Tag Archives: Wallabies

Courtney Lawes can be the heir to the talented Mr Ripley

The Northampton second-row has been waiting patiently for his chance to start for England and is ready to rampage tomorrow It would be a fitting tribute if England could mark the passing of one of their greatest rugby men with a stirring win over the Wallabies. Andy Ripley really was a man in a billion, an inspiration even to those who never saw him rampaging around Twickenham in his prime. That the English game has not produced a more thrillingly athletic forward before or since simply magnifies the huge sense of loss. Not once did the concept of damage limitation enter Ripley’s Corinthian soul, an approach the modern-day England side could do worse than embrace. Maybe Martin Johnson has arrived at the same conclusion, hence the belated decision to select Courtney Lawes for his first Test start. If there is a new age giant out there capable of generating an equal frisson with ball in hand as his head-banded, hippie-loving predecessor, the 21-year-old Lawes could just be the man. Theoretically Lawes is supposed to be a second-row, all grunt and close-quarter grind. Yet England also need ball carriers capable of knocking opponents backwards and blasting holes in the defensive line for their support runners to exploit. Eighteen months ago the word was already on the grapevine that Northampton had unearthed a gem with a spectacular mix of muscularity and momentum. And then nothing. Picked in England’s autumn squad the pretender has had to wait an intensely frustrating nine months for a start. If he has a stormer tomorrow, Lawes can justly claim to have fought his coaches’ innate conservatism and won. The player is aching to have a crack. The shy lad of last autumn, whose confidence slipped away either side of Christmas as he stumbled between the two stools of thwarted national ambition and club graft, has been replaced by a 6ft 7in tall, 18st hard nut, determined to reach out and seize the day. “I definitely feel ready. I feel very confident in myself and I’ve got a lot of support from the boys and the coaches. I was a little disappointed not to play during the Six Nations and lost my form a bit. But that’s fine if you pick yourself up again, which I have done. I’m looking to make an impact throughout the game: win my lineouts, make my tackles and get the ball in hand as much as possible.” There is a physical edge to Lawes that suggests he will be more than prepared to stand toe to toe with the experienced Nathan Sharpe and Rocky Elsom who, along with David Pocock, dominated the contact areas in Perth. There is already sufficient evidence of Lawes’s tackling strength to make opponents think twice and his capacity for punishment is bottomless. “I’ve never been too concerned about my body, to be honest,” he said this week. “I like making big tackles but so do most people. They’re pretty satisfying but I’m not a dirty player. If they want to get under my skin that’s fair enough. I’ll just try and hurt them legally.” If he speaks with the zeal of a relatively late convert it is because mini-rugby passed him by. Hailing from an Anglo-Jamaican background, he grew up in Northampton after his father, Linford, moved the family from Hackney when Courtney was four. Home was a few hundred yards from Franklin’s Gardens and he used to accompany his dad, a bouncer at a local pub, to martial arts training. Only in his teens at Northampton School for Boys did he sample rugby, eventually joining the Old Scouts club, which also produced Ben Cohen and Steve Thompson. A Northampton club stalwart, Lennie Newman, recalls going to watch his own son play and being deeply impressed by a gangling 17-year-old in the same team. “I remember thinking ‘Blimey, this guy is big’ but he was good as well. There was something special about him, and his physical size gave him that edge.” Winning the man-of-the-match award against Munster last October, when he stood firm against the Irish Lions Paul O’Connell and Donncha O’Callaghan, was another significant milestone yet Johnson, perhaps recalling how he felt when he was lobbed into international rugby as a 22-year-old, was determined not to rush him. But Simon Shaw will be 37 in September and time is pressing. Lawes, who can also operate on the blindside flank, is visibly delighted to be escaping bench duty. “You’ve got enough time to really make a difference in a game … you can do a lot more in 80 minutes than you can in 15. Playing against good sides also makes you raise your game and you can see how far you have to push yourself.” Lawes, in short, has the big-match appetite and the temperament necessary at this level. His appropriately long arms have earned him the name “Spider” but the Wallabies offer a physical and a mental test. “The more I can learn the better I’m going to get. I’ve got a bit wiser. I know how to get into the game and make a bigger impact. I know where to go to make the tackles and where to get the ball. It’s been a tough tour but we’re ready.” Ripley never had a koi carp tattooed on one arm or Maori tribal markings on the other but he would have admired the unflinching young dude hoping to create a little lawful disorder tomorrow. England rugby union team Rugby union Australia rugby union team Robert Kitson guardian.co.uk

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Courtney Lawes can be the heir to the talented Mr Ripley

