Planet Rugby

Four-try Australia dominate Wales

Wales v Australia David Pocock try

Wallabies in cruise control: David Pocock goes over for a score in Cardiff

28th November 2009 18:58

Digby Ioane score against Wales

Opening matters: Digby Ioane

Australia answered so many questions at the Millennium Stadium as they outplayed Wales 33-12 on Saturday.

Say what you will about the Wallabies but they do possess a class and zest that can dominate anyone on their day. This was one of those unfortunately for the shell-shocked Welsh, who were left chasing gold shadows and falling off tackles for large parts of the Cardiff contest.

Pre-tour injuries to the tourists' starting centre duo were finally put behind them while the lateral hosts were hampered by losing Leigh Halfpenny, Shane Williams and Matthew Rees to go with the absent Mike Phillips, Ryan Jones and Tom Shanklin.

But one suspects that not even a full-strength Welsh under the roof would have stopped this rampant Australian outfit in this kind of form, as they were simply in another league on their final 2009 outing. And yes, it went a long way to banishing any lingering memories of Murrayfield.

It was also to be a much-improved performance from fly-half Matt Giteau as his combination with Quade Cooper looked a cut above opposite numbers Stephen Jones and Jonathan Davies.

Quickly into his stride, the Brumby knocked over the opening three points from 50 metres after Ospreys tighthead Paul James was penalised at scrum-time. And that proved to be the catalyst for the visitors, with centre Cooper spotting some lazy inside defence to put a racing Peter Hynes up to the home 22-metre.

What followed was a script that Wales' worst nightmare could not even match.

The departure of last week's double try-scorer Williams - due to what looked like an innocuous injury - was then followed up by fellow Lions Halfpenny and Rees leaving the field. Now it really looked like being Australia's day.

More and more pressure was consequently being applied on the fragile-looking Welsh line and with Giteau intent to put things right, one sensed there was plenty more defending to do with 70 minutes remaining on the matchday clock.

Giteau was of course the orchestrator when the hosts were caught flat-footed soon after while the then-present Halfpenny left his job of watching the space in-behind.

The fly-half spotted this blunder and slid through a perfectly-weighted grubber that sat up nicely for man-of-the-match Digby Ioane. But moments later the playmaker's vision was penalised by Barnes, who adjudged Hynes to be in front of a second cross-field kick that came across to the right. Halfpenny slotted over the points with aplomb from 50 metres.

Then came an Australian double score, seconds later I might add. Benn Robinson was able to stretch his legs down the left before feeding Drew Mitchell in support, who in turn sent James Horwill over for the visitors' second five-pointer.

Gold pressure continued to come in front of a quiet Cardiff support and following sustained pressure, it was then the turn of David Pocock to reach over and cross after a smart ball from hooker Stephen Moore.

An sign that mission was firmly accomplished had to be the sight of the impressive Pocock being held back on the bench for the whole second period, a second period that had a depressing air of inevitability about it from a home perspective.

Wales were predictably finished off in a clinical manner in the end when Giteau carved them open and Polota-Nau touched down on 61 minutes. The on-song number ten added the extras, putting a seal on a high-class display packed with flair and deadly attacking execution while Wales must now regroup ahead of their Six Nations opener against England on February 6.

Man of the match: So many Australian names come to mind. The impressive first-half effort from David Pocock, the constant threat of Peter Hynes coming off his wing, Matt Giteau, both Benn Robinson and Ben Alexander. But for his all-round showing in Stirling Mortlock's shoes, Digby Ioane picks up the award for his dynamism that had Wales struggling for answers.

Moment of the match: Wales had a gilt-edged chance to get themselves back in the contest when Jamie Roberts was put through a hole. All he had to do was back himself or offload possession to the supporting Tom James, but the winger slid from the pass and the chance to close matters had gone.

Villain of the match: A game played in good spirits. No award.

The scorers:

For Wales:
Pens: Halfpenny, Jones 3

For Australia:
Tries:
Ioane, Horwill, Pocock, Polota-Nau
Con: Giteau
Pen: Giteau

Wales: 15 James Hook, 14 Leigh Halfpenny, 13 Jamie Roberts, 12 Jonathan Davies, 11 Shane Williams, 10 Stephen Jones, 9 Dwayne Peel, 8 Andy Powell (c), 7 Martyn Williams, 6 Dan Lydiate, 5 Luke Charteris, 4 Alun-Wyn Jones, 3 Paul James, 2 Matthew Rees, 1 Gethin Jenkins.
Replacements: 16 Huw Bennett, 17 Duncan Jones, 18 Jonathan Thomas, 19 Sam Warburton, 20 Martin Roberts, 21 Andrew Bishop, 22 Tom James.

Australia: 15 Adam Ashley-Cooper, 14 Peter Hynes, 13 Digby Ioane, 12 Quade Cooper, 11 Drew Mitchell, 10 Matt Giteau, 9 Will Genia, 8 Wycliff Palu, 7 David Pocock, 6 Rocky Elsom (c), 5 Dean Mumm, 4 James Horwill, 3 Ben Alexander, 2 Stephen Moore, 1 Benn Robinson.
Replacements: 16 Tatafu Polota Nau, 17 Matt Dunning, 18 Mark Chisholm, 19 George Smith, 20 Luke Burgess, 21 James O'Connor, 22 Kurtley Beale.

