Bow down to the Kings: Three the magic number as Latrell and Tedesco fire Kangaroos to third straight World Cup

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

MANCHESTER – Bow Down To The Kings. The stadium DJ has been playing the Mötorhead hit after every Australian try at this World Cup, and with 52 of them to choose from, it has become a more than familiar refrain.

This might have been the most dominant performance of the lot. Samoa, who went down 30-10 in the end, were strangled by this superb Kangaroos side. Every miniscule error was punished.

Jarome Luai kicked slightly too long early on and within moments Latrell Mitchell had scored. Oregon Kaufusi was momentarily offside in defence and seconds later, James Tedesco was under the posts. Cam Munster stole the ball, Cam Murray crossed.

It was a day on which everything had to go Samoa’s way, but despite the assistance of the vast majority of the 67,502 crammed inside Old Trafford cheehooing their every touch, they barely left a mark on the juggernaut.

Mal Meninga has been criticised for rotating his team, but in the end, he found exactly what he was looking for. Nathan Cleary, though still wayward from the tee, ran the show in attack, ably assisted by Cameron Munster.

“From a coaching perspective, I’m so relieved,” he said. “It’s been a long journey, the whole tournament, but I’m so happy for the players. They bought into everything and I’m happy with the end result.

“This is their moment, they put in so much hard work – not just these last seven weeks, but because they played so well for such a long period of time.

(Photo by Naomi Baker/Getty Images)

Tedesco, quiet for the most part at this World Cup, picked the perfect moment to produce his best and proved uncontrollable from the back. He won man of the match in the stadium and few could argue while his second try, off a superb Munster inside ball, was the best piece of play all night and underlined how superior the Kangaroos could be when they wanted to be.

“It’s killed us this last three years not being able to play for our countries, it’s very special to put this jersey on and this feels unbelievable,” said the Kangaroos captain.

“It’s a team full of superstars. We knew we had the individual brilliance and it was about bonding as a team – and we got better and better each game and this was probably our best performance of all.”

(Photo by Jan Kruger/Getty Images for RLWC)

Latrell Mitchell had been questioned in the lead-up, but had all the answers, opening and closing the scoring in typically authoritative fashion. Val Holmes kept battering in and Josh Addo-Carr did the same. He didn’t manage his record 13th try of the tournament, leaving him level with his wing partner’s number from 2017.

It’s hard to pick fault in Samoa. They never stopped trying and threw plenty of attack, but this Australia side are far too good. Junior Paulo and Luai, in particular, kept going until the final whistle.

They’d already won by getting this far, and could have been excused for playing like their final was last week, but turned up again with full gusto.

“The result was disappointing but not the effort nor the commitment of these guys,” said Samoa coach Matt Parish. “I couldn’t be prouder or happier about the group.

Samoa did start well, but didn’t get the rub of the green as a 40/20 from Chanel Harris-Tavita wasn’t spotted by the linesman. On a day that required everything to go right for them, it was an early indication that they wouldn’t.

The expected gaps didn’t take long to appear. Luai kicked long and gifted a tap restart, which Jack Wighton returned with interest through an unset line. Once they entered the Samoan end, Australia did not leave until they had points, acquired through a strong Mitchell carry that battered Joseph Suaalii out of the way.

CLICK HERE for a seven-day free trial for your favourite sport on KAYO

Again, the Samoans were the architects of their own downfall. Oregon Kaufusi went early in the line and, rather than be caught offside, he opted to wait. Addo-Carr ran straight through the hole and dumped inside for Tedesco to score. One wonders if he mightn’t have been better simply taking his chances with the ref.

Chanel Harris-Tavita lays motionless in Manchester. (Photo by Dave Howarth – CameraSport via Getty Images)

Samoa rotated their middles, and with a fresh Martin Taupau and Josh Papalii on the field, enjoyed their best spell. They might have scored when Suaalii took an attacking kick, or moments later, when Harris-Tavita was held up, but instead, the Kangaroos went straight up the other end and barged over through Martin.

Down 14-0 at the break, Parish’s men needed a break. They got one, with an Angus Crichton brainsnap earning him a ten minute sit down after raising an elbow to Harris-Tavita.

Taylan May got himself over, but only after a forward pass. The Kangaroos, to their credit, treated it like the hardest possible defensive drill and batted Toa Samoa away.

Even a man down, Munster was able to steal the ball from Spencer Leniu, and within seconds, Cleary slipped Murray over for his fifth try of this tournament.

There was respite coming. Samoa began to put some air under the ball and got rewards, with Laui tempting Mitchell to go for the intercept and, when he missed, Brian To’o got in behind for a well-received try.

Though the crowd went up, the Kangaroos kept calm. Munster, again, proved the difference with the deftest of inside passes that sent Tedesco streaking to the line.

Stephen Crichton then picked off a Ben Hunt pass – what is a major final these days without a Stephen Crichton intercept try? – and restored Samoan hope, but the last laugh was Australia’s as Mitchell ran in one with 20 seconds to play.

