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France overcome a dogged Scotland
October 26, 2008 FRANCE have accounted for a determined Scottish outfit 36-18 in their opening Rugby League World Cup match at Canberra Stadium. With 12 players from Super League's Catalans outfit, the Tricolores showed more class and skill than their less fancied opponents. Five-eighth Thomas Bosc led France effectively and with the occasional show of attacking flair but the foundation was laid by the strong running of forward Adel Fellous. French full-back Jared Taylor scored the first try of the match when he was on the supporting end of a bustling 40 metre line break from Adel Fellous in the 16th minute. Catalans star Bosc converted and the semi-final hopefuls were away. Three minutes later Scotland struck back via a slick backline movement that ended with a try in the corner for Jonathan Steel. But the first half was dominated by dropped ball, ill-disciplined tackling and strong running forwards with some big hits from both sides. The Bravehearts came out a different side in the second half with prop Oliver Wilkes grabbing a try in the 46th minute to bring the difference back to a converted try. Scotland were denied an opportunity to tie the game up at 24-all in the 66th minute when video referee Phil Cooley opted not to award a try to five-eighth John Duffy. It didn't matter in the end with France's Jerome Guisset and Christophe Moly both scoring tries in the final ten minutes to run away with the win. The game was the opening match of Pool 2, which also includes Fiji. |
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Thurston guides Roos to victory
October 26, 2008 JOHNATHAN Thurston cast aside his personal family tragedy to lead Australia to a 30-6 victory over New Zealand in their World Cup opener at the SFS. Only a day after his uncle Richard Saunders was bashed to death in a park south of Brisbane, Thurston produced one of his most composed efforts in a Kangaroos jumper in the most difficult of circumstances. The star half-back had a hand in three of Australia's five tries, booted four goals and directed their attacking play in a brilliant performance worthy of man-of-the-match honours. He was finally rested in the 72nd minute taking his record to eight wins from as many Tests for Australia. Captain Darren Lockyer was another standout, making a seamless return to the green and gold 18 months after he last played for Australia. Lockyer and Thurston have not played together since Origin III in 2007 but they fell immediately back into the old groove by running Australia around the paddock and controlling the tempo of the contest. But despite being the marquee match-up of the World Cup, the game lacked the usual spark of Test match football forcing the crowd of 34,157 to start a Mexican wave with 25 minutes remaining. Their boredom was stopped somewhat when Australian centre Brent Tate suffered concussion in the 58th minute tackling Lance Hohaia. The loss of Tate was the only thing that went wrong for the Australians. The same can't be said for New Zealand. Nothing went to script for the Kiwis as their brilliant warm up form was thrown out the window as their attack fell into disarray. Half-back Thomas Leuluai was ineffective and at times abysmal while star Benji Marshall never looked dangerous and was well below his best. Centre Steve Matai was also put on report for a high shot on Paul Gallen in the 13th minute that could attract a suspension. The only shining light for New Zealand was a strong solo try by forward Sika Manu in the 27th minute as he brushed aside three defenders to score their only try of the game. Australia led 14-6 at halftime after Greg Inglis and debutant Joel Monaghan scored from sweeping backline plays down the left flank. The Kangaroos busted the game apart shortly after oranges with Israel Folau barging over the line and then full-back Billy Slater scoring off a Thurston break on the hour for an 18-point lead. But Slater could find himself in hot water after diving feet first at Jerome Ropati to deny a try in the 74th minute, an act he was warned about prior to the tournament. Folau completed the dominant win by scoring his second try after some quick hands in the final 30 seconds of the game. |
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Tonga win thriller against Ireland
October 27, 2008 TONGA overcame adverse decisions on and off the field to beat Ireland 22-20 in a thrilling rugby league World Cup match at Parramatta Stadium. Denied access to NRL stars Fuifui Moimoi and Taniela Tuiaki by the NSW Supreme Court before the match, Tonga was twice reduced to 12 men in an eventful poll three encounter. Winger Damien Blanch scored a hat-trick of tries to give Ireland a sniff of causing the first big boilover of the competition. However, the appropriately-named winger Esi Tonga helped his team overcome a late 20-18 deficit with a decisive 73rd minute try. It was a case of going from villain to hero, as Tonga was one of two members of his team sin-binned by British referee Steve Ganson. Ireland scored their first three tries and 14 points while Tonga were outnumbered. Down 6-0 early, following a converted try to Tonga's Penrith star Michael Jennings, Ireland fully capitalised when Esi Tonga was binned for repeated infringements in the 23rd minute. Blanch crossed for his first try three minutes later and fullback Michael Platt gave the Wolfhounds the lead despite what appeared to be a blatant forward pass by halfback Karl Fitzpatrick. With their full complement restored, Tonga hit back with a try to winger Cooper Vuna and led 12-10 at the break following a penalty to halfback Joel Taufa'ao. The see-sawing encounter took another twist in the 49th minute when Tongan five-eighth Feleti Mateo was sin-binned for back chatting. Blanch scored his second try before Mateo returned to put Ireland back in front, but Tonga hit back to regain the lead with their third try. Blanch completed his hat-hat-trick to snatch the lead back for Ireland, but Tonga's late four-pointer prevented the Wolfhounds from causing the upset. |
