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'Horrendous': Wallabies head coach Dave Rennie hits out at officials

By PA
(Photo by GEOFF CADDICK/AFP via Getty Images)

Wales boss Wayne Pivac said he had no doubt about the legality of Nick Tompkins’ key second-half try after his team beat Australia 29-28 in Cardiff.

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Wallabies full-back Kurtley Beale was sin-binned for a deliberate knock-on after 22 minutes, with Australia briefly reduced to 13 players with number eight Rob Valetini having received an earlier red card following a dangerous tackle on Wales lock Adam Beard.

Australia head coach Dave Rennie was furious after the final whistle, telling Amazon Prime Video: “I thought some of the decision making by the officials tonight was horrendous and played a big part in the result.

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“Kurtley Beale got sin-binned for slapping the ball down. They do the same thing, and it clearly goes forward and they get seven points out of us.

“I am obviously really disappointed with the result. We will end up getting an apology next week, but it won’t help the result. I thought we deserved better.”

But Pivac countered: “I don’t think it (Tompkins incident) is a knock-on personally, nor did the referee, the TMO (television match official), the touch judges or anyone in our coaching box.

“It just goes to show that you can’t switch off and stop. You’ve got to play to the whistle. You tell that to five-year-olds. We were pleased with Nick’s efforts there.

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“At the end of the day, we can talk about red cards and yellow cards, but pressure creates cards and we are good enough to create pressure against sides.

“The red cards, I don’t know that we should be explaining that as we don’t give too many away, but opposition have and they need to have a look at that.”

Valetini’s red was the sixth time this year in 12 Tests that an opposition team have had a player sent off against Wales.

Wales recorded a third successive victory over Australia as they ended their Autumn Nations Series campaign in dramatic fashion.

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Substitute Rhys Priestland’s penalty with the final kick of a frantic game thwarted Australia and sent a 68,000 Principality Stadium crowd wild.

Hooker Ryan Elias and centre Nick Tompkins scored tries for Wales, yet it was fly-half Dan Biggar’s goalkicking that proved the difference, as he amassed 16 points through four penalties and two conversions, until Priestland struck.

Australia, desperate for a win following losses to Scotland and England, made injury-hit Wales fight every inch of the way despite the numerical disadvantage, as wings Andrew Kellaway and Filipo Daugunu touched down, with scrum-half Nic White also scoring.

James O’Connor booted two penalties and two conversions, yet his conversion attempt of Daugunu’s late score hit the post, and Wales could breathe a huge sigh of relief, despite Beale’s 78th-minute penalty.

Pivac added: “It was a game I felt we should have run away with in that last 15 minutes and made it comfortable for ourselves.

“I was very pleased with the group we had out there in the last quarter of the game. They managed to salvage a result in the end.

“When the dust settles, we will look back at the squad we have used, the depth that we’ve created. When we go one to 15 on our depth chart, the benefits will lie there, really.

“Internally as a group, we will celebrate for the first time in a number of months.

“To come out with a win, no matter how it comes, we are just pleased to get that result today. To fall behind and then to get it at the death, we probably made 68,000 people, and everyone watching at home, pretty happy.

“Development has been the key, and it has been forced upon us in a lot of areas and we’ve gone a bit deeper than we would have liked to.

“There are so many good stories here in terms of the development side of things. It sounds like I am just harping on down that track, but it’s factual.”

Wing Louis Rees-Zammit followed Beard in making an early exit, going off just after half-time, and Pivac said: “Adam has got a bit of a shiner and a swollen side of his face. He took a very big blow and couldn’t play on.

“Louis got a whack to the patella tendon. Hopefully, it’s not going to be too serious.”

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Comments

17 Comments
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Nomad 1094 days ago

Strange to complain about the officials considering RE has just been banned for a year. Of course nothing will happen to DR. I see that some of the people here went off about RE and how he should shut up and brought the game into disrepute. This week they are saying DR is right in what he says. Go figure! Just a bunch of hypoc**ts. The reality is that the standard of reffing is not acceptable and the board of WR should get their house in order. If the refs were competent there wouldn’t be any problems. DR complaining about the TMO is BS, it’s the ref who has the final say.

