England come from behind to beat inspired Samoa
LILLE, France, Oct 7, 2023 (AFP): England came back to edge Samoa 18-17 in the Rugby World Cup on Saturday after trailing by nine points with half an hour to play. The 2003 winners were already guaranteed top spot in Pool ‘D’ before kick-off and needed Danny Care’s late try to beat the Pacific Islanders, who were already knocked out.
England captain Owen Farrell kicked two penalties and a conversion in Lille as he broke Jonny Wilkinson’s points record for the country before next Sunday’s quarter-final with, in all likelihood, Fiji. England head coach Steve Borthwick started Farrell at centre outside fly-half George Ford as he looked to add some creativity to his side’s play after winning their opening three World Cup games.
Borthwick’s Samoa counterpart Seilala Mapusua changed his whole front five from last week’s loss to Japan, eyeing an unexpected maiden victory over the side eight places above them in the world rankings.
The thousands of travelling English fans sang ‘Swing Low Sweet Chariot’ in an attempt to distract Samoa’s players before their Sivu Tau pre-game war dance, setting the tone for a thrilling encounter. England opened the scoring after just 10 minutes as Manu Tuilagi, facing his country of birth, set-up lock Ollie Chessum before Farrell missed his first chance to overtake Wilkinson’s tally.
The score remained 5-0 after a quarter of an hour after ex-All Black Lima Sopoaga missed a straight-forward penalty, having been forced to change his decade-old kicking tee after losing it after September’s victory over Chile.
Farrell, 31, then surpassed Wilkinson’s England tally of 1,179 points with a penalty before the Pacific Islanders proved what Mapusua meant by wanting his side to be ‘unapologetically Samoan’ earlier in the week. By the half-hour mark, the Samoans were in front and in control, combining power and skill as winger Nigel Ah Wong crossed twice, his second coming from an inch-perfect cross-kick by centre Danny Toala.
On-fire Samoa were denied a third try as the television match official had spotted a Tumua Manu knock-on in the build-up to Duncan Paia’aua’s effort despite Andrew Brace awarding it on the field, much to the disgust of the local French fans who were supporting the Pacific Islanders.
England were shell-shocked and their inability to deal with Samoa’s intensity was highlighted by Farrell’s unnecessary knock-on seconds before the half-time whistle with the score at 14-8. Samoa continued to dominate after the break with Paia’aua only stopped from scoring with a last-ditch George Ford tackle 10m from the England line.