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October 27, 2003 Monday Sha’aban 30, 1424

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England and Ireland Overcome epic battles


England 35 Samoa 22

Ireland 16 Argentina 15


SYDNEY, Oct 26: England and Ireland both survived epic battles on Sunday to book their place in the World Cup quarterfinals and leave just two places up for grabs with a week of pool games left to play.

England recovered from a 10-point deficit to beat a physical Samoa 35-22 in Melbourne while Ireland held their nerve in a tense finish to defeat Argentina 16-15 in Adelaide.

Ireland’s win not only knocked the Pumas out of the tournament but also guaranteed defending champions Australia a place in the last eight with New Zealand, France and Wales.

The last two quarterfinal berths will be decided next weekend when Samoa play South Africa in Brisbane and Scotland tackle Fiji in Sydney.

The remaining 10 teams have all been eliminated although eight of them still have at least one match to play. Italy and Argentina are already packing their bags after playing their last matches.

Samoa exposed a number of chinks in England’s armour as they rattled the Six Nations champions with their ferocious tackling, racing to a 10-0 lead when flyhalf Earl Va’a kicked a penalty and then converted a sixth-minute try by captain and number eight Semo Sititi.

Flyhalf Jonny Wilkinson saved England once again after an erratic start, contributing 15 points with the boot while his superb crosskick in the 68th minute to an unmarked Iain Balshaw set up the try that broke the defiance of the Samoans.

England were also awarded a penalty try early in the second half while flanker Neil Back and replacement prop Phil Vickery both crossed the line as the northern hemisphere side booked a place in the tournament’s quarterfinals.

Ireland were forced to battle desperately hard to overcome a physical Argentina and avenge their loss to the Pumas four years ago.

Flanker Alan Quinlan scored a first half try for Ireland after a break by captain Keith Wood but was then forced to leave the field with a dislocated shoulder.

Ireland, who led 10-9 at halftime, were rocked by a magnificent drop kick by Argentina fullback Ignacio Corleto which gave his side a one-point lead going into the final quarter.

The Irish finally poured on the pressure with some spirited forays allowing Ronan O’Gara to kick two penalties. Argentine flyhalf Gonzalo Quesada then reduced the margin to a point with a penalty but Ireland held on.

Australia set a host of records, including the biggest winning margin in the history of the World Cup, when they thumped Namibia 142-0 in Adelaide on Saturday.

Standings

(Tabulated under played, won, drawn, lost, points scored for, points scored against, bonus points, total points):

Pool A

Australia 3 3 0 0 256 16 2 14

Ireland 3 3 0 0 125 39 2 14

Argentina 4 2 0 2 140 57 3 11

Romania 3 0 0 3 28 185 0 0

Namibia 3 0 0 3 21 273 0 0

Pool B

France 3 3 0 0 163 56 3 15

Scotland 3 2 0 1 80 77 2 10

Fiji 3 2 0 1 78 92 1 9

US 2 0 0 2 33 58 1 1

Japan 3 0 0 3 53 124 0 0

Pool C

England 3 3 0 0 144 34 2 14

South Africa 3 2 0 1 124 50 2 10

Samoa 3 2 0 1 128 57 2 10

Uruguay 2 0 0 2 19 132 0 0

Georgia 3 0 0 3 34 176 0 0

Pool D

New Zealand 3 3 0 0 229 20 3 15

Wales 3 3 0 0 95 45 1 13

Italy 4 2 0 2 77 123 0 8

Canada 3 0 0 3 30 128 1 1

Tonga 3 0 0 3 39 154 1 1

—Reuters



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