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Argentina maul Spain in battle of the big cats

Spain's lock Lucas Guillaume (L) tackles Argentina's wing Rodrigo Isgro (C) during the pre-World Cup international friendly rugby union match between Spain and Argentina at the Metropolitan stadium in Madrid on August 26, 2023. (Photo by Pierre-Philippe MARCOU / AFP) (Photo by PIERRE-PHILIPPE MARCOU/AFP via Getty Images)

Los Pumas flexed their South American muscle to make light work of Spain in their Rugby World Cup warm-up match at the Wanda Metropolitano in Madrid.

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The crowd might not have quite matched the average Athletico Madrid home attendance, but roughly 20,000 of the Los Leones faithful turned out for a fixture that had little meaning for a side that had forfeited their place at this year’s Rugby World Cup.

The home side were disqualified for their second World Cup in a row last November, so a home fixture against their Latin cousins just weeks out from a tournament they would have otherwise been at may well have been bittersweet.

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By the same token, Michael Cheika’s Pumas went out wanting to stretch their legs in what is effectively their only Rugby World Cup warm-up match, barring their turn in this year’s truncated Rugby Championship.

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Argentina struck first through a Nicolas Sanchez penalty, which was followed a few minutes later by a crossfield kick that found fullback Juan Cruz Mallia, who scored Los Puma’s first try with just 13 minutes on the clock.

Giant loosehead Joel Sclavi was next up with a 5-pointer, barging his way over in the 17th minute following some sustained pressure from Los Pumas.

The visitors didn’t take long to strike again, with Newcastle Falcons’ flyer Mateo Carreras dancing his way through Spain’s edge defence with just 22 minutes on the clock. Another Sanchez conversion took the score to 24-0.

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Spain fought back, nearly claiming a try from their own crossfield kick in the 31st minute. Winger Martiniano Cian was seemingly tackled as he caught the ball, with the incident duly referred to TMO, only for the intervention to be ruled legal. Not to be dissuaded, Spain’s Gonzalo Vinuesa kicked a penalty a few minutes later to avoid the ignominy of a potential whitewash on home soil.

Spanish joy was shortlived however, with Los Pumas scrumhalf Tomas Cubelli punishing the home side, diving over from close range following an Argentinian catch and drive. It was converted by Sanchez, which stretched the lead to 31-3. It was the last score of the half.

A sweeping Argentine attack nearly put Rodrigo Isgro away in the right corner, only for a last-ditch tackle to snuff out the move.

The game got a little scrappy after that, with a less-than-clinical Los Pumas failing to convert nearly 15 minutes of possession in the Spanish 22 into points. They managed to break the deadlock in the 54th minute, with a try for burly back row Marcos Kremer off a catch and drive. Sanchez’s conversion pushed the score out to 38-3.

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An on-song Jeronimo de la Fuente was next to score, the replacement barging his way over impressively in the 64th minute, before being joined on the scoreboard in the 68th minute by Martin Bogado.

Not to be outdone, the forwards struck next, with Facundo Isa crossing the whitewash off an unstoppable maul close to the Spanish line.

Bogado put the cherry on top for Los Pumas following a midfield break up the middle of the park, to leave the final score 62-3.

Points Flow Chart

Argentina win +59
Time in lead
0
Mins in lead
82
0%
% Of Game In Lead
95%
83%
Possession Last 10 min
17%
0
Points Last 10 min
7

 

 

 

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Comments

4 Comments
C
Corey 478 days ago

This Spain side missed all their ProD2 and Top14 players.

R
Ruby 478 days ago

This was Argentina's 2nd warm up, they played South Africa after the RC

S
Shaylen 479 days ago

Cant wait to see what they can do against England. Cheika has them going through a great process right now. He has a hard time as a coach with so many players playing in different regions around the world however now that he has his squad together he can get the prep required to make a real charge at the semis.

K
KiwiSteve 479 days ago

They beat Eng a year ago at Twickenham. They will destroy Eng in 2 weeks.

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f
fl 3 minutes ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

"fl's idea, if I can speak for him to speed things up, was for it to be semifinalists first, Champions Cup (any that somehow didn't make a league semi), then Challenge's semi finalists (which would most certainly have been outside their league semi's you'd think), then perhaps the quarter finalists of each in the same manner. I don't think he was suggesting whoever next performed best in Europe but didn't make those knockouts (like those round of 16 losers), I doubt that would ever happen."


That's not quite my idea.

For a 20 team champions cup I'd have 4 teams qualify from the previous years champions cup, and 4 from the previous years challenge cup. For a 16 team champions cup I'd have 3 teams qualify from the previous years champions cup, and 1 from the previous years challenge cup.


"The problem I mainly saw with his idea (much the same as you see, that league finish is a better indicator) is that you could have one of the best candidates lose in the quarters to the eventual champions, and so miss out for someone who got an easier ride, and also finished lower in the league, perhaps in their own league, and who you beat everytime."

If teams get a tough draw in the challenge cup quarters, they should have won more pool games and so got better seeding. My system is less about finding the best teams, and more about finding the teams who perform at the highest level in european competition.

50 Go to comments
f
fl 40 minutes ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

"Would I'd be think"

Would I'd be think.


"Well that's one starting point for an error in your reasoning. Do you think that in regards to who should have a say in how it's setup in the future as well? Ie you would care what they think or what might be more fair for their teams (not saying your model doesn't allow them a chance)?"

Did you even read what you're replying to? I wasn't arguing for excluding south africa, I was pointing out that the idea of quantifying someone's fractional share of european rugby is entirely nonsensical. You're the one who was trying to do that.