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Samoa clinch island derby
October 31, 2008 SAMOA took a big step towards the rugby league World Cup semi-finals with a dogged 20-12 win over arch rival Tonga in their island derby at Penrith. Samoa will clinch their pool if they beat Ireland in the last pool match at Parramatta next Wednesday. The clash featured plenty of rugged defence and jarring hits, plus occasional high tackles. And when it was over, hundreds of excited Samoa fans charged onto the pitch to celebrate. While it wasn't the spiteful battle some pundits had forecast, Australian referee Shayne Hayne still had his work cut out. He placed two players on report. The first was Samoa prop Kylie Leulua'i for a high tackle on Tongan full-back Fetuli Talanoa in the first half. After the break, Hayne placed Tonga centre Etu Uaisele on report for a dangerous tackle on full-back Smith Samau, who was picked up and driven into the ground. Samoa grabbed initiative early, with winger Francis Meli crossing in the third minute. And they bolted to a 10-0 advantage in the 11th minute, when skipper Nigel Vagana picked off a pass from Tonga hooker Tevita Leo-Latu and sprinted 90m for a try converted by Ben Roberts. Tonga surged back into the game when classy centre Michael Jennings charged onto a brilliant flick pass from Tony Williams. The conversion cut the deficit to four points. Vagana missed a glorious opportunity for another try when he dropped the ball over the line in what effectively became a 12-point turnaround. Just a couple of minutes later Leo-Latu burst out of dummy-half to set up a 12-10 Tonga lead. However Bulldogs NRL star Matt Utai weaved over in the right hand corner to give Samoa a 14-12 half-time lead. It was virtually one way traffic in the second half, with Samoa dominating possession against an outfit clearly still fatigued from last Monday's win over Ireland. Samoa extended their lead with a brilliant try to centre George Carmont, who capitalised on some sensational lead-up work by forwards David Solomona and Lagi Setu. The dominant Samoans had potential tries to Carmont and Ben Roberts rubbed out, but continued to monopolise possession until the closing minutes. Tonga was further hampered by an apparent groin injury to half-back Willie Manu. Great game and great crowd. Was lucky enough to get free tickets to see this match. Some of Best NRL and Super League players played tonight. Glad i went. cheers Dougie ![]() |
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Samoa-Tonga clash to be annual affair
November 01, 2008 RUGBY league officials will make Samoa-Tonga an annual event after their World Cup epic at CUA Stadium was compared to the birth of State of Origin. In their first game together, the Nigel Vagana-inspired Samoans eliminated Tonga from pool three and set up a possible semi-final clash with Australia when tries either side of half-time gave them a bruising, thrill-a-minute 20-12 victory. But the enduring image from the night was the large chunk of a vocal 11,787 crowd invading the field at fullt-ime, with Fox Sports sideline eye Scott Sattler bowled over live on air and Samoa's local hero Tony Puletua chaired from the field in his final game at Penrith. And despite the fear of violence, there was no evidence of any crowd trouble. "We're going to make it an annual fixture," Rugby League International Federation development officer Tas Baitieri said. "The idea is that next year Samoa and Tonga play off with the winner added to the following season's Tri-Nations, making it a Quad-Nations." There is also push for the annual tournament to become a Six Nations from 2010, with France and a Pacific qualifier to take part every year. Vagana, the Samoa captain, said both countries were ready to play at the top level "for the next 100 years" while second-rower David Solomona reckoned comparisons with the first Origin match in 1980 at Lang Park were not over the top. "Hopefully it can be like that," he said. "Sixty per cent of the Toyota Cup is Polynesian. If we can get these as annual events, it's only going to make international rugby league better. "Whoever's in charge of international league, if they came to the game today and you went to Australia-New Zealand, you tell me who's more passionate? "I've been to Test matches, I've played in big derbys in England and it was crazy out there. It was probably the best support ever." Samoa looked to have broken their bitter rivals' backs when George Carmont's try made it 20-12 in the 54th minute but the Tongan defence was nothing short of heroic as they repelled attack after attack for the rest of the game. |
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