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Sofia 1095 days ago

Rennie is absolutely right. I couldn't agree more. As a silent supporter of Aussie Rugby I believe in my heart of heart, it's the best game Australia has ever played for a very long time. The boys should be very proud of themselves 👍👍👍👍👍👍

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David 1095 days ago

Agree about the host broadcaster. Something REALLY needs to be done about THAT. But can we assume that Rennie will now be handed a two-year ban? I guess not. And it’s about time that somebody started telling the Aussies that they’re playing union here, not league. You just can’t make hits like that (any more). Part of the fault is on the player, but more on the coach. Once they’ve sorted that out, they can teach their No. 2s to stop diving shoulder-first at players’ knees.

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ric 1095 days ago

Wales were lucky to get a win against 13-14 man Australia

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isaac 1095 days ago

The host broadcaster plays a critical role in the fishing outbound cards by slow motion clips of every tackle by opposition to allow for review...always the case and the ref plays to the crowd as well...

D
Dawid 1095 days ago

Dave must be getting his chequebook ready.

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Bob Salad II 2 hours ago
'England's blanket of despair feels overdone - they are not a team in freefall'

1. RFU must scrape the eligibility rules, England's coach must be able to pick all players regardless of where they play.


I don't think this is going to happen and personally, I don't believe it should. The whole new Enhanced Player Squad (EPS) contracts can only be awarded to EQPs signed to Premiership teams (not sure about Championship sides). The Prem clubs are not going to be agreeable to any changes that see their best players heading off to France/Japan etc. Personally, I believe the Prem should be ring-fenced further with even tighter restrictions on the number of foreign players clubs can have on their books. If the RFU are serious about development pathways, then the Prem and Championship should be establish as the best nurseries for developing emerging EQP.


2. SB and coaching team must improve their coaching, selection and impact/substitutions.


Completely agree. Really disappointed that we're unlikely to see more of the England A/U20 cohort against Japan this week. Seems a perfect opportunity to get some of them on off the bench for 20-mins or so. The disparity between the starting 15 and the bench has been one of the biggest issues this Autumn.


3. England need to change their captain, young props to be given game time, inside centre to be introduced along with a younger fast fullback.


Another hot topic atm., though I'm not sure who you'd replace him with. Someone, somewhere mentioned making George Ford captain, but that creates a whole other set of issues regarding you-know-who. Agree about looking at some alternative 12/13 options. Can't see Borthwick drifting too far from Furbank at FB with Steward covering for high-kicking opposition.

6 Go to comments
F
Flankly 3 hours ago
'England's blanket of despair feels overdone - they are not a team in freefall'

England have all the makings of a good team. We know that, and we have known that for years (including when Eddie was delivering disappointing results). But sometimes the positive comments about under-performing teams sound like describing a darts player as "fantastic, aside from their accuracy".


Its a trivial observation to say that scoring more points and preventing more points against you would result in better outcomes. And points difference does not mean much either, as it is generally less than 5 points with top teams. Usain Bolt would win the 100m sprint by 200 milliseconds (approximately two blinks of an eye), but that doesn't mean the others could easily beat him.


Also, these kinds of analyses tend to talk about how the team in question would just need to do X, Y and Z to win, but assume that opponents don't make any changes themselves. This is nonsense, as it is always the case that both teams go away with a list of work-ons. If we're going to think about what would have happened if team A had made that tackle, kicked that goal or avoided that penalty, the n let's think about what would have happened if team B had passed to that overlap, avoided that card, or executed that lineout maul.


There are lots of things that England can focus on for improvement, but for me the main observation is that they have not been able to raise their game when it matters. Playing your best game when it counts is what makes champions, and England have not shown that. And, for me, that's a coaching thing.


I expected Borthwick to build a basics-first, conservative culture, minimizing mistakes, staying in the game, and squeezing out wins against fancier opponents and game plans. It's not that he isn't building something, but it has taken disappointingly long, not least if you compare it to Australia since Schmidt took over, or SA after Rassie took over.

6 Go to comments
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