Six Nations favourites England got their 2011 campaign off on the right foot on Friday as they defeated Wales 26-19 at the Millennium Stadium.
Much of the midweek talk had been about the props, line-out and that man Dylan Hartley but in truth those three facets of this one were swamped by the men out wide as Chris Ashton's brace of tries saw the Red Rose silence a hostile Cardiff.
Victory on the road for the last instalment of the Friday night experiment will slide down even sweeter for England in the knowledge that they now have three games at Twickenham - a venue they seldom lose at in the championship.
Wales had come out of the blocks hell bent on proving a point to their bitter rivals. However, the English stood tall and weathered an early assault before launching one of their own that ultimately brought the first points on fourteen minutes. Toby Flood was the architect, ghosting through a hole on the home 22 before feeding Northampton winger Ashton who swan-dived under the uprights. The conversion made the scores 0-7.
Flood extended the lead further before the quarter before Stephen Jones succeeded where James Hook had failed twice earlier from distance. The Scarlet knocked over a couple of three-pointers after English indiscretions, the latter offence seeing Louis Deacon binned.
The man advantage didn't result in much joy for Wales though, who struggled to recapture that sustained possession they'd enjoyed in the opening stages. In fact, England were the ones who came out of the ten-minute spell on top in terms of the scoreboard if one discounts Jones' kick while Leicester's Deacon departed for the walk of shame.
And so with a seven-point margin at the break, England were most definitely the happier of the two as Flood was completely on top of his opposite number in terms of creativity.
Wales did have their moments though, but too often they wasted promising attacking positions through poor kicking when keeping ball in hand would have proved a more threatening option.
Jones completed his penalty hat-trick within three minutes of the restart, yet indiscipline then surfaced as Craig Mitchell was carded for a technical infringement.
It was the last thing Wales wanted, and another Flood strike put England 16-9 in front before Ashton poached his second try after Tom Palmer's powerful run spread-eagled Wales' defence and Mark Cueto sent his fellow wing across.
Wales looked down and out, yet they struck back right on cue when Morgan Stoddart took Davies' scoring pass after England centre Shontayne Hape blasted out of the defensive line.
The try gave Wales renewed hope, and an air of anticipation surrounded Hook's move to fly-half after Jones went off with thirteen minutes left.
Hook's first act was to kick a penalty, leaving Wales just four points adrift, but England reverted to their forwards, Lee Byrne conceded a penalty and Jonny Wilkinson did the rest.
Man-of-the-match: Ben Foden was a real threat when in possession while two tries from Chris Ashton deserves a mention. But fly-half Toby Flood was the director of matters.
The scorers:
For Wales:
Try: Stoddart
Con: Jones
Pen: Jones 3, Hook
For England:
Tries: Ashton 2
Con: Flood 2
Pen: Flood 3, Wilkinson
Wales: 15 James Hook, 14 Morgan Stoddart, 13 Jamie Roberts, 12 Jonathan Davies, 11 Shane Williams, 10 Stephen Jones, 9 Mike Phillips, 8 Andy Powell, 7 Sam Warburton, 6 Dan Lydiate, 5 Alun Wyn Jones, 4 Bradley Davies, 3 Craig Mitchell, 2 Matthew Rees (capt), 1 Paul James.
Replacements: 16 Richard Hibbard, 17 John Yapp, 18 Ryan Jones, 19 Jonathan Thomas, 20 Dwayne Peel, 21 Rhys Priestland, 22 Lee Byrne.
England: 15 Ben Foden, 14 Chris Ashton, 13 Mike Tindall (capt), 12 Shontayne Hape, 11 Mark Cueto, 10 Toby Flood, 9 Ben Youngs, 8 Nick Easter, 7 James Haskell, 6 Tom Wood, 5 Tom Palmer, 4 Louis Deacon, 3 Dan Cole, 2 Dylan Hartley, 1 Andrew Sheridan.
Replacements: 16 Steve Thompson, 17 David Wilson, 18 Simon Shaw, 19 Joe Worsley, 20 Danny Care, 21 Jonny Wilkinson, 22 Matt Banahan.
Referee: Alain Rolland (Ireland)
Assistant referees: Alan Lewis (Ireland), Simon McDowell (Ireland)
Television match official: Jim Yuille (Scotland)
Comments
capedcrusader says...
For a country with the most registered players in the world England MUST find a midfield. Hape looked great from an NZ (reject) viewpoint. Well watched (the ball that is). Tindall 45 n.o. hard to fathom. There was no spear tackle a simple lift & place & the trip - at full tilt as Davies said post match the brain said kick (the ball) the foot said huh doah... not outright intentional IMO. Confident win not really ugly basics pretty well & scored when in range. Ashton - shoulders are injured and balls knocked out that way not v professional either so keep up the good work
Posted 13:26 08th February 2011
lawynd says...
@crunchfit - it wasn't an intentional spear by any stretch of the imagination, but Flood did still end up going down on the angle between neck and shoulder hard enough to need a medical assessment on the pitch; it's dangerous play whether it is intentional or not. There were two players banned in the Tri-Nations for 'tip tackles' that were far less serious than that.
@StunTheMullet - I agree, Hartley should have been cited and punished for the same length of time as Mealamu...but previous citings (or lack thereof) don't and shouldn't have any bearing on future incidents; each case is judged on its own merits. Your comment stinks of bitterness, which I find rather strange...enjoy yourself, you support the best team in the world right now!
