El torneo de la Rugby League Four Nations de 2009 (oficialmente conocido como Gillette Four Nations debido al patrocinio [1] ) fue el primer torneo de la Rugby League Four Nations desde su expansión del torneo Tri-Nations . Jugó en Inglaterra y Francia durante tres semanas desde el viernes 23 de octubre hasta el sábado 14 de noviembre, [2] Francia e Inglaterra compitieron por primera vez, con la división permanente de Gran Bretaña en las selecciones nacionales de las naciones de origen después de Nueva Zelanda 2007 Tour de todos los oros. El torneo culminó con una final entre la selección número uno del mundo Australia y la anfitriona Inglaterra. Después de 60 minutos de fútbol altamente competitivo, Australia se escapó con el partido, anotando un aluvión en los últimos intentos para ganar 46-16. [3]
2009 Cuatro Naciones ( 2009 ) () | |
---|---|
Numero de equipos | 4 |
Países anfitriones | Inglaterra Francia |
Ganador | Australia |
Partidos jugados | 7 |
Asistencia | 116.089 (16.584 por partido) |
Puntos anotados | 280 (40 por partido) |
Intentos anotados | 50 (7,14 por partido) |
Máximo anotador | Johnathan Thurston (38 años) |
Máximo anotador de try | Brett Morris (6) |
< 2006 2010 > |
La serie de 2009 fue la primera de las tres series de las Cuatro Naciones planificadas antes de la Copa del Mundo de la Rugby League 2013 , y las sedes rotan entre Europa y el Pacífico Sur. [4] El RLIF también declaró que las próximas Cuatro Naciones se celebrarían en 2010.
Calificación
Las Cuatro Naciones se gestionan en asociación entre la Liga Australiana de Rugby , la Liga de Fútbol de Rugby y la Liga de Rugby de Nueva Zelanda, que representan a las tres principales naciones del deporte: Australia , Inglaterra y Nueva Zelanda . [5] Un cuarto socio, Fédération Française de Rugby à XIII , aceptó una invitación para ingresar a Francia en el torneo inaugural de 2009. [5]
Equipos participantes
Cada equipo debía jugar contra los otros tres una vez durante el torneo de todos contra todos. Los dos primeros equipos que terminaron disputarían la final.
Equipo | Mascota | Entrenador | Capitán | Rango RLIF |
---|---|---|---|---|
Australia | Los canguros | Tim Sheens | Darren Lockyer | 1 |
Nueva Zelanda | Los kiwis | Stephen Kearney | Benji Marshall | 2 |
Inglaterra | Los Leones | Tony Smith | Jamie Peacock | 3 |
Francia | Les Tricolores | Bobbie Goulding | Olivier Elima | 5 |
Escuadrones
Cada nación debía elegir un escuadrón de 24 hombres para participar en las Cuatro Naciones.
Australia
La plantilla del entrenador australiano Tim Sheens para el torneo fue:
No. | Nombre | Expresar | Club |
---|---|---|---|
661 | Darren Lockyer (c) | QLD | Broncos de Brisbane |
687 | Nathan Hindmarsh | NSW | Anguilas Parramatta |
691 | Petero Civoniceva | QLD | Panteras de Penrith |
715 | Luke Lewis | NSW | Panteras de Penrith |
716 | Trent Waterhouse | NSW | Panteras de Penrith |
731 | Johnathan Thurston | QLD | Vaqueros del norte de Queensland |
734 | Jarryd Hayne | NSW | Anguilas Parramatta |
735 | Justin Hodges | QLD | Broncos de Brisbane |
737 | Greg Inglis | QLD | Melbourne Storm |
738 | Cameron Smith (vc) | QLD | Melbourne Storm |
739 | Sam Thaiday | QLD | Broncos de Brisbane |
744 | Cooper Cronk | QLD | Melbourne Storm |
747 | Kurt Gidley | NSW | Caballeros de Newcastle |
748 | Ryan Hoffman | NSW | Melbourne Storm |
750 | Paul Gallen | NSW | Tiburones Cronulla-Sutherland |
751 | Billy Slater | QLD | Melbourne Storm |
758 | Anthony Watmough | NSW | Águilas marinas de Warringah varonil |
761 | Ben Hannant | QLD | Bulldogs |
762 | Brett Morris * | NSW | Dragones de San Jorge Illawarra |
763 | Brett White | NSW | Melbourne Storm |
764 | Robbie Farah | NSW | Tigres del oeste |
765 | David Shillington | QLD | Canberra Raiders |
766 | Michael Jennings | NSW | Panteras de Penrith |
767 | Josh Morris | NSW | Bulldogs |
* Reemplazó al seleccionado originalmente Israel Folau que se retiró debido a una lesión. [6]
De los veinticuatro jugadores, veintitrés nacieron en Australia y uno nació en Fiyi.