England aiming to sign off for summer with rare victory in Australia | Robert Kitson

• ‘Some won’t get a chance to play in a Test in Australia again’ • Defining moment for Martin Johnson’s World Cup planning One game should not define a season, but England know there are exceptions. A big defeat in the second and final Test will confirm the worst fears of those who suspect the coaches are flogging a dead horse. Victory, on the other hand, would allow the management to insist their World Cup plans are gathering momentum. There is hardly any middle ground still available for rent. Even a gallant loss would underline what the rugby world has come to believe: that England talk a better game than they play in terms of beating the southern hemisphere’s finest. Australia are a good side but their current scrum issues make them more vulnerable than they might be. If Martin Johnson’s squad wish to enjoy their holidays, it is important they erase the memory of their diffident display in Perth. Precisely that message will be repeated before kick-off by coaches and senior players alike. “We’ve got a chance to put the record straight,” said Nick Easter, the England No8 who, by his own admission, fell below the required standard last week. “You want to have a summer when you can look back and be pleased with your last performance, otherwise you’ll be stewing. We’ve got to go out and show a lot more than we did last Saturday.” Johnson has also reminded everyone that places in England’s 32-man elite squad to be named next month remain unbooked, well aware that Wednesday’s game against New Zealand Maoris in Napier is unlikely to supply much solace. A potential tour record of one scratchy win from five games will not rank as a great leap forward. “Some of the guys won’t get a chance to play in a Testmatch in Australia again,” he said. Barring a marked upturn, several are unlikely to be tackling the Wallabies at Twickenham this November either. At least the cheery mood during training at North Sydney Oval was encouraging. Maybe the sunshine helped, but the squad contains enough talent and enthusiasm to hint at better days ahead if the players can escape their current underachieving rut. Ben Youngs has the ability to match his contemporary Will Genia as a backline catalyst and his first Test start will be instructive. If the Leicester scrum-half shines, it might even persuade Johnson to start thinking like an Australian and blood the likes of Alex Goode on the enlightened basis that class is permanent and immaturity is temporary. It would also help if the French referee Romain Poite, as he surely will, takes a sadistic interest in the scrum engagements. At times last week England’s tight-head Dan Cole unquestionably used illegal tactics to destabilise his opponent Ben Daley, but he is good enough to make life difficult without resorting to the dark arts. Tim Payne, even so, has cautioned against assuming the Wallabies scrum will be minced again. “Without a shadow of a doubt, they’ll be better,” the loose-head said. “I’m sure they’ll have hit the scrum machine many times this week.” Either way, England crave a collective performance that is not entirely down to their scrummagers or the slowly fading veterans of the 2003 World Cup final triumph in the same arena. Australia remains mystified at Jonny Wilkinson’s non-selection, with the former Wallabies centre Tim Horan declaring it “a decision Martin Johnson is likely to regret”. The hosts should clinch a 2-0 win but the ghost in the white No10 jersey has yet to be exorcised Down Under. If Jonny rises off the bench and slots another winning drop-goal the groans will be audible from Canberra to Cape Tribulation. Sky Sports 1: kick-off 11am England rugby union team Australia rugby union team Martin Johnson Robert Kitson guardian.co.uk

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England aiming to sign off for summer with rare victory in Australia | Robert Kitson

