Wales let history slip in Melbourne as
Australia claim a 25 - 23 victory in the second test match with a last gasp
penalty from newcomer Mike Harris.
After last week’s disappointment at Suncorp
Stadium Wales got off to the dream start. After sustained pressure and good
work around the fringes, George North powered over from close range to open the
scoring just 4 minutes into the game.
Berrick Barnes responded with a penalty and
Australia began to dominate. The home team had the lion’s share of possession
and territory due to a poor Welsh lineout preventing them from getting any sort
of continuity.
Barnes slotted another penalty to bring the
hosts to within a point and the more pressure Wales were put under the more
mistakes they began to make.
Then on the stroke of halftime Berrick
Barnes received clean ball off the top of the lineout, he went on to sell a
dummy to the welsh midfield and go clean through to execute a simple two on one
and send Rob Horne over for the try and the teams went in at the half with
Australia leading 13 – 7.
The final try of the half is a prime
example of the importance of giving your backline clean ball off the set piece;
Wales had very little ball clean ball and were under pressure in the first 40,
and as soon as Barnes gets good ball he glides through the defence to set up
the 5-pointer.
Wales couldn’t have wished for a better
start to the second half. A Wallaby set move goes wrong and Wales centre Ashley
Beck hacks the ball downfield for his centre partner Jonathan Davies to win the
footrace and Halfpenny converted to put Wales back in the lead.
In the second half the lead changed hands a
total of 8 times as Barnes and Halfpenny traded penalties. However Wales missed
a massive opportunity when Cooper Vuna was sin binned for tackling Leigh
Halfpenny in the air, the correct decision and possibly warranted a red card.
During that 10 minute period Wales only scored 3 points and with that a big
opportunity had been missed.
It all came down to a Mike Harris penalty
that came as a result of a powerful driving lineout and he stepped up to break
Welsh hearts and give the home team a 25 – 23 victory.
This means that Australia have won the
series and this tour is now considered a failure by the players, coaching staff
and Welsh public.
Wales can be proud of their effort; their
defence was extremely good and only leaked one try. They may feel they deserved
a victory out of the game but ultimately the scoreboard doesn’t lie and once
again Wales are looking for positives in defeat.
Wales seemed to lose composure with 90
seconds on the clock, with a knock on advantage rather than keeping the ball
and closing the game out they kicked the ball 60 metres downfield allowing
Australia the chance to march up field and claim victory.
Wales’ kicking again was extremely poor,
they didn’t learn their lessons from last week. They kicked loosely and
straight down the throat of Aussie full back Adam Ashley Cooper and Wales were
simply unable to gain any territory.
I think it’s now time for Priestland to be
dropped, Hook deserves to be given a chance because Priestlands form has been
poor. Mike Phillips at times was guilty of trying to take on the whole of Australia
by himself. I’d like to see Tipuric given some game time on the big stage
because ultimately Sam Warburton has been second best to David Pocock this
series and a few changes might help to revitalize the team.
So Wales set their stall out at the
beginning of the tour claiming that nothing less than a series victory will do,
and that hasn’t happened. Now it’s about trying to salvage something, a victory
next week will make history and should begin to heal the wounds, now they have
to pick themselves up as they head to Sydney still in search of the elusive ‘W’
in the Southern Hemisphere.
Your doing some good reports on this blog. Keep it up. I think Wales showed that perhaps the Six Nations wasn't the strongest competition this year. I don't even particularly rate that Australian side.
ReplyDeleteWales are young though, and they will improve. They need to change their mentaility though as they seem to lose it against the top teams when the opportunity is just waiting there to be seized.
I've tried to join your site btw but I can't see any option on it??? Maybe you could change that so that readers like myself can find your site more easily.
Anyways, keep up the good work.
I have my own rugby blog at Dumptacklee Rugby Blog if you fancy a read too.
http://www.dumptackle.blogspot.com