Nueva Zelanda
Entrenador: Stephen Kearney
De los veinticuatro jugadores, diecinueve nacieron en Nueva Zelanda, cuatro en Australia y uno en Tonga.
Equipo del club | Jugadores |
---|---|
Canberra Raiders | Bronson Harrison |
Bulldogs de Canterbury | Greg Eastwood 1 y Bryson Goodwin |
Águilas marinas de Warringah varonil | Kieran Foran , Steve Matai y Jared Waerea-Hargreaves |
Melbourne Storm | Adam Blair (vc) y Jeff Lima |
Caballeros de Newcastle | Junior Sa'u |
Guerreros de Nueva Zelanda | Lance Hohaia , Kevin Locke y Ben Matulino |
Anguilas Parramatta | Krisnan Inu y Fuifui Moimoi |
Panteras de Penrith | Frank Pritchard |
Rabbitohs del sur de Sydney | Issac Luke y Eddy Pettybourne 2 [7] |
Dragones de San Jorge Illawarra | Nathan Fien y Jason Nightingale |
Gallos de Sydney | Frank-Paul Nuuausala , Sam Perrett y Iosia Soliola |
Tigres del oeste | Benji Marshall (c) |
Guerreros Wigan | Thomas Leuluai 3 |
1 Se descartó del resto de la serie el 5 de noviembre tras romperse la mano en la victoria de la segunda ronda sobre Francia. [8]
2 Se registró como miembro del equipo antes de que comenzara el torneo, pero esto no fue revelado a los medios hasta que los Kiwis lo llamaron a Europa desde Australia el 25 de octubre.
3 El único jugador de la escuadra que no es de la National Rugby League .
Inglaterra
Entrenador: Tony Smith
Los veinticuatro jugadores nacieron en Inglaterra.
Equipo del club | Jugadores |
---|---|
Bradford Bulls | Sam Burgess y Paul Sykes |
Tigres de Castleford | Michael Shenton |
Gigantes de Huddersfield | Eorl Crabtree y Scott Moore |
Hull FC | Tom Briscoe 1 |
Hull Kingston Rovers | Shaun Briscoe y Peter Fox |
Rinocerontes de Leeds | Jamie Peacock (c), Ryan Hall , Danny McGuire , Kevin Sinfield y Lee Smith |
Rojos de la ciudad de Salford | Richard Myler |
Santa Elena | Kyle Eastmond , James Graham , James Roby y Jon Wilkin |
Lobos de Warrington | Chris Bridge , Garreth Carvell , Adrian Morley y Ben Westwood |
Tigres del oeste | Gareth Ellis 2 |
Guerreros Wigan | Sam Tomkins |
1 Reemplazó al seleccionado originalmente Sean O'Loughlin quien se retiró debido a una lesión.
2 El único jugador de la plantilla que no es de la Superliga .
Francia
Entrenador: Bobbie Goulding
De los veintisiete jugadores, dieciocho eran de origen francés, mientras que tres eran de origen australiano, tres de Nueva Zelanda, uno de origen marroquí y uno de Nueva Caledonia.
