France pulling out the other international windows as well).

147 Go to comments
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