Australian commentators on Sunday slammed the Wallabies as an
"error-riddled" team which showed "sheer stupidity" by allowing
themselves to be outplayed by England in the World Cup.
Australia went into the competition with hopes of reaching the
finals but was unceremoniously knocked out on Saturday by an
English team which came back from a half-time deficit to win 12-10
at Stade Velodrome in Marseilles.
Favorites New Zealand were also dumped from the competition,
failing to reach the semifinals for the first time, following a
20-18 loss to France.
"You've got to be choking, it's a new world order," read a
headline on the Sydney Morning Herald's website.
The paper's rugby site said the England-Australia quarterfinal,
which kicked off late Saturday Sydney time, had "some claim to be
the worst game of the World Cup."
The match, in which Australia scored the only try, was saved by
England's attacking energy, ability to control possession and
dominance of the scrum, it said.
"Yes, last night's game was terrible, but England recognised
their limitations, played well within those confines and played
positively," it said.
"That leaves only one team as the culprit - the error-riddled
Wallabies."
Rugby commentator Roy Masters said Australia was "absolutely no
challenge at all to a very resolute England" and laid some of the
blame at the feet of retiring coach John Connolly.
"The area where Australia really lost, which no one anticipated
and can only come down to a very poor match plan from the coach, is
that every time we received the ball... although in our own half,
it was from kicks," he said.
"Now we have perhaps one of the best backlines in all of the
World Cup yet rather than link and run the ball back against a
fairly disorganised, disintegrating English opposition, what did we
do? We kicked it back to them.
"It was sheer stupidity," he told ABC television from
Marseilles.
Connolly himself has admitted the Marseilles match was
Australia's "worst performance" of the World Cup.
On Australian rugby blogs, there was as much praise for the
English as criticism for the failings of the Australians.
"The best team won hands down and valuable, albeit hard, lessons
have been learnt again," wrote Nathan Bracks of Brisbane on News
Ltd's site.
"Let's just hope this time the Wallabies actually do something
about it. I can't take losing to you Poms like this anymore."
But Sydney Morning Herald sports writer Jacqueline Magnay said
whatever Australia's Wallabies woes, they would be small in
comparison to All Blacks supporters.
"I have some sympathy for our Tasman neighbors that, as bad as
we feel this morning, just how bad they must be feeling." she
said.
"What do they have to do to win the World Cup? They were odds-on
favorites, they've done everything right and they just choked."
(China Daily via AFP October 8, 2007)