Equipo del club | Jugadores |
---|---|
AS Carcassonne | Romain Gagliazzo , Christophe Moly y Teddy Saddaoui |
Dragones catalanes | Olivier Elima (c), Nicholas Piquemol , Andrew Bentley , Kane Bentley , Jean-Philippe Baile , Thomas Bosc , |
Burros Pia | Maxime Grésèque |
Toulouse Olympique | Mathieu Griffi y Constant Villegas |
Lézignan Sangliers | James Wynne |
Leopardos de Villeneuve | Artie Shead |
- Casey McGuire fue nombrado inicialmente en el equipo, pero se retiró después de "una temporada agotadora de la Superliga". No puede ser reemplazado. [9]
- Rémi Casty sufrió una fractura en la mano que terminó la serie en el primer partido contra Inglaterra. [10]
- Artie Shead , James Wynne , Andrew Bentley y Nicholas Piquemol se agregaron al equipo para el partido contra Nueva Zelanda después de que varios miembros del equipo contrajeron la gripe porcina .
Árbitros
Los órganos de gobierno de los equipos participantes nominaron a cuatro árbitros para el torneo. [11] Uno de cada una de las naciones participantes. Los árbitros nominados fueron:
- Thierry Alibert
- Steve Ganson
- Shayne Hayne
- Leon Williamson
Sedes
Se utilizaron varias sedes durante el torneo en Inglaterra y Francia .
Doncaster | Londres | Wigan |
---|---|---|
Estadio Keepmoat | Twickenham Stoop | Estadio DW |
Capacidad: 15,231 | Capacidad: 14,816 | Capacidad: 25,138 |
Toulouse | París | Huddersfield |
Stade Ernest-Wallon | Estadio Sébastien Charléty | Estadio Galpharm |
Capacidad: 19,500 | Capacidad: 20.000 | Capacidad: 24,500 |
Final
La Final de las Cuatro Naciones se jugó en el estadio Elland Road en Leeds , Inglaterra.
Leeds |
---|
Elland Road |
Capacidad: 40,242 |
Ronda uno
Inglaterra vs Francia
Viernes 23 de octubre de 2000 BST |
Inglaterra | 34 - 12 | Francia |
---|---|---|
Intentos: Richard Myler (2) Lee Smith Kevin Sinfield Ryan Hall Tom Briscoe Goles: Kevin Sinfield (5) | Listas de equipos de informes | Intentos: Vincent Duport Kane Bentley Goles: Thomas Bosc (2) |
Keepmoat Stadium , Doncaster , Inglaterra Asistencia: 11,529 Árbitro: Leon Williamson Hombre del partido: Gareth Ellis |
Después de ir detrás 12–4 en el descanso, Inglaterra anotó 30 puntos consecutivos para derrotar a Francia 34–12, que fue entrenada por la ex mitad de Gran Bretaña, Bobbie Goulding .
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Nueva Zelanda vs Australia
Para Australia, Ben Hannant , Brett Morris y Brett White fueron seleccionados para hacer su debut. Petero Civoniceva fue seleccionado a pesar de no haber jugado fútbol desde que se lesionó la pierna en el juego 2 de la serie State of Origin 2009 en junio. [12]
Cuando el capitán australiano Darren Lockyer salió al campo para este partido, superó el récord de Mal Meninga de más partidos internacionales para los Canguros. Después de 6-6 en el descanso, Australia rápidamente se puso en ventaja 14-6 antes de que Nueva Zelanda anotara catorce puntos seguidos para hacer el 14-20. El australiano Cameron Smith anotó un try y Johnathan Thurston hizo la conversión para nivelar los puntajes con menos de cinco minutos por jugar. La puntuación terminó en 20-20. La multitud de 12,360 en el estadio Twickenham Stoop estableció un nuevo récord de asistencia en un partido de la liga de rugby.
