'We love going to Twickenham, love the crowd hating us, so let's get it on'
Michael Cheika's message to England was "let's get it on" after Australia beat Italy 26-7 on Saturday.
The Wallabies were far from their best in Padova but were able to run in four tries - two coming from Marika Koroibete - while showing some resolute defending to keep Italy at bay.
It was only the third win in 12 Tests for Australia this year, but Cheika felt there were aspects that showed signs of progression, the coach particularly impressed with the defensive play.
Next up for Australia is a trip to Twickenham and a meeting with Cheika's old adversary Eddie Jones, and the Wallabies head coach is relishing the contest.
"I enjoyed it, it was physical," he told reporters. "Defensively I thought we were really good, we got up and looked like we were enjoying our defence.
"The Italians brought a lot of physical ball carrying, they've got big back-rowers, they carry the ball hard, and we looked good.
"We created a few things in attack, we had a couple of chances we could have been slicker on with our finishing but where we are right now we've just got to keep grinding, keep at it, do the things we know that we we've been working on to do well, and keep bringing it.
"There was a lot about that win, considering the situation of the season, that I was very pleased about.
"Now we have to look to see what we need next week. We love going to Twickenham, love the crowd hating us, so let's get it on!"
Australia will hope for positive news on the fitness of David Pocock after he was injured during the second half.
"I don't know [the severity of the injury] yet," Cheika added. "He's obviously got a pretty nasty stinger on his neck [and] it was giving him pain down his arm.
"We'll just see what happens and see how he recovers in the next couple of days."
In other news:
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VDF was excellent last week and this week. Henshaw was great in the first half. Sam Prendergast tried to "do it all by himself" precisely once, when he did very well but was left unsupported. McCarthy had a mixed game, as did Crowley. Hansen was poor for the second week in a row. How was Casey not on long enough to rate but Baird was considering Baird was on all of a minute? These ratings were phoned in, the author must have been drunk by half-time.
Go to commentsStill only two RCs in fifteen years when we won nearly every year. Win rate in the Rassie era still under 70% when the Henry/Hansen era was over 85%. Best forwards will be too old in 2027. Poor old Rassie has done a fantastic job but that itch ain't going anywhere and it'll be there for the rest of his life 🥴🥴🥴
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