The Crowd Says:

2022-11-24T03:21:43+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


Oh dear, really? So, you’d rather have the argument and try to belittle me personally because you cannot see the correlation? Now, either read slowly or read it twice. Olympics: Who has the biggest bank balance and dominates every time? USA, Russia, China, Germany, USA. Who trains and provides athletes to the world, including Aust. USA, Russia, Germany, Great Britain . What sports? Athletics (which covers quite a few individual events), Swimming, Tennis just to name a few. I don’t have to “defend” anything, it was played and enjoyed by millions all over the world and you’re here commenting on it. Except, you made a stupid comment you can’t back up you weasel and worm and try attack me. With that intellect, I hope you can lift heavy things.

2022-11-24T01:49:57+00:00

Not An Expert

Guest


So what exactly is the “correlation” between one of the world’s biggest sporting events to one that isn’t even relevant in more than a handful of countries, I must have missed it?! Which teams/sports at the Olympics are “constructed” of participants from the same country with the same passport & the same citizenship status yet, “represent” different countries?! Please name them? (Good luck :laughing:). “Vague swipe”, I’m sorry you had trouble comprehending my comment, you know, that was posted in the comments section of a “League article” about the “Australian League Team” winning the “League World Cup.” Next time I’ll ask the Editors if I can use crayon’s for ya?! :laughing: :laughing: Keep reaching for the straws, you may clutch some one day?! :laughing: Who’s “jumpy”?! I’m not the one who had to reply to “defend” a slight against your so called “World Cup”, that was you. Not sure if you’re trying to convince me, or yourself? Either way, I don’t think it’s working. :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

2022-11-22T23:24:07+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


No, I wasn’t trying to disprove anything. You made a general comment about “ country with the largest bank balance by miles, most amount of teams and players…wins the tournament constructed of teams full of lesser players” so there is no “whataboutism” at all because there is a direct correlation to your comment to the fact that every large event in the world has similar structures in place. Next time you try a vague swipe be more specific instead of getting all jumpy because your example relates to 99% of large events.

2022-11-22T08:14:13+00:00

London Panther

Roar Rookie


What do you mean by ‘early ball’ from Grant. He plays dummy half…. This is Grant’s issue and why it was so disjointed with Cleary; too much run first from Grant, with Teddy also popping up way too often on the 4th tackle.

2022-11-22T05:33:44+00:00

Not An Expert

Guest


Mentioning the Olympics is relevant to my comment, how?! Replies that contain “whataboutism’s”, just confirm & reinforce the original statement. Your comment does nothing to disprove that the League “World Cup” contains and is overwhelmingly over-represented by people from ONE country. Why not call it what it is, a “World Heritage” Cup and be done with the gratuitous self-flagellation? :laughing:

2022-11-22T03:17:38+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


A closet what sheep boy? Come on, give me one of those 1985 taunts that are still scything for those intelligent enough to watch fox? Tell me how do you balance living off other people’s tax money, hating anyone who has achieved anything in their life and still love Rupert and Trump? They represent everything you hate and hate everything you are. Poor little cheech doesn’t know where to turn.

2022-11-21T21:19:02+00:00

Me Vlad You Crane

Guest


He's definitely a closet something .

2022-11-21T06:49:11+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


So you’ve never seen an Olympics?

2022-11-21T06:30:06+00:00

Con Version

Roar Rookie


No, my brother Per is a bigger disappointment. He probably has something in common with a lot of league players.

2022-11-21T06:24:30+00:00

Con Version

Roar Rookie


The majority of players not coming from one country would help! Do you think that's a reasonable definition?

2022-11-21T03:36:49+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


Lol, that's exactly what someone who is triggered would say :laughing:

2022-11-21T03:11:59+00:00

Noel

Roar Rookie


If a cricketer wants to 'break' a ton? 99? Semantics, I know. Sorry, I should leave this alone and get back to work...

2022-11-21T03:02:23+00:00

matth

Roar Guru


Poor old Brett Kimmorley nearly had his career ruined by Matty Bowen. I have no dog in this fight. I believe Cleary is the best Australian halfback at the moment and I thought the final was his best performance at the World Cup

2022-11-21T02:26:57+00:00

Ben Pobjie

Expert


Ok, settle down love

2022-11-21T02:23:33+00:00

Cam

Roar Rookie


I was being mostly facetious. I will put it in brackets next time so you don't get triggered.

2022-11-21T02:20:25+00:00

Kent Dorfman

Roar Rookie


Ah - so the Kiwis had 2 sides in the RLWC))

2022-11-21T02:05:31+00:00

souvalis

Roar Rookie


Any more involved and he’d be in the way.

2022-11-21T01:49:24+00:00

Nat

Roar Guru


I’ve been called a lot of things before but… :laughing:

2022-11-21T01:13:41+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


I thought he should have won the Clive Churchill medal in the GF and he has been on fire in these post season matches !

2022-11-21T01:10:30+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


100% . And with so many "stars" trying to get their hands on the ball and "star", how is Cleary supposed to also be the standout "star" ?

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar