Eleven-try England thrash sorry Fiji to end losing run

Figure caption,

Pollock scores hat-trick as 11-try England thrash Fiji

By
BBC Sport rugby union news reporter

Nations Championship - round two

Fiji (3) 8

Try: Ikanivere, Pen: Muntz

England (35) 73

Tries: M Smith, George, Pepper, Janse van Rensburg, Atkinson, Feyi-Waboso, Pollock (3), Slade, Caluori Cons: F Smith (9)

Replacement Henry Pollock scored a second-half hat-trick as England cruised to victory and ended a five-Test losing streak against an ill-disciplined and disjointed Fiji in Liverpool.

Playing against 14 men for half the match after scrum-half Simione Kuruvoli was shown a straight red for a kick out at Ellis Genge, England raced away to their largest ever win over Fiji.

Immanuel Feyi-Waboso's acrobatic finish down the left wing and Pollock's treble, all celebrated in style, brought loud cheers from the Hill Dickinson Stadium's 50,209-strong crowd after the break.

Elsewhere Bristol's South African-born centre Benhard Janse van Rensburg and Saracens' teenage wing sensation Noah Caluori made try-scoring Test debuts from the bench.

England were as comprehensive winners as the scoreline suggested, but the value of the victory has to be assessed in the context of a rabble of a performance from Fiji.

The Pacific Islanders famously beat England at Twickenham in August 2023, and came close to doing so again when the teams met in the Rugby World Cup quarter-finals a few weeks later.

When they met in the autumn, in the midst of an England winning streak, Fiji had been within three points on the hour mark, before fading to a 38-18 loss.

This version however, never looked like having the consistency and cohesion to condemn England to a sixth successive Test defeat – a run of form which would have been their worst in 20 years.

England take advantage of poor defence and fast track

After defeat by South Africa last weekend, England emerged with impetus and intent, apparently determined to chance their arm.

Fin Smith had already attempted a crossfield kick to Northampton team-mate Tommy Freeman from an early penalty, only to be called back by referee Hollie Davidson for going too quickly.

Fortune favoured the England fly-half's brave play a few minutes later.

Once again Smith aimed a punt at Freeman. It bounced over the wing's head and seemed to be heading for touch, only to bounce off the corner flag and back in-field to allow Marcus Smith to pounce for the opening try.

Last weekend, South Africa's powerful ground game had slowed England's ruck speed, pouring sludge in their attacking gears.

Fiji's back row, containing the 30-plus trio of Peceli Yato, Lekima Tagitagivalu and Levani Botia, could not make such a great nuisance of themselves.

With the Pacific Islanders' scrum disintegrating and their defence short of shape and speed, England had a chance to show the attacking ambition that they have talked about so often and delivered so rarely this year.

Their second try came via the route Wales had followed to a 39-24 victory last weekend, with Feyi-Waboso, Seb Atkinson and Henry Slade adding their weight to a driving maul that captain Jamie George was at the bottom of.

England looked to the open spaces, rather than close quarters, to add to their 14-3 lead.

Ben Earl and Freeman were both close to claiming clever kicks ahead with the tryline close at hand, with Jack van Poortvliet bringing some of the zip that was sorely absent in Johannesburg.

Guy Pepper bullocked through to a third try in the immediate aftermath of Fiji losing Botia to a yellow card, with Janse van Rensburg hitting an angle hard and low to score from close range at the end of the powerplay.

Atkinson stretched the lead out to 35-3, going in after some blurring footwork from Marcus Smith and a lovely offload off the floor from Van Poortvliet.

The contest was all but over. Four minutes later, it certainly was.

In the final phases of the first half, Bristol's Kalaveti Ravouvou appeared to have wormed over for a score that Fiji could take some solace from at the break.

However, the television match official had spotted Kuruvoli's frustrated kick out at Genge while attempting to regain his feet after a tackle.

Referee Davidson had only one imperfect angle on the incident, but showed Kuruvoli a straight red card for a deliberate, violent act.

Unlike the 20-minute version which leaves a team down on numbers only temporarily, Fiji had to play with 14 men for the remainder of the game.

They struck first in the second half – captain Tevita Ikanivere trundling over – but, from then, the game slipped well below usual Test intensity.

Noah CaluoriImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Caluori, who finished joint top try-scorer in the Prem this season, crossed for his first England try

Pollock, introduced in the 48th minute, revelled in the broken field, dry pitch and patchy defence.

The 21-year-old won the race to a kick ahead, sliding in to score his first try, outpaced Bordeaux-Begles full-back Salesi Rayasi on an arcing run for his second and hit a sharp angle to puncture a flagging Fiji for his third in the final minute.

By then England were playing without a specialist scrum-half after replacement Alex Mitchell was forced off with a hamstring injury that will rule him out of next weekend's match in Argentina.

Fin and Marcus Smith took turns to fill the gap, with Marcus in particular looking like a natural despite never having trained in the position with England.

Pollock now has six tries in 12 Test appearances, all but one of which has come from the bench.

He marked his latest score by mimicking England footballer Jude Bellingham's familiar outstretched goal celebration.

Argentina away will offer less opportunity for such gestures, but head coach Steve Borthwick may be tempted to see if Pollock can be as effective from the start.

Benhard Janse van Rensburg celebrates being awarded his England Test capImage source, Getty Images
Image caption,

Benhard Janse van Rensburg celebrates being awarded his England Test cap

Line-ups

Fiji: Rayasi; Karaivalevu, Ravouvou, Tuisova, Wainiqolo; Muntz, Kuruvoli; Mawi, Ikanivere, Doge, Ratuva, Nasilasila, Yato, Tagitagivalu, Botia

Replacements: Matavesi, Matave, Ravai, Mayanavanua, Canakivata, Sovakula, Lomani, Armstrong-Ravula

England: M Smith; Freeman, Slade, Atkinson, Feyi-Waboso; F Smith, Van Poortvliet; Genge, George, Heyes, Coles, Martin, Chessum, Pepper, Earl.

Replacements: Cowan-Dickie, Opoku-Fordjour, Kloska, Curry, Pollock, Mitchell, Janse van Rensburg, Caluori

Officials

Referee: Hollie Davidson (Scotland)

Assistant referees: Eoghan Cross (Ireland) and Sam Grove-White (Scotland)

TMO: Mike Adamson (Scotland)