
No Lions, no worries as depleted England shock Pumas
England winger Tom Roebuck scored two tries and veteran flyhalf George Ford delivered a virtuoso performance to secure the visitors' upset victory in La Plata on Saturday.
Argentina beat the Lions 28-24 in Dublin two weeks ago for the first time and left most of the team intact for their first Test at home this year.
But Argentina's failure to score any points in a first half they dominated came back to bite them as England opened the new half by suddenly running the ball and scoring three tries in seven minutes.
The Pumas rallied with two tries to forwards Pablo Matera — his 110th appearance tying Agustin Creevy's national caps record — and Pedro Rubiolo.
But that's all England allowed in an impressive show of depth and ruthless efficiency.
It even finished with a flourish. Replacement wing Cadan Murley scored the fourth try and co-captain Ford, who became the eighth man to play 100 England Tests, capped off a surprisingly emphatic win with 15 points and a try assist.
"It's a great win for us," Ford told broadcaster Sky Sports.
The Pumas arrived at halftime utterly frustrated. They were held up over the tryline three times and England flanker Sam Underhill was underneath two of them.
England lock Alex Coles and new midfielder Seb Atkinson were yellow-carded. For at least four minutes, Argentina was playing against 13 men.
But by the time Argentina was facing 15 again, England led 3-0 after a drop goal by Ford.
England absorbed everything and turned a 3-0 halftime lead into 22-0 by the 50th minute.
Sweeping backline moves that England kept under wraps in the first half sprouted two tries for Roebuck and another for fullback Freddie Steward.
"The first five minutes of the second half we were very poor," Pumas captain Julian Montoya told Sky Sports. "We can't have those gaps where we concede very easy points."
The Pumas closed the gap to 10 going into the fourth quarter but England pinned them down and finished on a high, giving it confidence of sweeping the two-Test series in San Juan next weekend.

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The Advertiser
3 hours ago
- The Advertiser
'Newton's third law': Schmidt defence of rested Tizzano
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He's copped a lot of online abuse," Schmidt told reporters. "The only thing I'd say in defence of Carlo is that there were just over 54 Gs of force that went directly through the neck, which is enough to cause serious injury, although not to a rugby player who is as well conditioned as Carlo. "We are all aware of Newton's third law - for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. "When that force hits him and the speed of his head collapsing down, he recoiled out the back of the ruck. "I don't think he wanted to recoil like that but that's the nature of force. That there is an equal and opposite reaction. "We weren't sure about him on Tuesday. He was still pretty sore. He was great today (Thursday). He was right back to the irrepressible character he is. "I've advised Carlo to stay away from the media full stop, and the opinions that are out there. For Carlo, it's better that he sits this one out." Schmidt made it clear in the bitter aftermath to last week's series-deciding loss that he felt Morgan's clear-out was illegal and the no-penalty decision went against World Rugby's campaign for player safety. While the New Zealander escaped sanction, World Rugby chief Alan Gilpin was unimpressed. Five days on and Schmidt wants to leave the saga in the past and focus on ensuring the Wallabies avoid becoming the first team to be whitewashed 3-0 in a Lions series in Australia since 1904. "You can lament all sorts of things," Schmidt said. "I actually feel like (Italian referee) Andrea Piardi had a good game. "There's a couple of decisions we might not agree with, but I thought he refereed well. So we're not looking at refereeing decisions. "We're looking at what we could have done better, making sure that we try to repair those things." 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He's copped a lot of online abuse," Schmidt told reporters. "The only thing I'd say in defence of Carlo is that there were just over 54 Gs of force that went directly through the neck, which is enough to cause serious injury, although not to a rugby player who is as well conditioned as Carlo. "We are all aware of Newton's third law - for every action there is an equal and opposite reaction. "When that force hits him and the speed of his head collapsing down, he recoiled out the back of the ruck. "I don't think he wanted to recoil like that but that's the nature of force. That there is an equal and opposite reaction. "We weren't sure about him on Tuesday. He was still pretty sore. He was great today (Thursday). He was right back to the irrepressible character he is. "I've advised Carlo to stay away from the media full stop, and the opinions that are out there. For Carlo, it's better that he sits this one out." 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Perth Now
4 hours ago
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'Newton's third law': Schmidt defence of rested Tizzano
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Sydney Morning Herald
6 hours ago
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