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George Ford proud of his side as England complete tour clean sweep
George Ford proud of his side as England complete tour clean sweep

The Independent

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • The Independent

George Ford proud of his side as England complete tour clean sweep

Captain George Ford said he was proud of his young England colleagues after they completed a clean sweep of victories on their summer tour. A much-changed England side shrugged off two lengthy delays caused by lightning to beat the United States 40-5 in Washington DC on the back of a 2-0 series win in Argentina. Curtis Langdon, Luke Northmore, Cadan Murley, Jack van Poortvliet, Harry Randall and Gabriel Oghre, one of six debutants, grabbed England's six tries with Ford landing four conversions with one from another new face, Charlie Atkinson. 'The boys have been unbelievable all tour. They deserve that tonight,' said Ford, who won his 102nd cap. 'It is a proud moment for the families, so we will celebrate. 'There has been a lot of hard work and the conditions were difficult tonight. 'We have won all three games, we have had six new caps, I am proud of the effort of everyone.' After kick-off at Audi Field was delayed due to an electrical storm in the American capital, England seized control when the Eagles were reduced to 14 by a deliberate knock-on from outside-half Chris Hilsenbeck. Langdon was the beneficiary of a driving line-out for the first score and then new boy Max Ojomoh slipped in fellow centre Northmore for a simple score under the posts. Alex Dombrandt and debutant Jack Carpenter had scores ruled out on either side of a 40-minute delay for lightning before Murley raced over in the final play of the first half. Van Poortvliet, showing his sound positional sense, went over straight after the restart and England were camped in the Americans' 22 for most of the second period. The hosts held out until Immanuel Feyi-Waboso sliced through to send the supporting Randall over and Bristol hooker Oghre burst out of a maul to score as England turned to the bench. The US were finally on the scoreboard in the final seconds as a well-worked ploy at the front of a line-out saw Chris Poidevin put Shilo Klein over for a consolation score. 'It is a big challenge, but the boys stayed on it,' said home captain Benjamin Bonasso. 'We trusted the process and got a try at the end of the game. 'We have got to keep going. Facing this type of speed and conditions always makes you better.'

George Ford proud of his side as England complete tour clean sweep
George Ford proud of his side as England complete tour clean sweep

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

George Ford proud of his side as England complete tour clean sweep

Captain George Ford said he was proud of his young England colleagues after they completed a clean sweep of victories on their summer tour. A much-changed England side shrugged off two lengthy delays caused by lightning to beat the United States 40-5 in Washington DC on the back of a 2-0 series win in Argentina. Curtis Langdon, Luke Northmore, Cadan Murley, Jack van Poortvliet, Harry Randall and Gabriel Oghre, one of six debutants, grabbed England's six tries with Ford landing four conversions with one from another new face, Charlie Atkinson. 'The boys have been unbelievable all tour. They deserve that tonight,' said Ford, who won his 102nd cap. 'It is a proud moment for the families, so we will celebrate. 'There has been a lot of hard work and the conditions were difficult tonight. 'We have won all three games, we have had six new caps, I am proud of the effort of everyone.' After kick-off at Audi Field was delayed due to an electrical storm in the American capital, England seized control when the Eagles were reduced to 14 by a deliberate knock-on from outside-half Chris Hilsenbeck. Langdon was the beneficiary of a driving line-out for the first score and then new boy Max Ojomoh slipped in fellow centre Northmore for a simple score under the posts. Alex Dombrandt and debutant Jack Carpenter had scores ruled out on either side of a 40-minute delay for lightning before Murley raced over in the final play of the first half. Van Poortvliet, showing his sound positional sense, went over straight after the restart and England were camped in the Americans' 22 for most of the second period. The hosts held out until Immanuel Feyi-Waboso sliced through to send the supporting Randall over and Bristol hooker Oghre burst out of a maul to score as England turned to the bench. The US were finally on the scoreboard in the final seconds as a well-worked ploy at the front of a line-out saw Chris Poidevin put Shilo Klein over for a consolation score. 'It is a big challenge, but the boys stayed on it,' said home captain Benjamin Bonasso. 'We trusted the process and got a try at the end of the game. 'We have got to keep going. Facing this type of speed and conditions always makes you better.'

Was Scotland's summer tour a success or failure?
Was Scotland's summer tour a success or failure?

Yahoo

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • Yahoo

Was Scotland's summer tour a success or failure?

We asked for your views on whether Scotland's summer tour should be regarded as a success or a failure. Here's what some of you said: Abigail: I don't think it can be classed as a success without the win in Fiji. However, I do believe the players on the tour will have learned a lot during their game time. The players built strong cohesion to end the tour and some players really stood out for Scotland selection, which is the ultimate aim. Especially Jamie Dobie, Andy Christie, Fergus Burke, Gregor Brown, Kyle Rowe, Ben Muncaster and Ollie Smith. George: Yes, it was a success because of the amount of first-team players who were missing. They did great against Samoa. Bernard: No, it's been a failure. We couldn't find our game against Fiji and got beat for it. Winning against Samoa isn't getting us into the top-six rankings, which means another group of death in the next World Cup. Gregor Townsend's time is up. Jake: The Fiji game was billed as crucial to our World Cup seeding so the success of the tour can only be judged on this game. We once again showed a complete inability to perform when it really matters; characteristic of Townsend's tenure as head coach. The only way the tour could be judged a success is if the higher-ups at the SRU finally see sense off the back of this fresh failure and remove Townsend. Kev: I'm counting the performance of the Dobie-Burke combination as a success. They looked class against Samoa, with the creative emphasis taken on by Dobie while Burke attacked the line with solid skill. Of course the Fiji result is not ideal, but the exposure of the wider squad to test match rugby is a plus. Christie and Fin Richardson also looked up to speed and offering something to be hopeful for in the future. Stuart: The Scots did their job well against Samoa. Ewan Ashman had a good game, his first for a while. Arron Reed and Rowe connected well, as did Burke in the midfield. Fiji was a disaster but a good look at the talent coming through. Townsend has done well. The players let him down badly last week. Tam: Scotland still lack the killer instinct when they are ahead of teams. It's something which has not been addressed. We are able to fight back great and hold out wins here or there, however there is a lack of cutting edge, especially in second-half performances. Townsend says we showed character. We know we have that within us but it's taking teams to the sword which we lack.