Sábado 24 de octubre de 2000 BST |
Nueva Zelanda | 20 - 20 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Intentos: Frank-Paul Nuuausala Junior Sa'u Lance Hohaia Frank Pritchard Goles: Bryson Goodwin (2) | Listas de equipos de informes | Intentos: Brett Morris Johnathan Thurston Cameron Smith Goles: Johnathan Thurston (4) |
Twickenham Stoop , Londres , Inglaterra Asistencia: 12,360 Árbitro: Steve Ganson Hombre del partido: Lance Hohaia |
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Segundo round
England vs Australia
Changes made to the Australian side included the removal of Sam Thaiday, Ryan Hoffman, Trent Waterhouse and Kurt Gidley. Taking their places were débutants Luke Lewis and David Shillington as well as Robbie Farah and also Nathan Hindmarsh, making his test football comeback. Australian captain Darren Lockyer equalled Ken Irvine's record of 33 test tries for Australia by scoring in this match. On a warm and sunny day, the Kangaroos went into half-time 26-0 up and after Australia defeated England 52–4 in their previous meeting in last year's Rugby League World Cup, the English looked set for another thrashing. However, England made an ambitious fight-back in the second half but, keeping Australia scoreless to lose by a more respectable margin of 26–16. Towards the end of the match, Johnathan Thurston was sent to the sin bin.
Saturday, 31 October 1430 GMT |
England | 16 – 26 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Tries: Sam Burgess Gareth Ellis Lee Smith Goals: Kevin Sinfield (1) Lee Smith (1) | Report | Tries: Billy Slater (2) Darren Lockyer Greg Inglis Brett Morris Goals: Johnathan Thurston (3) |
DW Stadium, Wigan, England Attendance: 23,122 [13] Referee: Steve Ganson Man of the Match: Greg Inglis |
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New Zealand vs France
New Zealand were leading 16–6 at half-time. France got to within 4 points of New Zealand at 16-12 before New Zealand scored 46 points in a row to comfortably win 62–12. New Zealand's Bryson Goodwin scored 22 individual points and Sam Perrett scored a hat-trick of tries. This loss ended the French hopes of making the finals.
Saturday, 31 October 1800 CET |
France | 12 – 62 | New Zealand |
---|---|---|
Tries: Sébastien Martins James Wynne Goals: Thomas Bosc (2) | Report | Tries: Sam Perrett (3) Lance Hohaia (2) Jared Waerea-Hargreaves (2) Benji Marshall Frank-Paul Nuuausala Junior Sa'u Bryson Goodwin Goals: Bryson Goodwin (9) |
Stade Ernest-Wallon, Toulouse, France Attendance: 12,412 [14] Referee: Shayne Hayne Man of the Match: Sam Perrett |
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Ronda tres
Australia vs France
The Kangaroos had not played in Paris since 1994. They went into the match having won their last 14 matches against France. Due to French laws prohibiting the use of alcohol advertising in sport, the Australian jerseys' usual Victoria Bitter logo was replaced by one for Movember. Debuting for Australia were Brett Morris' twin brother Josh Morris and New South Wales State of Origin centre Michael Jennings.[15] By playing in this match, Darren Lockyer surpassed Clive Churchill's record for most games as Australian captain.[16] For the first 20 minutes the contest was quite even,[17] being played at both ends of the field with both sides getting and conceding penalties. It was the Australians who scored first when debutant Michael Jennings dummied his way through the defence from 20 metres out to score out wide.[18] Johnathan Thurston's conversion attempt missed, so France were down 4 nil with 18 minutes of the first half remaining. Jennings also scored the second try of the match in the 27th minute when Lockyer threw a cutout pass to him in front of France's line. Thurston again failed to add the extras, so the score remained at 8 nil. The score did not change from then till half time, with both sides' defence holding each other's attacking opportunities out.
