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Kyle Sinckler the talk of Twitter once again after Wallabies rout

Kyle Sinckler running free

England sailed through to the Rugby World Cup semi-finals with a convincing win over old rival Australia, but it was Kyle Sinckler’s star turn that had Twitter talking.

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Ruthless England sent Australian crashing out of the Rugby World Cup, playing with more precision than the frenetic Wallabies to win their quarter-final 40-16 in Oita.

However it was Sinckler’s head-turning performance and moreover his temperament that had many England fans Tweeting his praises.

The England tighthead was in fine form on the ball, at the scrum and with his now-famous chat; and his long-range communication with AR Romain Poite entertained many and frustrated some on social media.

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Here’s what they were saying:

https://twitter.com/alexshawsport/status/1185465740272517120
https://twitter.com/TomGriffola/status/1185465329104932864
https://twitter.com/tanyaevans2012/status/1185465978802573312
https://twitter.com/IanStaffs/status/1185485421616291846

His brilliant try also had tongues wagging:

https://twitter.com/10SportAU/status/1185472035495055360
https://twitter.com/thepaulwilliams/status/1185471591947350016
https://twitter.com/MaggieAlphonsi/status/1185487871668604933
https://twitter.com/TheRugbyPaper/status/1185473359338979328
https://twitter.com/gpickle_23/status/1185486664002670592
https://twitter.com/WLaws_18/status/1185487647696965632

Winger Jonny May scored two tries in the space of three minutes midway through the first half on Saturday to set up a deserved victory and book England a semi-final berth for the first time in 12 years.

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The result has almost certainly ended the tenure of Australian coach Michael Cheika, who has failed to get the best out of his team in Japan in the manner he did at the global tournament four years ago.

England’s victory was built on an unforgiving defence and the control of five-eighth Owen Farrell, who kicked 20 points and was a class above under-used opposite Christian Lealiifano.

Both pivots enjoyed perfect goalkicking returns but Farrell’s eight successful shots included four conversions while Lealiifano only got to convert his team’s lone try, along with three penalties.

Australia dominated many of the game’s statistics, forcing their opponents to attempt 181 tackles to just 78.

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However, basic errors proved costly – as they have done throughout the tournament – against opponents who were methodical every time they made an incursion into Australia’s territory.

The result equalled England’s biggest ever win over the Wallabies and was sweet revenge for the pool defeat at Twickenham four years ago that knocked them out of the global tournament in pool play.

It was also the seventh straight win for England coach Eddie Jones over Cheika, whose erratic approach to selection at the tournament played a part in their lack of cohesion when it counted.

Australia’s desire to run England off their feet wasn’t helped by numerous long delays for scrum stoppages, with a poor quality surface partly to blame.

It meant the match won’t be remembered in the way that several other Australia-England knockout clashes at the tournam ent are.

The Wallabies led briefly through Lealiifano’s first of three first-half penalties before the game broke wide open through May’s double in the 18th and 21st minutes.

The speedy winger firstly finished off a slick attack when Manu Tuilagi’s bust created an overlap on the left.

May doubled his tally moments later when a loose David Pocock pass was gathered by Henry Slade, who scooted 40m before a pinpoint grubber was collected with glee by the man celebrating 50 Tests.

Both sideline conversions were slotted by Farrell, who also landed a penalty before the break to put his team 17-9 ahead.

The Wallabies closed within one through a brilliant Marika Koroibete try, set up by smart passing from Reece Hodge and Petaia before the former NRL winger scorched around Elliot Daly to continue his exceptional tournament form.

Just one point clear, England re-established control through Farrell, whose inch-perfect pass sent prop Kyle Sinckler thunder ing across.

A long spell of Australian attack came to nothing and England’s pack gradually took control, earning three penalties which all turned into three points, and a late intercept try to Anthony Watson.

– Additional reporting AAP

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DarstedlyDan 19 minutes ago
New Zealanders may not understand, but in France Test rugby is the 'B movie'

Italy have a top 14 issue too, that’s true. I doubt SA are overly pleased by that, although it’s countered somewhat by the fact they would expect to thrash them anyway, so perhaps are not that bothered.


The BIL teams are (aside from Ireland) A/B teams - still with many A team players. I would rather the England team touring Argentina be playing the ABs than this French one.


France could have reduced the complaints and the grounds for such if they had still picked the best team from those eligible/available. But they haven’t even done that. This, plus the playing of silly b@ggers with team selection over the three tests is just a big middle finger to the ABs and the NZ rugby public.


One of the key reasons this is an issue is the revenue sharing one. Home teams keep the ticket revenues. If the July tours are devalued to development larks then the crowds will not show up (why go watch teams featuring names you’ve never heard of?). This costs the SH unions. The NH unions on the other hand get the advantage of bums on seats from full strength SH teams touring in November. If the NH doesn’t want to play ball by touring full strength, then pay up and share gate receipts. That would be fair, and would reduce the grounds for complaint from the south. This has been suggested, but the NH unions want their cake and eat it too. And now, apparently, we are not even allowed to complain about it?


Finally - no one is expecting France to do things the way NZ or SA do. We oddly don’t really mind that it probably makes them less successful at RWC than they would otherwise have been. But a bit of willingness to find a solution other than “lump it, we’re French” would go a looonnng way.

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