Watch - Los Pumas centre pulls hamstring but refuses to stop
Los Pumas centre Jerónimo De La Fuente scored a sublime solo try against Australia yesterday, beating three defenders immediately after pulling his hamstring.
The moment of magic came at a crucial point in the first half, when Argentina held a slender 14-10 lead, thanks to tries from Juan Imhoff and prop Thomas Gallo.
Minutes earlier the Wallabies thought they had moved ahead on the scoreboard with a try from flyhalf James O’Connor, but the score was ruled out due to an illegal cleanout earlier in the play.
Los Pumas responded to the scare imperiously, marching down field into the Australia 22. With a rolling maul constructed, the forwards began powering ahead but scrum half Gonzalo Bertranou opted to take control of the ball and spread it to the backline.
His dart from the maul was met by his inside centre De La Fuente who received a close-range pass and cut a clean diagonal line through the Wallabies defence, stepping hooker Lachlan Lonergan in the process.
At that moment it looked as though the try line was beckoning, but then the unthinkable happened. De La Fuente pulled up sharply and clutched his hamstring for a split second. With the whitewash still in his sights, he decided to fight through the pain and continue charging on, drawing in three Wallabies defenders before touching down.
Any doubt about whether De La Fuente’s injury was genuine, and not a rehearsed trick, was soon put aside when he was replaced in the 24th minute by Lucio Cinti.
The try proved pivotal in the wider context of the game. Argentina went on to dominate the encounter, scoring a record seven tries against an Australia team that never recovered from their disallowed try.
In the end Los Pumas came out 48-17 winners and held off a late charge from the Wallabies to secure a famous victory in San Juan.
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Get world rugby to buy a few Islands in the Mediterranean. Name them Rugby Island #1, #2, #3 etc. All teams are based there all season and as the knockouts progress, losers go home for a few months rest. Sell the TV rights to any and all.
Have an open ballot/lottery each week to fly fans out to fill the stadiums. They get to enter the draw if they pay their taxes and avoid crime which would encourage good social engagement from rugby supporters as responsible citizens. The school kids get in the draw if they are applying themselves at school and reaching their potential.
Or maybe there is some magic way to prioritise both domestic rugby and international rugby by having the same players playing for 12 months of the year...
Go to commentsPerhaps he would have been better off going under the knife earlier, rather than travelling to Europe to hold tackle bags.
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