After receiving France's kick-off and making their way up-field with the help of a penalty, the Australians scored in only the 2nd minute of the half when Luke Lewis powered his way through the defence from about 12 metres out. With Cooper Cronk on the field instead of Johnathan Thurston, Kurt Gidley was given kicking duties and converted the try, pushing Australia's lead out to 14 nil. In the 45th minute the Kangaroos scored again after a Cooper Cronk 40/20 kick put them in an attacking position and they moved the ball out to Brett Morris' wing where he dived over untouched in the corner. Gidley's sideline conversion attempt missed so the score was 18 nil. Morris got his second try just a few minutes later when Darren Lockyer kicked ahead for him from 35 metres out. Gidley kicked the extras so Australia's lead was 24 nil. the Kangaroos continued to dominate possession and in the 56th minute Jennings got his hat-trick with a long-range try when he regathered a French dropped ball 30 metres out from Australia's line. Jennings thus became the 4th Kangaroo since Lionel Morgan in 1960, Brad Mackay in 1990 and David Williams in 2008 to score a hat-trick on debut for Australia. Thurston, back on the field kicked his first successful goal of the match to push the score out to 30 nil with over 25 minutes of play to go. In the 61st minute France made the most of an attacking opportunity when Tomas Bosc kicked over the Australian defence where Olivier Elima leapt for it, coming down with the ball over the line.[19] Bosc's conversion attempt missed so the score was 30–4 with 18 minutes remaining. Josh Morris then got a try at the 69-minute mark when he received the ball from his twin brother Brett after the Australians had kept the ball alive. Thurston kicked the extras so the score was 36–4. Josh Morris then got his second try a little over 2 minutes later when the Australians moved the ball out to his wing from a scrum win 30 metres out. Thurston's successful conversion made the score 42-4 and this is what it would be at the final whistle.
The victory for Australia meant they would face the winner of the match between New Zealand and England to be played in Huddersfield later that evening.
Saturday, 7 November 1530 CET |
France | 4 – 42 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Tries: Olivier Elima Goals: | Report | Tries: Michael Jennings (3) Brett Morris (2) Josh Morris (2) Luke Lewis Goals: Johnathan Thurston (3) Kurt Gidley (2) |
Stade Sébastien Charléty, Paris, France Attendance: 6,234 [20] Referee: Leon Williamson Man of the Match: Michael Jennings[21] |
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New Zealand vs England
The last time these two sides met was in the 2008 World Cup when they played each other for the chance to face Australia in the final. On that occasion New Zealand won, sending England back home. This time they were playing for the chance to face Australia in the Four Nations final. New Zealand could draw and still make the final, while England needed to win to advance. In all of England's prior games, they had lost the first half but had won and not conceded a point in the second half. For this match England coach Tony Smith dropped Danny McGuire, Lee Smith and Tom Briscoe in favour of Peter Fox, Chris Bridge and Jon Wilkin. For New Zealand, Greg Eastwood and Steve Matai were out with injury so Jeff Lima was recalled and 19-year-old Kieran Foran was brought in to make his international debut ahead of Krisnan Inu.
England got the first points of the match when they attacked up the middle, Sam Burgess spinning out of a tackle to send Kyle Eastmond over under the black dot just on 9 minutes. Sinfield's conversion from right in front was successful so England were out to a 6 nil lead. New Zealand responded 5 minutes later, moving the ball out wide to Bryson Goodwin's wing where he dived over in the corner. He couldn't convert his own try though, so the score was left at 6–4. In the 29th minute New Zealand were awarded a penalty right in front of the goal-posts and took the two points, leveling the score at 6 all. Six minutes later England were up at the Kiwis' end of the field again, attacking the line, when Sam Tomkins kicked across-field to Peter Fox's corner where the winger dived on the ball. Sinfield kicked the extras from the sideline so England were again a converted try in front with just over 4 minutes remaining. England continued dominating field position and scored again in the 39th minute from a scrum win near England's line, the ball going through the hands out to Peter Fox to score his second. Sinfield again added the extras, pushing England's lead out to 18–6.
New Zealand opened the scoring after just a minute and a half into the second hand when at the halfway line Isaac Luke made a break from dummy-half, his offload finding support players who got the ball out to Ben Matulino who scored. Bryson Goodwin's kick added the extras, bringing the Kiwis back within a converted try, trailing 18–12. The play for the next half-hour went from end to end, with both teams getting good attacking opportunities but both teams' defences holding them out. Then when England were close to New Zealand's line they were awarded a penalty for ruck interference and with less than 10 minutes remaining, decided to take the kick for an 8-point lead. Sinfield's kick was successful so the score was 20–12 in favour of the home team. England were able to hold New Zealand out for the remaining minutes of the match and so earned a place in the final. Kevin Sinfield, in the unfamiliar position of hooker was named man-of-the-match.