Second-string shine but familiar problems for Scotland
Second-string shine but familiar problems for Scotland

BBC News

time18-07-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Second-string shine but familiar problems for Scotland

Two wins, one narrow and one commanding, and a bruising defeat. It's been a mixed bag for Gregor Townsend and his players on their summer sojourn to the southern were clinical against the Maori All Blacks, ill-disciplined against Fiji and dominated both sides of the ball against will focus on the humbling loss in Suva. The Scots were second best in every department, with a match plan that seemed to play to Fiji's remember, this is a squad without at least 10 first-choice players due to a combination the British & Irish Lions tour and although the world rankings may have been harmed, the new World Cup format means Scotland will, most likely, not face another 'pool of death' like they did in not too bruising in the end, then. Plus, there are plenty of positives. Let's look through them. Second-string shines in New Zealand "Those are the two best performances on tour, so we obviously like playing in New Zealand!" Townsend joked after the 41-12 win over Samoa in first and last games of the tour were the matches in which far more game time was given to Scotland's back-up brigade and a fair few excelled."You rise to a challenge and you show your true identity when you've got that challenge of backing up a defeat and the players showed that," added Townsend."The way they came together during the week with just a six-day turnaround and one training session, they were really aligned and focused on delivering a better performance."Andy Onyeama-Christie looked back to his best, with the back-rower returning from a horrific leg break sustained playing for Saracens last Smith was another on the comeback trail and immediately made an impact. Given Scotland's lack of depth in the back-three, his recovery is a Samoa, the midfield partnership of Stafford McDowall and Rory Hutchinson did their best impression of Sione Tuipulotu and Huw Jones, with McDowall equally adept at trucking forward like an angry rhino, or showing the delicate hands of a important relationship that blossomed was in the half-backs, between Jamie Dobie and Fergus they struggled with the game plan against Fiji, the duo look to have cemented themselves as second-choice behind Lions' tourists Ben White and Finn inclusion in the starting XV against Fiji - his first Test start at nine - suggested a reshuffle in the scrum-half pecking order and his all-action performance against Samoa only boosted his fly-half, there have been plenty of contenders for the second violin spot, but with Townsend saying Burke "is up there with the best 10s" it looks like he's going to get his shot in the coming months. Old ghosts continue to haunt The problems in the loss to Fiji will keep Townsend awake at we saw the good stuff that has kept Scotland fans dreaming of a Six Nations triumph; smooth backline running and powerhouse performances in the back-row - there was also all the bad stuff that keeps crashing us back down to ill-discipline was horrendous. Townsend called it "unusual" but the man in the middle was Ben O'Keeffe, a referee who once gave 17 successive penalties against enormous defensive pressure, teams do start to creak but at some stage, players and coaches have to wise up. Why were so many offsides given away? What are we doing that this referee doesn't like? Questions to be set-piece also continued to struggle. Although hooker Ewan Ashman has been called up as cover for the Lions tour, the line-out has been a problem area for Scotland for a long a decent set-piece, Scotland don't have a solid foundation to build upon. It has to be sorted before they can ever be Six Nations was also the shaky restarts, something that predates Townsend's eight years in charge. When spilled, or not gathered at all in some cases, any confidence from scoring at the other end immediately evaporates. They need to get over the nerves. 'Pool of death' unlikely at next World Cup A lot was made of the game against Fiji and the damaging impact on ranking now looks a lot harder for Scotland to be inside the top six when the World Cup pools are drawn in December, something that Townsend admitted was the what does finishing outside the top six actually look like now? It's certainly not the same as 2023, given the expanded 24-team edition of the next top two teams will go through from the six four-team groups, as will the four best third-placed means it's highly likely that Scotland will qualify for the knockouts, regardless of whether they're in the top six or course, if they were one of the best-ranked sides the group would be easier and give them a better path deeper into the tournament. But let's put one foot in front of the other though, it's important to rest. "It's end of the season for a lot of guys, it's been a long season," Townsend said."They put their bodies on the line right to the last play of the game and they deserve a good rest."After some of those bone-juddering, neck-snapping collisions in Suva, they'd be forgiven for sleeping in ice baths until the autumn Tests.

Scotland showed 'true identity' against Samoa
Scotland showed 'true identity' against Samoa

BBC News

time18-07-2025

  • Sport
  • BBC News

Scotland showed 'true identity' against Samoa

Gregor Townsend says Scotland showed their true colours against Samoa as they ended their summer tour with a commanding Scots ran in seven tries in Auckland to bounce back from last week's loss against Fiji. And Townsend was delighted with the performance."We had to defend really well at the beginning of the game," Townsend said. "Samoa were direct and physical. We were really clinical in the 22, through direct carrying and good skills."It's hugely important [to bounce back]. You rise to a challenge and you show your true identity when you rise to a challenge. "The players showed that. They were really aligned and focused on delivering a better performance."

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