James O'Connor stars as Reds put a dampener on Western Force homecoming
Stand-in captain James O'Connor has produced a playmaking masterclass to lead the injury-hit Queensland Reds to a 29-16 win over the Western Force in Perth.
The captain's curse struck the Reds after just four minutes of Friday night's match when stand-in skipper Lukhan Salakaia-Loto injured his left ankle in a tackle.
With co-captains Tate McDermott and Liam Wright already out injured, it left O'Connor to take over the leader's duties, and the star Wallaby rose to the occasion with a hand in all four of the Reds' tries.
His most important contribution came in the 65th minute with the Reds trailing 16-15 and down to 14 men after Hunter Paisami was sin-binned five minutes earlier for a lifting tackle.
O'Connor unleashed a perfectly-weighted dribble kick for Josh Flook to run onto, with the Reds winger snaring the ball and touching it down in the same movement a split second before being flung out of play.
The try and sideline conversion proved to be the critical moment of the match, with O'Connor setting up Fraser McReight six minutes later to seal the victory and secure the bonus point.
The victory showed the fighting spirit of the Reds, who had been affected by the Queensland floods and an astounding injury list
"It's just an awesome result," Salakaia-Loto told Stan after the match. "To sum it up, it was the Queensland spirit. It's been a massive week for our state, for our people back at home. So to be able to pull a result out there, that was pretty tight and tough against a real strong Force team.
"Full credit to the lads, I'm proud of the fight they put up."
Force captain Feleti Kaitu'u felt his team let the game slip.
"That one hurts," he said. "I thought we had them on the ropes there through quite a few periods in the game, but unfortunately we fell short in converting that into points."
A deft pass from O'Connor while running at the Force's defending line set up Hamish Stewart to score the opening try of the match in the eighth minute.
And another brilliant pass from O'Connor in the 26th minute opened the door for fullback Jock Campbell to sprint over.
At 12-3 down, the Force needed a spark, and a brilliant chip kick from Force scrumhalf Issak Fines-Leleiwasa proved to be just the tonic.
The ball bounced high in the air over the try line and a charging Kyle Godwin jumped high to latch on to it and touch down for the Force's opener.
The Reds were on the wrong end of a 10-2 penalty count in the first half, and prop Feao Fotuaika was sin binned in the 37th minute for the team's accumulation of penalties.
The Force failed to take advantage of the numerical advantage, and they again didn't capitalise in the 60th minute when Paisami was binned for a lifting tackle on Manasa Mataele.
- Justin Chadwick
Latest Comments
SCW really dislikes Eddie, doesn't he?
His words in 2019 before the RWC final that he now says should have resulted in Eddie's firing:
"Was Saturday’s sensational World Cup semi-final win over New Zealand England’s greatest ever performance? Yes, unquestionably, would be my answer."
So let's fire the coach one game later? Duh!
Go to commentsIreland have every right to back themselves for a win. But the key variable has little to do with recent record etc.
The reality is that Ireland are a settled team with tons of continuity, an established style, and a good depth chart, whereas NZ are fundamentally rebuilding. The questions are all about what Razor is doing and how far along he is in that program.
NZ are very close to really clicking. Against England all of the chatter is about how England could have closed out a win, but failed to do so. This has obscured the observation that NZ were by far the more creative and effective in attack, beyond the 3-1 try differential and disallowed tries. They gave away a lot of unnecessary penalties, and made many simple errors (including knock-ons and loose kicks). Those things are very fixable, and when they do so we are once again going to be staring at a formidable NZ team.
Last week we heard the England fans talking confidently about their chances against NZ, but England did not end up looking like the better team on the field or the scoreboard. The England defense was impressive enough, but still could not stop the tries.
Ireland certainly has a better chance, of course, but NZ is improving fast, and I would not be surprised at a convincing All Black win this week. It may turn on whether NZ can cut out the simple mistakes.
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