Saturday, 7 November 1800 GMT |
England | 20 – 12 | New Zealand |
---|---|---|
Tries: Peter Fox (2) Kyle Eastmond Goals: Kevin Sinfield (4) | Report | Tries: Bryson Goodwin Ben Matulino Goals: Bryson Goodwin (2) |
Galpharm Stadium, Huddersfield, England Attendance: 19,390 Referee: Thierry Alibert Man of the Match: Kevin Sinfield |
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Escalera de torneo
2009 Four Nations | |||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Team | Pld | W | D | L | PF | PA | PD | Pts | |
1 | Australia W | 3 | 2 | 1 | 0 | 88 | 40 | 48 | 5 |
2 | England | 3 | 2 | 0 | 1 | 70 | 50 | 20 | 4 |
3 | New Zealand | 3 | 1 | 1 | 1 | 94 | 52 | 42 | 3 |
4 | France | 3 | 0 | 0 | 3 | 28 | 138 | −110 | 0 |
Final
The Australian team for the final had the Queensland team's halves pairing, front row, centre pairing and fullback, while both wingers, the whole back row, three-quarters of the bench and the coach were New South Walshmen.
Saturday, 14 November 1930 GMT |
England | 16 – 46 | Australia |
---|---|---|
Tries: Sam Burgess (2) Peter Fox Goals: Kevin Sinfield (2/3) | Tries: Billy Slater (3) Brett Morris (2) Greg Inglis Jarryd Hayne Cameron Smith Goals: Johnathan Thurston (7/9) |
Elland Road, Leeds, England Attendance: 31,042 [22] Referee: Leon Williamson[23] Man of the Match: Johnathan Thurston[24] |
England | Position | Australia |
---|---|---|
Shaun Briscoe | FB | Billy Slater |
Peter Fox | WG | Brett Morris |
Chris Bridge | CE | Greg Inglis |
Michael Shenton | CE | Justin Hodges |
Ryan Hall | WG | Jarryd Hayne |
Sam Tomkins | FE | Darren Lockyer (c) |
Kyle Eastmond | HB | Johnathan Thurston |
Adrian Morley | PR | Ben Hannant |
Kevin Sinfield | HK | Cameron Smith |
James Graham | PR | Petero Civoniceva |
Jamie Peacock (c) | SR | Luke Lewis |
Gareth Ellis | SR | Paul Gallen |
Sam Burgess | LK | Nathan Hindmarsh |
Eorl Crabtree | Int | Kurt Gidley |
Jon Wilkin | Int | Brett White |
Ben Westwood | Int | Anthony Watmough |
James Roby | Int | Sam Thaiday |
Tony Smith | Coach | Tim Sheens |
By playing in this match, Darren Lockyer became the first Australian in history to play in fifty international matches for his country. In addition, teammate and fellow Queenslander, Petero Civoniceva became the most-capped forward, breaking Johnny Raper's record by earning his 40th cap.[25]
It took Australia till the ninth minute to cross England's line. Quick passing out to Brett Morris on the right wing saw him dive over in the corner, but the video referee ruled that he'd lost control of the ball in the grounding of it so no try was allowed.[26] In England's very next set of six, they had reached Australia's half when NRL-bound loose forward Sam Burgess charged through the Kangaroos' defence, running forty-five metres and dummying past the fullback to score under the posts.[27] Sinfield's conversion put England ahead 6 nil after eleven minutes of play. In the fourteenth minute Australia responded: a cut-out pass from Johnathan Thurston on England's try-line was flicked on by Justin Hodges' fingertips to Morris, who this time got his try. Thurston kicked the conversion from near the sideline so the scores were level at 6 all. A few minutes later England were back attacking Australia's line, when on the final tackle Eastmond put a kick up to his right winger Peter Fox, who beat Jarryd Hayne in the leap for the ball to come down with the try, putting the home team back in front.[28] Sinfield missed the conversion attempt so the score was 10–6 with twenty minutes of the first half remaining. Five minutes later Hayne made a good break from half way, kicking ahead for Greg Inglis to chase through and ground the ball. The video referee checked Inglis' grounding and gave him the benefit of the doubt.[29] Thurston kicked the extras so Australia had the lead again 12–10 with fourteen minutes of the first half left. At the thirty-minute mark England were penalised right in front of their goal posts and Australia opted to take the kick, Thurston's boot pushing Australia's lead out to four. No further points were scored in the first half so they went into the break at England 10, Australia 14.[30]
