Owen Farrell relieved his shot clock blunder did not cost England victory
Sign up to our free sport newsletter for all the latest news on everything from cycling to boxing
Sign up to our free sport email for all the latest news
Thanks for signing up to the
Sport email
Owen Farrell admitted his relief that his shot clock blunder did not cost England victory as they scraped past Samoa in their final World Cup group game.
England needed a late Danny Care try to defeat magnificent Islander opposition in an error-ridden 18-17 victory in Lille that will have sent the spirits of likely quarter-final opponents Fiji soaring.
A crucial moment came in the 64th minute when Farrell was lining up a routine penalty with the team 17-11 behind only for the time to run out on the shot clock â the first time it has happened in this tournament.
âI didnât see the clock. I wasnât aware. It was above where I was picking my target. I got lost a little bit in the kick,â Farrell said.
âIt wasnât good enough and Iâm glad for the teamâs sake that it didnât cost us. Hopefully it doesnât happen again.â
England had already qualified for the quarter-finals as Pool D winners but this night in Lille was a backwards step that evoked memories of Augustâs dismal warm-up campaign.
Head coach Steve Borthwick accepted it was a poor performance but valued the hard-fought run out before the knockout phase begins.
âImmense credit to Samoa, I thought they played brilliantly,â said Borthwick, who revealed that Manu Tuilagi suffered an injury that forced him off.
âSamoa spoke about it being their World Cup final and thatâs exactly how they played. They tested us and forced us into a lot of errors,â Borthwick said.
âIt was a scrappy performance for a long period by us in a real tough Test. As we look towards next week, I wanted a tough Test â and thatâs exactly what we got.
âThere was a lot that was not at the required standard â lots of errors, mistakes, scrappiness and for a period there were too many penalties. And then the players got hold of it on the pitch and found a way to get the result.
âA lot has been said before about this England team when it is in tough circumstances.
âNow the team was in tough circumstances against Samoa. We didnât want to be there, we didnât want to play the way that got us in those tough circumstances but this team found a way out of it.â
Samoa head coach Seilala Mapusua feels less-established teams such as his Islanders are battling against âunconscious biasâ from officials when they face the heavyweights.
âI asked the question if the referees have an unconscious bias when a tier-one team plays a tier-two team. I believe there is and I believe there has been in the past,â Mapusua said.
âI donât think itâs anyoneâs fault, itâs what Iâve seen in our game for the last however many years, since I was playing.
âMy heart breaks for these boys. I thought they deserved a lot more than they got from that game.
âI felt we did enough to earn a victory. Such is the cruel nature of sport, it wasnât to be. In terms of the effort itâs a pretty tough one to take.â
Source: Read Full Article