England beat Australia 40-16 to make Rugby World Cup semi-finals

Jonny May tryImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Jonny May scored two tries within three minutes on the day he won his 50th cap

2019 Rugby World Cup quarter-final

England: (17) 40

Tries: May 2, Sinckler, Watson Pens: Farrell 4 Cons: Farrell 4

Australia: (9) 16

Try: Koroibete Pens: Lealiifano 3 Con: Lealiifano

England are into the World Cup semi-finals for the first time in 12 years as they ruthlessly dispatched old rivals Australia.

Two first-half tries in three minutes from Jonny May on his 50th cap helped establish a 17-9 half-time lead before a sensational score from Marika Koroibete brought the Wallabies to within a point.

But prop Kyle Sinckler smashed through from Owen Farrell's flat pass as England regained control, the fly-half landing 20 points with his boot to crush Australian hopes before Anthony Watson applied the coup de grace with a late interception try.

It was England's best performance of a World Cup when they have seldom been tested, the decision of coach Eddie Jones to start Farrell in place of George Ford vindicated by a seventh successive win over his home country.

Four years ago England were sent packing at the group stage from the tournament they were hosting by Michael Cheika's side.

But with the young back-row combination of Tom Curry and Sam Underhill outstanding, this was sweet revenge, a last-four meeting with New Zealand in a week's time the rich reward.

May day for Australia as clinical England cut loose

Media caption,

England make semi-finals & All Blacks thrash Ireland

Australia came out fast and battered away at the England defence, the men in white forced into 30 tackles in the first three minutes, Christian Lealiifano's penalty reflecting the early balance of power.

But after England had twice wasted overlaps in the opposition 22, they struck twice in quick succession to stun the Wallabies.

First Farrell went left after Watson had made inroads down the right, and with the defence stretched Curry committed the last man before putting May into the corner.

Farrell curled the conversion over from the touchline and with English celebrations still ringing round the stadium Australia handed over another priceless gift.

David Pocock threw a needless loose pass in midfield, Henry Slade gathered, charged into space and kicked cleverly ahead and May gathered the bouncing ball to dive into the same little patch beyond the try-line.

Lealiifano brought it back to 14-6 with his second penalty after Slade strayed offside but Farrell popped over one of his own to re-establish the 11-point lead on the half-hour.

And there was palpable relief among the gold-shirted support when a scrum penalty after a typically bullocking run from Samu Kerevi allowed Lealiifano to make it 17-9 at the interval.

Sinckler try sinks Australia's hopes

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Sinckler's try gave was a bitter blow to Australia's hopes

Australia had been nine points down to Fiji and 15 to Wales in the group stage before charging back, and within moments of the restart they had closed the gap to a single point.

Winger Reece Hodge spotted space beyond Slade and threw a long pass to 19-year-old Jordan Petaia, and Koroibete came accelerating up on his inside before leaving Elliot Daly for dead on the outside.

It was a stunning try but England struck back immediately in similar style.

After a poor kick from the struggling Will Genia, England battered to within 25 metres before Farrell's sweet flat pass found Sinckler hammering through like a runaway dumper-truck for his first international try.

Farrell made it 27-16 after Australia's scrum splintered and then the defence held firm on their own line despite repeated Wallaby charges.

Farrell twisted the knife again with two more penalties, England taking control at the scrum, the power of their ball-carriers repeatedly punching dents in the Australian rearguard.

With Australia 17 points down and time running out, Watson picked off Beale's desperate long pass in search of Hooper, and England could celebrate a first win in knockout rugby since 2007.

Man of the match: Tom Curry

Image source, AFP
Image caption,

The 21-year-old was up against the best flankers in international rugby across the last two World Cups in David Pocock and Michael Hooper. Curry was outstanding throughout, making 16 tackles and with partner-in-crime Sam Underhill dominated their storied opposite numbers.

'We haven't been at our best yet' - reaction

England head coach Eddie Jones: "They came back at us in the second half and we had to find ourselves. It was one of those 'bring it on moments'. We had to decide whether we were going to stick at it or go individual and I thought it was brilliant.

"We are so excited about the semi-final. We haven't been at our best yet and that is the challenge to see how we can get to our best."

England captain Owen Farrell: "Australia made that a brilliant game. They attacked throughout but our boys did well in defence and managed to get some field position off the back of it. We know when we have field position we can be pretty dangerous.

"We did what was needed. We had the lead and Australia were throwing everything at us again. We wanted to play the game at our pace and we did that in the second half."

England scrum-half Ben Youngs: "We stuck in there, the key point was midway in the second half on our line when we pushed them back, pushed them back.

"We were probably cruising in second gear in those first few games, but we went through the gears today."

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Flanker Sam Underhill made a staggering 20 tackles

Match stats

  • England's 24-point margin of victory was their biggest in a World Cup knockout game and Australia's heaviest defeat in the knockouts.

  • This was England's joint biggest victory against Australia in Test history (matching the 30-6 win in November 2017); in fact, England's three biggest wins against the Wallabies have come under Eddie Jones.

  • Australia have lost just three of their nine Rugby World Cup quarter-final matches, each of those three defeats has come against England (also 1995, 2007).

  • Jonny May became the first player to score a brace of tries in a World Cup knock-out match for England since Will Carling and Rory Underwood both crossed twice against New Zealand in the 1995 semi-final.

  • Sam Underhill (20), Mako Vunipola (18), Jamie George (17), and Owen Farrell (17) all surpassed the previous highest tackle tally in a World Cup match by an England player (five players previously made 16).

  • Kyle Sinckler became just the sixth prop to score a try in a World Cup knockout game and the first since Tony Woodcock in the 2011 final.

Image source, AFP
Image caption,

Maro Itoje takes a selfie with England supporters

Teams

England: Daly; Watson, Slade, Tuilagi, May; Farrell (capt), Youngs; M Vunipola, George, Sinckler; Itoje, Lawes; Curry, Underhill, B Vunipola.

Replacements: Ford for Slade (61), Joseph for Tuilagi (74), Heinz for Youngs (73), Marler for M Vunipola (69), Cowan-Dickie for George (69), Cole for Sinckler (64), Kruis for Lawes (64), Ludlam for Underhill (69).

Australia: Beale; Hodge, Petaia, Kerevi, Koroibete; Lealiifano, Genia; Alaalatoa, Latu, Sio; Arnold, Rodda; Naisarani, Hooper (capt), Pocock.

Replacements: O'Connor for Petaia (74), Toomua for Lealiifano (53), White for Genia (61), Slipper for Sio (69), Uelese for Latu (66), Tupou for Alaalatoa (61), Coleman for Arnold (66), Salakaia-Loto for Naisarani (69).

Referee: Jerome Garces (France).

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