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Rugby-Argentina stun rusty England 30-29 at Twickenham

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International - England v Argentina

International – England v Argentina© Reuters/MATTHEW CHILDS

By Mitch Phillips

LONDON (Reuters) -Winger Emiliano Boffelli scored 25 points as Argentina shocked a misfiring England 30-29 on Sunday to claim their first win at Twickenham since 2006 and end a 10-game losing streak against the team they face in their opening game at the World Cup.

International - England v Argentina

International – England v Argentina© Reuters/PETER NICHOLLS

Boffelli scored a superb try and kicked six penalties and Santiago Carreras also crossed as the Pumas went toe to toe with the favourites on a horrible wet day to give them a huge boost ahead of next September’s Marseille clash.

International - England v Argentina

International – England v Argentina© Reuters/PETER NICHOLLS

“The players have got a great attitude,” said Argentina’s Australian coach Michael Cheika.

“They need to know what defence is, it’s not about a great ending it’s about getting a good field position so you are able to pounce.

“We were able to take points even though we didn’t have a lot of ball.”

Boffelli, who struck the ball from the tee with real elegance all day, said: “We said at halftime that we must stay close in the score, then we got two tries Our attitude was important. To score 25 points at Twickenham is great. The whole team did their job.”

England’s much-heralded combination of Marcus Smith, Owen Farrell and Manu Tuilagi barely featured and the home side committed far too many errors and can have no complaint about the result.

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“We talked about some issues we had on the field that we didn’t address, we can’t drop confidence because of this,” Farrell said.

“We had scrappy parts of the game which will get better, the discipline is avoidable and it wasn’t quite happening. We let the pressure off at times. It was a wet day, a wet pitch and as you saw both teams didn’t move the ball well.

“The penalties stopped our momentum. We weren’t at our best and that’s what we are here to do.”

HANDLING ERRORS

England, who led 16-12 at halftime, scored through Joe Cokanasiga and Jack van Poortvliet but showed precious little attacking invention and kept the visitors in the game with a succession of penalty offences and handling errors.

After a cagey opening quarter England eventually struck off a scrum in the 26th minute as recalled winger Cokanasiga powered his burly frame over from close range to take his international try tally to 12 in 13 appearances

Argentina had not done much with the ball but stayed in touch via four Boffelli penalties and, with Farrell landing three, England, wearing their new black strip, edged the largely forgettable half.

The Pumas cut loose seven minutes after the break as they fizzed the ball across the backline to allow Boffelli to slide in at the corner.

Five minutes later they scored a second when Carreras seized on a loose ball to run 50 metres and score. Farrell claimed his misplaced pass had been knocked on but the TMO view ruled otherwise.

England had to hit back quickly and did so through Van Poortvliet, who showed great pace and determination a minute after coming on to replace Ben Youngs at scrumhalf. Farrell converted to make it a one-point game going into the final 20 minutes.

Twickenham sat back for an expected home surge but, though they briefly got their noses in front, England failed to take command as two penalties apiece kept Argentina ahead and they controlled the final five minutes superbly to claim the win.

Argentina next play Wales and Scotland. England face Japan next Saturday –- also World Cup pool opponents next year — before playing New Zealand and South Africa, all at Twickenham.

“It was one of those games, the lead changed a lot but you can’t put your finger on what went wrong,” said England coach Eddie Jones.

“Structurally we had control of the game but we kept making fundamental mistakes and easy errors. We lacked a bit of cohesion but the mistakes we made were in the head. They weren’t team or structural issue. We’ll get better, don’t worry.”

(Reporting by Mitch Phillips, editing by Ed Osmond and Clare Fallon)

Reuters

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