After ten minutes of sustained pressure on Australia's defence England were through, Burgess again charging over under the posts from close range.[31] Sinfield's kick added the Extras so once again England had the lead at 16–14. A little over three minutes later it was Australia attacking England's line when their fullback Billy Slater dove over from dummy-half, the lead changing again to be back with the Kangaroos.[32] Thurston couldn't get the conversion so Australia's lead stayed at only two points, 18–16. In the fifty-eighth minute the Kangaroos were on the attack again when Thurston chipped ahead from twenty metres out for Brett Morris to chase through and score in the corner behind the England defence. The conversion attempt by Thurston was missed so Australia lead 22–16 with twenty-one minutes of the match remaining. Shortly after the kick-off following the try England's Michael Shenton suffered a head clash when trying to tackle front-row forward Ben Hannant and the game was halted as he was stretchered unconscious from the field.[citation needed] Moments after the restart of play Hannant himself was concussed when tackled by James Graham but played on. Australia scored a remarkable try after sixty-six minutes when Darren Lockyer chipped over the top into England's in goal and Slater, chasing through leapt over the dead ball line to slap the ball back in with his hand for Cameron Smith to dive on and claim the four points.[33] Thurston's kick from right in front did not miss so Australia lead 28–16. As the Kangaroos returned the ball after a short kick-off from England they reached the opposition's end of the field and Slater scored again after backing up a good break from Smith. The conversion from Thurston was an easy one so the score was 34–16 in favour of the visitors with under ten minutes of the match remaining. In the seventy-third minute Jarryd Hayne got a try after running through to chase a Lockyer grubber. Thurston added the extras, Australia's lead now 40–16 with a little over five minutes left to play. The Australians got one more try though when Kurt Gidley made a break around the halfway line and kicked ahead, Billy Slater winning the race to the ball to claim his hat-trick in the seventy-seventh minute. Man-of-the-match Thurston added the extras so the score was 46-16 when the final hooter sounded.[34] It was England's heaviest loss to Australia on home soil.[35]
Pruebas que no son de serie
Before the series, New Zealand and England played additional Tests against Tonga and Wales respectively.
New Zealand vs Tonga
14 October 2009 |
New Zealand | 40 – 24 | Tonga |
---|---|---|
Tries: Benji Marshall (2) Bryson Goodwin (2) Junior Sa'u Sam Perrett Nathan Fien Steve Matai Goals: Issac Luke (3) Benji Marshall (1) | Report | Tries: Etuate Uaisele (2) Feleti Mateo Sam Huihahau Viliami Mataka Goals: Eddie Paea (2) |
Rotorua International Stadium, Rotorua, New Zealand Attendance: 8,000 Referee: Leon Williamson Man of the Match: Benji Marshall |
New Zealand led 24–8 at half-time before Tonga fought back to level the scores at 24-24. New Zealand went on to score 16 unanswered points to win the match 40–24.
Wales vs England
17 October 2009 |
Wales | 12 – 48 | England |
---|---|---|
Tries: Craig Kopczak Ian Watson Goals: Lloyd White (2) | Report | Tries: Sam Tomkins (3) Tom Briscoe (2) Louie McCarthy-Scarsbrook Sam Burgess Sean O'Loughlin Adrian Morley Goals: Paul Sykes (6) |
Brewery Field, Bridgend, Wales Attendance: 3,249 Referee: Thierry Alibert Man of the Match: Sam Tomkins |
England lead Wales 20-12 approaching the hour, before racking up 28 points in the last quarter..
Premios
- Greg Inglis of Australia was named Player of the Tournament.
- Brett Morris of Australia was the tournament's Top Try Scorer with 6 tries.
- Johnathan Thurston of Australia was the tournament's Top Point Scorer with 38 points.
Detalles de la transmisión
The competition was televised in Australia, New Zealand, Great Britain and France.
