Guernsey Press

5 things we learned from England’s narrow defeat to New Zealand

George Ford missed a penalty and drop goal in the closing stages that would have won the game for the hosts.

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England opened the Autumn Nations Series with a 24-22 defeat by New Zealand at Allianz Stadium – their third successive loss to the All Blacks.

Here the PA news agency examines five things learned from Steve Borthwick’s 25th match as head coach.

A costly decision

One question reverberated around Twickenham at the final whistle – why had Marcus Smith been replaced by George Ford? Smith had completed all six of his kicks at goal for an individual haul of 17 points, picked off the intercept pass for Immanuel Feyi-Waboso’s try and was the architect of England’s commanding eight-point lead. But with 18 minutes left he was replaced by Ford, whose first appearance since September 28 because of a torn quad was predictably rusty and the veteran fly-half duly missed late penalty and drop-goal attempts that would have snatched the win. A pre-planned substitution designed to close down the game may have cost England victory.

Near-miss nightmare

England players leave the field looking dejected
England players leave the field looking dejected (David Davies/PA)

The pressure is on

England already face an uphill struggle in their no-excuses autumn. Australia, South Africa and Japan follow New Zealand into Twickenham and given that three wins in the four Tests would be considered a reasonable return from the campaign, they have little room to manoeuvre. Back-to-back world champions the Springboks must now be toppled in a November 16 grudge match, as well as victories being posted against the weaker Wallabies and Brave Blossoms, to spare head coach Steve Borthwick searching questions about the team’s direction of travel.

Do not ‘bin’ the Haka

After a week of focus on the ‘Haka’ sparked by Joe Marler describing it as “ridiculous” and calling for it to be “binned”, the Maori war dance took centre stage at Twickenham. And what a spectacle it produced, with England accepting the challenge by advancing to the halfway line before the All Blacks surged forwards with only the cameramen separating the rivals. It was captivating sporting theatre that thrilled the audience and proved Marler’s is a minority view.

All Blacks on the slide

New Zealand’s Scott Barrett (left) has faced questions about his side's 'aura'
New Zealand’s Scott Barrett (left) has faced questions about his side’s ‘aura’ (David Davies/PA)
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