Referee: Wayne Barnes (England)
Assistant referees: Romain Poite (France), Peter Allan (Scotland)
Television match officials: Geoff Warren (England)
Assessor: Patrick Robin (France)

By Adam Kyriacou

Comments

catchyname says...

good performance from OZ, wales arent as strong has i had thought, Scotland could give them a going over in the 6 nations!

Posted 11:47 29th November 2009

rhino says...

I think a lot more will be said about this game over the next week, chief amongst them, is this the dawn of the new Wallabies? Who knows, what I would like to do is put in a mention for Quade Cooper, it pleases me no end to see him play with authority, confidence and maturity. I also like the spine he has found in defence, particularly with Digby Ioane, they tackled themselves in to the ground. The days of Quade Cooper being a soft touch in defence appear to have been banished. Suddenly the Queensland Reds are looking a bit tougher opposition next year.

Posted 11:20 29th November 2009

IslandPower says...

gods no one else have anything to say on this? why have all the toffs gone silent?

Posted 06:09 29th November 2009

jmanngod says...

Told you that the wallabies would win. Good to see Gatland eat more pie (though in his case a salad wouldn't go amiss)

Posted 00:24 29th November 2009

Wallaroo says...

Yeah what an exciting way to finnish the NH tour. Giteau stepped up this week which was great to see.

Proud to be Aussie.

Posted 23:50 28th November 2009

IslandPower says...

i wonder what gatlands excuse will be this time? hahahahahahahahahahahaha, maybe a whinge about the ref? or that the wallabies having the underdog tag backfired. well done wallabies, digby is the man, haha scary you got mortlock, and also this center/wing coming up, wallabies should be better in the tri-nations next year.

Posted 19:38 28th November 2009

Page 1 of 1

Character Count : 0/1900

Forthcoming Fixtures
FixtureDetails
All times are local
RBS Six Nations
Saturday , March 13
Ireland vs Wales14:30
Scotland vs England17:00
Sunday , March 14
France vs Italy14:30
More RBS Six Nations fixtures
Super 14
Friday , March 12
Chiefs vs Crusaders19:35
Waratahs vs Lions19:40
Saturday , March 13
Bulls vs Highlanders17:05
Stormers vs Hurricanes19:10
Brumbies vs Sharks19:40
Sunday , March 14
Reds vs Western Force16:30
More Super 14 fixtures
Top 14
Friday , March 12
Brive vs Stade Francais19:00
Bayonne vs Clermont Auvergne19:00
Toulouse vs Montpellier19:00
Albi vs Bourgoin19:00
Toulon vs Castres19:00
Perpignan vs Biarritz20:45
Saturday , March 13
Montauban vs Racing Metro Paris20:45
More Top 14 fixtures
LV= Cup
Sunday , March 14
Cardiff Blues vs Gloucester12:15
Northampton vs Saracens16:15
More LV= Cup fixtures
Recent Results
FixtureDetails
All times are local
Guinness Premiership
Sunday , March 7
Sale 7 - 15 NorthamptonSale vs Northampton Report
Wasps 24 - 19 GloucesterWasps vs Gloucester Report
Newcastle 13 - 17 BathNewcastle vs Bath Report
Leeds Carnegie 19 - 12 SaracensLeeds Carnegie vs Saracens Report
More Guinness Premiership results
The Magners League
Edinburgh 33 - 17 OspreysEdinburgh vs Ospreys Report
Cardiff Blues 20 - 29 LeinsterCardiff Blues vs Leinster Report
More The Magners League results
Guinness Premiership
Saturday , March 6
Harlequins 14 - 11 WorcesterHarlequins vs Worcester Report
Leicester 35 - 19 London IrishLeicester vs London Irish Report
More Guinness Premiership results
Super 14
Stormers 33 - 0 HighlandersStormers vs Highlanders Report
Waratahs 25 - 21 SharksWaratahs vs Sharks Report
Crusaders 33 - 20 BluesCrusaders vs Blues Report
Cheetahs 28 - 12 HurricanesCheetahs vs Hurricanes Report
More Super 14 results
Top 14
Castres 35 - 10 Brive
Bayonne 46 - 13 Albi
Montpellier 22 - 19 Racing Metro Paris
Stade Francais 0 - 29 Toulouse
Bourgoin 22 - 14 Montauban
Toulon 21 - 20 Biarritz
More Top 14 results
The Magners League
Newport-Gwent D'gons 31 - 22 Munster
More The Magners League results
Super 14
Friday , March 5
Chiefs 18 - 23 RedsChiefs vs Reds Report
Brumbies 24 - 13 LionsBrumbies vs Lions Report
More Super 14 results
Top 14
Clermont Auvergne 22 - 17 PerpignanClermont Auvergne vs Perpignan Report
More Top 14 results
The Magners League
Scarlets 25 - 8 UlsterScarlets vs Ulster Report
Connacht 19 - 19 GlasgowConnacht vs Glasgow Report
More The Magners League results
Guinness Premiership
Sunday , February 28
Leeds Carnegie 26 - 10 WaspsLeeds Carnegie vs Wasps Report
More Guinness Premiership results
RBS Six Nations Table
PosTeamPPts
1France36
2England34
3Ireland34
4Wales32
5Italy32
6Scotland30