Posted 12:32 06th February 2011
StunTheMullet says...
Don't see why the citing commisioner would drag himself away from his ladyboys for this one.
He didn't feel the urge against the Boofhead twins Hartley and Powell, for elbow in head and clothesline round face respectively, against the ABs so why should trifling matters like alleged foottrips and non spear tackles be a concern?
Posted 07:27 06th February 2011
Nicholas41 says...
htown. I bet you said that about England at the last two WCs. And that NZ would win them, probably beating Wales in the finals....
England are a tournament team. They rise to the occasion and have strength in depth. You may well choke on your coffee, as NZ will probably do (not on their coffee, that was '95); England won't.
Posted 21:52 05th February 2011
crunchfit says...
The tackle on Flood wasn't a spear. The player lifted Flood up and he tilted (because of where the tackler was holding him and because another player hit Flood causing him tip). Once Flood started tilting, the tackler tried and managed to hold Flood up then let him down gently. He certainly didn't drive him into the ground or drop him.
The trip on the other hand, that was pretty bad. Lucky not to be seen by the ref.
Posted 21:33 05th February 2011
htown says...
pffffttttt! just read Paul Rees article in the Guardian... I quote, 'Five things we learned last night....'England can win the world cup... they now look Europe's main contenders: resourceful, fit and clinical with strength in depth....' I choked on my coffee. Based on last nights performance I don't understand how anyone can come to that conclusion. They will be ripped apart at the WC!
Posted 14:06 05th February 2011
lawynd says...
A good win for England in a tricky tie - not perfect by any stretch of the imagination but disciplined enough to get over the line. I hope the lads can go out in the next two games and really show what they're capable of. Also, I hope Hartley watched Gatland eat every last crumb of the humble pie he served up. I also hope to see the trip on Ashton and the spear tackle on Flood punished by the citing commission.
Posted 13:29 05th February 2011
BathSimon says...
Peopleforget that this is the first game of the tournameant. England needed that win and anny kind of win in Cardif would have been great. It was a great win for England. i do agree that they need to improve, but they only leaked one try and scored two very good ones. Well done England they should beat Italy and Scotland in the next two weeks and with the French after that would test them. absoloutely brilliant from England, keep calm and deliver when it matters
Great game for England well done
Posted 10:46 05th February 2011
JeanLucJoinel says...
Very uninspiring performance by both teams. Wales were dreadful. England a bit less dreadful. But given the problems all the 6 N teams face England probably are favourites because of those 3 home games. Ireland lack quality, Scotland lack depth, Italy lack any kind of class behind the scrum, and France lack a sensible coach. England are largely unimaginative, started with 2 very poor centres who wouldn't get into any other 6n team bar Italy, but will probably grind out dismal wins. Southern hemisphere looked nailed on for the WC.
Posted 09:58 05th February 2011
crunchfit says...
Steve Thompson is a fat #####. He came on, did nothing useful and insisted on leaning over Welsh players who were on the ground every chance he got and stopping them from getting up. Even when play stopped. I don't think he even tackled any of them, he just fell over onto them after a collapsed maul or ruck and then lent over them. At least earn the right to do it in the match, don't just toddle onto the field with a few minutes left and start disrespecting opposition players when you've done nothing yourself but tip over a few times.
Also, considering all the trouble England seem to be having at 12 / 13, why don't they use Banahan? I've seen him a couple of times at centre for Bath and he was brilliant. He can bash his way through multiple player and can do the deft offload. He could combine with pretty much any other centre.
Posted 03:01 05th February 2011
dolphin says...
Firstly what makes England favourites?
They came 3rd last year - only winning 2 games. No silverware in 8 years and they only played 1 good game last November against Austrailia.
Also Wales are brutal, they hadn't won in 7 games coming into this, England have a guy in Tindall who is well past is prime as captain and can't throw a decent pass anymore and has no creativity. Yes they have a good pack as always. You can't win championship without decent centres. Don't get carried away with yourself
Posted 01:36 05th February 2011
suilven says...
"Swan dive"? Really... Anything less swan-like is hard to imagine!
(And was that try actually amazing enough to merit the flying display?)
Posted 23:17 04th February 2011
Bokswillprevail says...
Not impressed overall. Still some way to go to match tri-nats. That said, it (the 6N) was better than usual, so fair play. The North needs an extra layer of competition, to fine sieve the best players - akin to the S14/5. Lets see.....
Posted 23:13 04th February 2011
Nicholas41 says...
Good advice from Andy Powell to young Tom Wood about the level of intensity being a huge step from club to international rugby. The youngster stepped up - the peroxide, golf cartist....did not.
Posted 23:05 04th February 2011
Nicholas41 says...
Wales missed their injured players. England didn't. Let's face it, the 6N is secondary to the WC. A 'warm up' and it looks better for the 'big brothers'. Shane's and James' silly reverse passes should be saved for fun touch tournaments - it will cost them second phase in NZ. England are looking less dull because they do the basics more thoroughly rather than only doing a few of them particularly well.
Posted 22:57 04th February 2011
5Lock4ward says...
If I was Dylan Hartley I'd have developed short term rigor-mortis in my middle digits and made sure I was in viewing range of Warren Gatland, although maybe not if Gats is going to play any future role for England or the Lions. haha!
Posted 21:55 04th February 2011