'Eddie got found out': Jones in spotlight as 'ferocious' Fiji leave Wallabies RWC hopes hanging by thread in 69 year first

By Tony Harper / Editor

SAINT ETIENNE – The Wallabies face a win-or-die pool C clash with Wales in Lyon next weekend after they were battered in the breakdown and conquered out wide by a brilliant Fiji 22-15 at the World Cup on Monday (AEST).

Fiji hadn’t beaten Australia since 1954, six years before Eddie Jones was born.

“It was a thoroughly deserved victory by Fiji and they outplayed us particularly around the ruck. They executed three times more turnovers than us and in a close game that’s the difference,” said Jones.

“For some reason we were just off today. If you look at the stats we dominated and we scored two tries to one but we were a poor version of ourselves. There’s a bit of soul searching to do.”

Fiji, needing to win to stay alive, destroyed the Wallabies in all facets and exposed a lack of experience in the Australian ranks, especially at No.10 where Carter Gordon had a miserable afternoon, and was dragged off on 49 minutes.

Eddie Jones, through his own design, had no one of experience to right the ship – needing Ben Donaldson to step up for the playmaking duties down the stretch.

Jones will find his selection choices for this game and the tournament – and the use of his replacements – questioned by angry Wallabies fans in the coming hours and days.

“I feel for Carter Gordon right now because he doesn’t have a Quade Cooper or Bernard Foley to go back to the hotel and pull him aside and say ‘bro these things happen, you’ll learn from this’. It was really tough to see him pulled like that,” said Sonny Bill Williams on Stan Sport.

“I’d like to see Carter given another shot for the young man’s confidence., For him to be pulled out would be a tragedy.

“These selections – we’re in a high performance arena and sometimes you live and die by your selections and Eddie Jones got found out tonight.”

Jones responded to Williams’ comments in his post match press conference.

“When you are a television commentator, you are always right,” said Jones. “Maybe I need to become a television commentator then I’ll be right all the time. Look, we’ve gone with a young team, I’ve got no regrets at all. We are building a team for the future and we are going to go through some pain.

“I made the decision to go for a younger team and if that’s the wrong decision then I will be held accountable for that. But I think Australian rugby needs to move on to a younger team. I am prepared to go through some pain to leave Australia with a team capable of doing really well in a World Cup.

“That’s not to say we can’t do it, we’ve had a bit of a setback today but that’s all part of being in a World Cup. I do remember South Africa lost a game and won a World Cup, so funny things have happened.”

“Of the 10-12 major issues the Wallabies had in the game I don’t think Carter Gordon was part of them,” said Morgan Turinui, who said the Australians were dominated at the breakdown. “Their breakdown work wasn’t up to it tonight.”

It was a Fiji masterclass in the tight that proved the key difference.

Former Wallabies skipper Michael Hooper added: “It was always going to be a tough contest but what the Fijians did – what I was so impressed about – was they came out in the first 40 and they were ferocious. “

As Australia chased down the game with a 19-8 deficit as the game went into the final quarter, Australia got into the Fijian 22 and in excellent attacking positions only to concede three penalties in less than five minutes.

Every Fijian penalty win was greeted by huge cheers and if there were neutral fans at kick off in the 41,492 crowd they were solidly behind the Fijians down the stretch.

Australia’s build up to the game has been seriously affected by injuries, with Taniela Tupou and Will Skelton ruled out in the leadup – the skipper’s absence only confirmed an hour beforehand even though leaks suggested he was never a chance to play.

Afterwards, Jones said they would also miss the Wales game.

We’ll have to wait for the insider Stan documentary to work out what all the smoke and mirrors were about – because you won’t get a straight answer out of Jones or his coaching staff.

While the Australian scrum held its own, the Fijians asked physical questions everywhere and right from the start.

They brought Josua Tuisova in at No.12 and he targeted a disappointing Gordon, while fast hands looked to expose the Australians on the flanks with long passes to wingers with chalk on their heels.

Referee Andrew Brace gave two penalties for high hits by Fii in the opening two minutes and the second led to Ben Donaldson kicking the first points of the game.

The Wallabies held on in the opening waves of Fijian attacks but Fiji were back on level terms in 10 minutes when Richie Arnold was caught on wrong side of the ruck. Brace went early with the penalty as Simione Kuruvoli passed the ball into Arnold. He had charged through and was tryline bound but had to settle for three points instead.

Soon after Gordon ran into the brick wall of Eroni Mawi, the first of two occasions in the first half where he had the ball jolted out of his hands by brutal defence in a difficult evening.

The step up in pace and intensity from the Wallabies opener against Georgia was marked, with Fiji outpacing the Aussies in the breakdown, and the error count mounting. Nic White, in for Tate McDermott, drove a long kick dead in goal but redeemed himself soon after.

With the Wallabies 6-3 down after another precision Kuruvoli kick, Australia produced a masterstroke of a try to hit the front.

Richie Arnold caused havoc in a breakdown, the ball popped out to White who drove a superb kick deep towards the Fiji line for a 50-22.

Chasing the ball in touch, Mark Nawaqanitawase wrestled away from an opponent. He took a quick lineout to Samu Kerevi who charged forward and flicked a pass back inside for Marky Mark to steam over.

“This is the one you dream about. You talk about this happening – if we get a 50-22 we’ll play this play and it never comes off,” said former skipper Michael Hooper on Stan Sport. “It’s come off here. I love the intent by the Wallabies to all be around. There’s four Wallabies in the picture and only one Fijian. I really love that.