- In Australia, matches were broadcast on Channel Nine.
- In New Zealand, SKY Network Television showed all games live.
- In the United Kingdom, BBC Sport broadcast the first England v Australia match and France v Australia live, with all other matches shown by Sky Sports. Both networks showed highlights programmes. It was the first time terrestrial television had shown international rugby league in the United Kingdom since the 2000 World Cup.
- In France, Orange Sport had rights to the tournament.
- In the United States, from the second round onward, the games were available on ESPN360.
Referencias
- ^ Fraser, Adam (14 July 2009). "Gillette signs on with Four Nations". SportsProMedia. Archived from the original on 29 September 2009. Retrieved 1 November 2009.
- ^ PA (12 July 2009). "Gillette to sponsor Four Nations". Sporting Life. Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 13 July 2009.
- ^ AAP (16 November 2009). "Slater rights World Cup wrongs". tvnz.co.nz. New Zealand: Television New Zealand Limited. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ RLIF unveils expanded Test schedule Archived 14 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine NRL.com
- ^ a b Dean Ritchie (24 February 2009). "UK stuff-up in league of its own". news.com.au. Archived from the original on 30 March 2009. Retrieved 17 April 2009.
- ^ Sheens 'cut-throat' with injured players Archived 11 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine NRL Official website, 8 October 2009
- ^ Kiwis call up 'giant' Pettybourne Archived 15 July 2011 at the Wayback Machine rugbyleague.com, 25 October 2009
- ^ Eastwood ruled out of Four Nations Archived 27 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine NRL.com, 5 November 2009
- ^ McGuire pulls out of Four Nations Archived 27 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine NRL.com, 19 October 2009
- ^ 'Depleted' France face tough NZ Test Archived 25 October 2009 at the Wayback Machine NRL.com, 24 October
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- ^ Williams, Tony (8 November 2009). "France 4-42 Australia". LastTackle.com. Retrieved 23 November 2009.
- ^ "France 4-42 Australia". BBC News. 7 November 2009. Retrieved 23 April 2010.
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- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 5 June 2011. Retrieved 14 November 2009.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
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- ^ Smith, Peter (16 November 2009). "Too big, too quick and too strong". Yorkshire Evening Post. UK: Johnston Press Digital Publishing. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ Jancetic, Steve; AAP (16 November 2009). "Kangaroos discover Four Nations identity". The Age. Melbourne: Fairfax Digital. Archived from the original on 19 November 2009. Retrieved 23 November 2009.
- ^ Clowes, Nick (14 November 2009). "Rampant Australia crush England to win Four Nations final". Google. AFP. Archived from the original on 24 January 2013. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ Craven, Dave (14 November 2009). "Gillette Four Nations Final: England 16 Australia 46". Yorkshire Post. UK: Johnston Press Digital Publishing. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ The Associated Press (15 November 2009). "Wallabies wallop England at Four Nations". The Globe and Mail. Canada: CTVglobemedia Publishing Inc. Archived from the original on 18 November 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ Hadfield, Dave (16 November 2009). "Lockyer's final flourish leaves England reeling". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 19 November 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ Burke, David (15 November 2009). "Aussie rules". Daily Mirror. Archived from the original on 21 November 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ Lawrenson, David (14 November 2009). "Billy Slater helps himself as Australia outclass brave England". The Guardian. London. Archived from the original on 17 November 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ Kilgalon, Steve (16 November 2009). "England rue lost chance in final". stuff.co.nz. New Zealand: Fairfax New Zealand Limited. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ Jancetic, Steve; AAP (15 November 2009). "Australia defeat England 46-16 in Four Nations final at Elland Road". foxsports.com.au. Premier Media Group Pty Ltd. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ Morgan, Robert (14 November 2009). "England 16 Australia 46: match report". The daily telegraph. London. Archived from the original on 18 November 2009. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
- ^ Irvine, Christopher (16 November 2009). "Australia clinch title with devastating finish". The Times. London. Retrieved 25 November 2009.
enlaces externos
- Official Site (as archived September-2009)
- Australia face NZ in Four Nations opener AAP, 23 February 2009