"Yes, I was thinking about an automatic qualifier for a tier 2 side"

What proportion of european rugby are they though? Got to make sure those fractions match up! 😂


"Ultimately what I think would be better for t2 leagues would be a third comp underneath the top two tournemnts where they play a fair chunk of games, like double those two. So half a dozen euro teams along with the 2 SA and bottom bunch of premiership and top14, some Championship and div 2 sides thrown in."

I don't know if Championship sides want to be commuting to Georgia every other week.


"my thought was just to create a middle ground now which can sustain it until that time has come, were I thought yours is more likely to result in the constant change/manipulation it has been victim to"

a middle ground between the current system and a much worse system?

50 Go to comments
f
fl 55 minutes ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

"Huh? You mean last in their (4 team) pools/regions? My idea was 6/5/4, 6 the max, for guarenteed spots, with a 20 team comp max, so upto 5 WCs (which you'd make/or would be theoretically impossible to go to one league (they'd likely be solely for its participants, say 'Wales', rather than URC specifically. Preferrably). I gave 3 WC ideas for a 18 team comp, so the max URC could have (with a member union or club/team, winning all of the 6N, and Champions and Challenge Cup) would be 9."


That's a lot of words to say that I was right. If (e.g.) Glasgow won the URC and Edinburgh finished 16th, but Scotland won the six nations, Edinburgh would qualify for the Champions Cup under your system.


"And the reason say another URC (for example) member would get the spot over the other team that won the Challenge Cup, would be because they were arguable better if they finished higher in the League."

They would be arguably worse if they didn't win the Challenge Cup.


"It won't diminish desire to win the Challenge Cup, because that team may still be competing for that seed, and if theyre automatic qual anyway, it still might make them treat it more seriously"

This doesn't make sense. Giving more incentives to do well in the Challenge Cup will make people take it more seriously. My system does that and yours doesn't. Under my system, teams will "compete for the seed" by winning the Challenge Cup, under yours they won't. If a team is automatically qualified anyway why on earth would that make them treat it more seriously?


"I'm promoting the idea of a scheme that never needs to be changed again"

So am I. I'm suggesting that places could be allocated according to a UEFA style points sytem, or according to a system where each league gets 1/4 of the spots, and the remaining 1/4 go to the best performing teams from the previous season in european competition.


"Yours will promote outcry as soon as England (or any other participant) fluctates. Were as it's hard to argue about a the basis of an equal share."

Currently there is an equal share, and you are arguing against it. My system would give each side the opportunity to achieve an equal share, but with more places given to sides and leagues that perform well. This wouldn't promote outcry, it would promote teams to take european competition more seriously. Teams that lose out because they did poorly the previous year wouldn't have any grounds to complain, they would be incentivised to try harder this time around.


"This new system should not be based on the assumption of last years results/performances continuing."

That's not the assumption I'm making. I don't think the teams that perform better should be given places in the competition because they will be the best performing teams next year, but because sport should be based on merit, and teams should be rewarded for performing well.


"I'm specifically promoting my idea because I think it will do exactly what you want, increase european rugyb's importance."

how?


"I won't say I've done anything compressive"

Compressive.

50 Go to comments
J
JW 59 minutes ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

Generally disagree with what? The possibility that they would get whitewashed, or the idea they shouldn't gain access until they're good enough?


I think the first is a fairly irrelevant view, decide on the second and then worry about the first. Personally I'd have had them in a third lvl comp with all the bottom dwellers of the leagues. I liked the idea of those league clubs resting their best players, and so being able to lift their standards in the league, though, so not against the idea that T2 sides go straight into Challenge Cup, but that will be a higher level with smaller comps and I think a bit too much for them (not having followed any of their games/performances mind you).

Because I don't think that having the possibility of a team finishing outside the quarter finals to qualify automatically will be a good idea. I'd rather have a team finishing 5th in their domestic league.

fl's idea, if I can speak for him to speed things up, was for it to be semifinalists first, Champions Cup (any that somehow didn't make a league semi), then Challenge's semi finalists (which would most certainly have been outside their league semi's you'd think), then perhaps the quarter finalists of each in the same manner. I don't think he was suggesting whoever next performed best in Europe but didn't make those knockouts (like those round of 16 losers), I doubt that would ever happen.


The problem I mainly saw with his idea (much the same as you see, that league finish is a better indicator) is that you could have one of the best candidates lose in the quarters to the eventual champions, and so miss out for someone who got an easier ride, and also finished lower in the league, perhaps in their own league, and who you beat everytime.

50 Go to comments
J
JW 1 hour ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

Well I was mainly referring to my thinking about the split, which was essentially each /3 rounded up, but reliant on WCs to add buffer.


You may have been going for just a 16 team league ranking cup?


But yes, those were just ideas for how to select WCs, all very arbitrary but I think more interesting in ways than just going down a list (say like fl's) of who is next in line. Indeed in my reply to you I hinted at say the 'URC' WC spot actually being given to the Ireland pool and taken away from the Welsh pool.


It's easy to think that is excluding, and making it even harder on, a poor performing country, but this is all in context of a 18 or 20 team comp where URC (at least to those teams in the URC) got 6 places, which Wales has one side lingering around, and you'd expect should make. Imagine the spice in that 6N game with Italy, or any other of the URC members though! Everyone talks about SA joining the 6N, so not sure it will be a problem, but it would be a fairly minor one imo.


But that's a structure of the leagues were instead of thinking how to get in at the top, I started from the bottom and thought that it best those teams doing qualify for anything. Then I thought the two comps should be identical in structure. So that's were an even split comes in with creating numbers, and the 'UEFA' model you suggest using in some manner, I thought could be used for the WC's (5 in my 20 team comp) instead of those ideas of mine you pointed out.


I see Jones has waded in like his normal self when it comes to SH teams. One thing I really like about his idea is the name change to the two competitions, to Cup and Shield. Oh, and home and away matches.

50 Go to comments
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