“Marky’s running so hot on confidence. A lot of teams are looking to do this – whether they can execute is the challenge. We did that tonight. I love that.”

Two more penalties saw Fiji go into the rooms up 12-8 at the break and they charged ahead with a moment that would have left Jones raging.

A high box kick from the excellent Kuruvoli was allowed to bounce as Gordon, White and Nawaqanitawase got in each other’s ways. Josua Tuisova claimed the bouncing ball and charged over.

Tuisova, though really should have iced the game on 51 minutes as Fiji had a six on three overlap down the left but the giant centre threw a wild pass into touch.

It could have been the moment to match Semi Radradra’s fumble with the line open in the loss to Wales as the Wallabies fought desperately to get back into the match.

Down 22-8 they came time and again only to be denied by excellent defence and Brace’s whistle.

With 10 minutes to go Suli Vunivalu scooped up a ball after a Dave Proecki surge and went over. Donaldson’s conversion meant Australia could level with a converted try, but the Fijians had enough.

Australia came through with a bonus point but need a win over Wales next Monday (AEDT).

The Crowd Says:

2023-09-19T09:12:19+00:00

Rogue Estate

Roar Rookie


Simple - start with kids - have hero's in the community to become legends. Back parenting coaches with the right resources. None of this is happening like it should in rugby.

2023-09-19T04:52:48+00:00

John Lucas

Roar Rookie


All the experience, talent, skills we left in Aussie. Surely no coach can survive in any sport with a win lose ratio the Wallabies will have if we lose against Wales?

2023-09-18T23:11:26+00:00

Reds Harry

Roar Rookie


Fair comment. Was probs viewing through my Wallaby support lense. Certainly we were lucky with Arnold's playing on the ground not pinged in the leadup to our first half try. As I said, no doubt Fiji were the better team.

2023-09-18T21:05:33+00:00

Dean

Roar Rookie


It was sad watching Nic White struggle in every aspect of his game against Fiji. Worst he has played in Gold. Would have been nice to see Fines and Gordon linking, at least Fines passes the ball to his 10.

2023-09-18T21:03:36+00:00

Dean

Roar Rookie


I reckon you will get a lot of takers backing Fiji against any team with a 50 point head start. I hope Fiji get through to the QF and give us all another display of beautiful Rugby.

2023-09-18T20:58:20+00:00

Dean

Roar Rookie


Fiji were beautiful to watch, even against my Wallabies. I truly hope that they can sort their lineout before their QF. If they do, Aus won’t be the only “Tier 1” team they destroy at this RWC. I agree with you on the Drua Harry, also don’t forget the Drua toweled up a couple of NZ Super teams as well. However, I disagree on 50/50 and ref calls. We were very lucky that our scrum wasn’t found out earlier by the ref. I also thought the ref team were super consistent throughout the match. He reffed the breakdown differently than what we are used t, but he was consistent. I loved the enforcement of clean rucks and the offside line. We didn’t cotton on to his style until the last 10 mins.

2023-09-18T15:43:54+00:00

ojp44

Roar Rookie


Hitting the ball up one out with your biggest baddest ball runners is very League like.... and in related news, the Wallabies attack coach is former NRL prop Jason Ryles. (NB - I'm sure Ryles isnt directing the attack solo)

2023-09-18T12:18:46+00:00

Guess

Roar Rookie


Lol why? It's not his job

2023-09-18T12:06:14+00:00

BrewsterBandit

Roar Rookie


In pre-game build up Hooper was oddly talking about looking for balance at the rucks - i.e. not over committing to them, but it actually sounded like not committing to them.......so weird to be coming from a #7....

2023-09-18T11:09:14+00:00

John Mendoza

Roar Rookie


On that we are in raging agreement. The reason is 20 years of woeful stewardship by the ARU/RA. Again they are hoping to bag a couple of quality NRL players and hope that’ll result in a few trophies. Jones and RA are banging on about going for youth for the future. So the future looks like the past.

2023-09-18T10:27:03+00:00

Andy J

Roar Rookie


The one I’m replying to and the one directly above mine? Don’t have to look too far

2023-09-18T10:24:57+00:00

Guzzle

Roar Rookie


" Fiji should have beaten Wales, and will be a top tier team for years to come. " That means Wales should beat the Wallabies as they beat Fiji. :silly:

2023-09-18T09:52:04+00:00

Ben Pobjie

Expert


I can see the benefits but I think it’s important to recognise there are experienced heads there. No veteran flyhalf to talk specifics of the position but I think there are plenty of wise oldies to help him out confidence wise.

2023-09-18T09:50:53+00:00

Ben Pobjie

Expert


No wuckers!

2023-09-18T09:05:14+00:00

JamieInBrisbane

Roar Rookie


Ahh, now I'm reading your comment with a different lens and I admit to feeling like a bit of a dill. Sincere apologies.

2023-09-18T08:14:55+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


Fines did well, as expected.

2023-09-18T08:13:43+00:00

Ken Catchpole's Other Leg

Roar Guru


I always saw Fiji as a tougher task than Wales. (But we could sink further)

2023-09-18T07:54:46+00:00

Freddo

Roar Rookie


Not all 9s look to see where the 10 is, but White NEVER looks

2023-09-18T07:52:48+00:00

Freddo

Roar Rookie


White must be training in a different time zone

2023-09-18T06:34:26+00:00

Clippers

Roar Rookie


Not sitting in his room crying, but I agree with SBW having an experienced 10 there to talk shop with and echo chamber his confidence would be beneficial-even in the broader squad. Locker room veterans come cheer leaders are great for a new breed culture.

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