England leave out Jonny Wilkinson for second Test in Australia

• Toby Flood and Shontayne Hape preferred • Wilkinson on the bench at stadium where he won World Cup It is so long since England won the 2003 World Cup at Stadium Australia that Jonny Wilkinson says he has forgotten at which end he kicked his life-changing drop-goal. If that sounds bizarre to an Australian audience, his exclusion from Saturday’s England starting XV at the same location has similarly baffled the locals. There was an obvious horses-for-courses case for fielding Wilkinson at either 10 or 12 but it has been pointedly ignored in favour of a line-up featuring only two changes from the team unable to capitalise on their scrum superiority in Perth. This is a game England dare not lose tamely and the temptation to include Wilkinson for his goal-kicking alone must have been significant. Robbie Deans, the Wallabies coach, was convinced England would play the Wilko card. Instead Martin Johnson has opted to retain Shontayne Hape at inside-centre and Toby Flood at fly-half, a decision which indicates Wilkinson is no longer seen as a must-have item for England’s biggest games. “We like what we’ve got with Toby starting and Jonny on the bench,” Johnson said. Courtney Lawes and Ben Youngs getting first Test starts is also a sign of the times. Johnson has finally confronted the reality that Simon Shaw is unlikely to make next year’s World Cup and that Danny Care has not nailed down the No9 jersey, although he phrased it rather more diplomatically. If they respond well, Lawes and Youngs can now expect a decent run in the side. This will be an auspicious day for them and England. While Lawes’s athleticism is considerable he must prove he can perform a mountain of unglamorous physical work for 80 minutes at the highest level. Youngs, having endured a stellar season for Leicester, will find himself required to subdue Will Genia, such a pivotal figure that Deans has omitted Luke Burgess despite the latter’s fine first Test efforts. This time last year the two Premiership tyros were featuring in the World Under-20 final in Japan and have been regarded as the rising sons of English rugby ever since. “Some players don’t really want to put their heads where it’s going to hurt but I’m not too fussed,” the 21-year-old Lawes said, shrugging. “I’ll put my body on the line for my team.” Youngs, only 20, has the vision and the sharpness around the fringes to profit if England’s scrum does start rumbling forward again. “It’s the opportunity of a lifetime and hopefully one I’ll take,” he said. England’s forwards coach, John Wells, is also among those hoping for a more physical effort up front, not least from Tom Palmer and his new second-row partner Lawes. “They’re both big, heavy lads. They need to use some of their pace and weight and start knocking some players back a bit.” Shaw remains on the bench – “I’ve said to Simon: ‘If you want to compete until 2011 we’ll let you do that, we’re not writing you off,” insisted Johnson – alongside Delon Armitage, who has ousted Mathew Tait as the utility back. Given Armitage can barely muster a thimble-full of self-belief at the moment, it has to be interpreted as a shot across the bows of both Tait and Ben Foden as this tour enters its final, defining days. With Matt Giteau also back in the Wallabies’ midfield, Johnson has reiterated the need for England to display more alacrity across the park from the first whistle. Some of the tour squad spent their free time this week diving with sharks and climbing the Harbour Bridge but Johnson, who has summoned Saracens’s Brad Barritt from the Churchill Cup as cover for the injured Dominic Waldouck, has not travelled this far to be a tourist. “I don’t like losing games. Do I worry about my personal record? I just want us to get better. Of course I worry about losing but being under pressure is what playing for England is all about. That’s the whole game. If you don’t want pressure, you might as well sit there with a notepad.” England, though, have to demonstrate they have the makings of a genuinely competitive World Cup squad rather than build foundations on shaky ground. “If you paper over the cracks too many times, ultimately you set yourself up for a big fall,” Wilkinson said, stressing the importance of not looking too far ahead. Given he can remember so little about his 2003 kick – “It’s lost in a bit of a blur” – that should not be a major problem. Australia: O’Connor (Western Force); Ioane (Reds), Horne (Waratahs), Giteau (Brumbies), Mitchell (Waratahs); Cooper (Reds), Genia (Reds); Daley (Reds), Faingaa (Reds), Ma’afu (Brumbies), Mumm (Waratahs), Sharpe (Western Force), Elsom (Brumbies, capt), Pocock (Western Force), Brown (Western Force). Replacements: Edmonds (Brumbies), Slipper (Reds), Chisholm (Brumbies), Hodgson (Western Force), Burgess (Waratahs), Barnes (Waratahs), Ashley-Cooper (Brumbies). England: Foden (Northampton); Cueto (Sale), Tindall (Gloucester), Hape (Bath), Ashton (Northampton); Flood (Leicester), Youngs (Leicester); Payne (Wasps), Thompson (Brive), Cole (Leicester), Lawes (Northampton), Palmer (Stade Français), Croft (Leicester), Moody (Leicester, capt), Easter (Harlequins). Replacements: Chuter (Leicester), Wilson (Bath), Shaw (Wasps), Haskell (Stade Français), Care (Harlequins), Wilkinson (Toulon), D Armitage (London Irish). England rugby union team Jonny Wilkinson Martin Johnson Rugby union Robert Kitson guardian.co.uk

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England leave out Jonny Wilkinson for second Test in Australia

Talks intensify over closing Calif.’s $26B deficit (AP)

AP – Against a backdrop of IOUs and expanding government furloughs, Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger and legislative leaders expressed optimism Saturday that they were moving toward a compromise that could end California’s fiscal calamity.

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Talks intensify over closing Calif.’s $26B deficit
(AP)

Thousands seek relatives’ graves at Ill. cemetery (AP)

AP – Thousands of relatives hoping to find their loved ones showed up Saturday as officials exhumed one grave in a cemetery where four former employees are accused of digging up and dumping hundreds of bodies in a scheme to resell plots.

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Thousands seek relatives’ graves at Ill. cemetery
(AP)