2010 June rugby union tests

The 2010 mid-year rugby union tests (also known as the Summer Internationals in the Northern Hemisphere) refers to the rugby union Internationals that were played from late May to late June, mostly in the Southern Hemisphere.

For Australia, New Zealand and South Africa, the Tests constituted preparation for the 2010 Tri Nations.

The first nation to announce its fixtures for this series was Australia, which unveiled its schedule on 21 September 2009.[1]

South Africa announced its fixtures on 8 October 2009, but delayed announcing the venues since it simultaneously hosted the 2010 FIFA World Cup. FIFA regulations call for World Cup venues to be handed over to FIFA 15 days before the World Cup starts. FIFA also prohibits any other major sporting events from being held in host cities from 7 days before the opening of the World Cup until 7 days after its end.[2] An agreement was reached between the South African Rugby Union and the local World Cup organising committee to allow the match against France to be held at SARU's intended venue of Newlands in Cape Town, a non-World Cup venue in a World Cup city.[3]

Overview

Series

Tour Result Victor
Australia v England test series 1–1  Australia
New Zealand v Wales test series 2–0  New Zealand
Argentina v Scotland test series 0–2  Scotland
South Africa v Italy test series 2–0  South Africa

Other tours

Team/Tour Opponents
Barbarians end of season tour  England (lost) –  Ireland (won)
France tour  South Africa (lost) –  Argentina (lost)

Matches

Week 1

30 May 2010
17:00 WEST/GMT+01 (UTC+01)
England  35–26 The Barbarians
Try: Haskell 13' c
Hape 23' c
Foden 36' m
Tindall 45' c
Con: Hodgson (2/2)
Barkley (1/2)
Pen: Hodgson (2), Barkley
Report[4] Try: Sackey (2) 34' c, 75' c
D. Smith 55' c
Johnston 64' m
Con: Élissalde (3/4)
Twickenham, London
Attendance: 41,035
Referee: Jérôme Garces (France)
15Ben Foden
14Mark Cueto
13Mike Tindall
12Shontayne Hape
11David Strettle
10Charlie Hodgson
9Danny Care
8Nick Easter (c)
7Steffon Armitage
6James Haskell
5Tom Palmer
4Dave Attwood
3Paul Doran-Jones
2Steve Thompson
1Jon Golding
Substitutes:
16Lee Mears
17Tim Payne
18Dan Ward-Smith
19Joe Worsley
20Joe Simpson
21Olly Barkley
22Mathew Tait
Team manager:
Martin Johnson
15 Paul Warwick
14 Paul Sackey
13 Casey Laulala
12 Florian Fritz
11 Cédric Heymans
10 Jean-Baptiste Élissalde
9 Byron Kelleher
8 Xavier Rush (c)
7 Martyn Williams
6 Rodney So'oialo
5 Ben Kay
4 Ross Skeate
3 Julian White
2 Benoît August
1 Rodrigo Roncero
Substitutes:
16 Ken Owens
17 Census Johnston
18 Jérôme Thion
19 George Smith
20 Pierre Mignoni
21 Fabrice Estebanez
22 David Smith
Coach:
Philippe Saint-André
  • As is typical for Barbarians matches, this was an uncapped match for England.

Week 2

4 June 2010
19:45 WEST/GMT+01 (UTC+01)
Ireland  23–29 The Barbarians
Try: Ronan 40'+2' c
Buckley 60' c
Con: O'Gara (2/2)
Pen: O'Gara (3/4) 20', 47', 64'
Report[5] Try: Rush 34' m
G. Smith 38' c
Heymans 48' m
Con: James (1/3)
Pen: James (3/3) 12', 18', 30'
Élissalde (1/1) 57'
Thomond Park, Limerick
Attendance: 26,500[6]
Referee: Romain Poite (France)
15Robert Kearney
14Shane Horgan
13Gavin Duffy
12Fergus McFadden
11Andrew Trimble
10Ronan O'Gara (c)
9Peter Stringer
8Chris Henry
7Niall Ronan
6John Muldoon
5Dan Tuohy
4Ed O'Donoghue
3Tony Buckley
2Seán Cronin
1Marcus Horan
Substitutes:
16Jerry Flannery
17Tom Court
18Mick O'Driscoll
19David Wallace
20Tomás O'Leary
21Jonathan Sexton
22Paddy Wallace
Coach:
Declan Kidney
15 Paul Warwick
14 Cédric Heymans
13 Casey Laulala
12 Seru Rabeni
11 David Smith
10 Brock James
9 Pierre Mignoni
8 George Smith
7 Xavier Rush (c)
6 Alan Quinlan
5 Malcolm O'Kelly
4 Jérôme Thion
3 Census Johnston
2 Schalk Brits
1 David Barnes
Substitutes:
16 Benoît August
17 Julian White
18 Rodney So'oialo
19 Martyn Williams
20 Byron Kelleher
21 Jean-Baptiste Élissalde
22 Fabrice Estebanez
Coach:
Philippe Saint-André
  • As is typical for Barbarians matches, this was an uncapped match for Ireland.
5 June 2010
19:30 AEST (UTC+10)
Australia  49–3  Fiji
Try: Beale (2) 10' c, 77' c
Brown 39' c
Cooper 43' c
Ioane (2) 50' c, 66' c
Mitchell 63' c
Con: Giteau (6/6)
Cooper (1/1)
Report[7] Pen: Rawaqa (1/1) 27'
Canberra Stadium, Canberra
Attendance: 15,438[8]
Referee: Peter Fitzgibbon (Ireland)
15Kurtley Beale
14Digby Ioane
13Rob Horne 20' to 31'
12Matt Giteau
11Adam Ashley-Cooper 56'
10Quade Cooper
9Luke Burgess
8Richard Brown
7David Pocock 61'
6Rocky Elsom (c)
5Nathan Sharpe
4Dean Mumm
3Salesi Ma'afu 52' 61'
2Huia Edmonds 55'
1Ben Alexander 61'
Substitutes:
16Saia Faingaa 55'
17Pekahou Cowan 52'
18Mark Chisholm
19Matt Hodgson 61'
20Josh Valentine
21Drew Mitchell 20' 31' 56'
22James O'Connor
Coach:
Robbie Deans
15Taniela Rawaqa
14Sireli Bobo
13Rupeni Caucaunibuca 65'
12Saula Radidi 54'
11Timoci Nagusa
10Waisea Luveniyali 67'
9Emosi Vucago 53' to 63'
8Jone Qovu
7Jimilai Nakaidawa 7' to 15' 74'
6Anthony Wise 54'
5Dominiko Waqaniburotu
4Seko Kalou
3Deacon Manu (c)
2Talemaitoga Tuapati 74'
1Campese Ma'afu 73' 77' 79'
Substitutes:
16Graham Dewes 73' 75' to 80'
17Viliame Veikoso 74'
18Rupeni Nasiga 54'
19Samu Bola 7' 15' 74' 77' to 79'
20Vitori Buatava 67'
21Nemani Nadolo 65'
22Ropate Ratu 54'
Coach:
Sam Domoni
5 June 2010
14:30 WEST/GMT+01 (UTC+01)
Wales  31–34  South Africa
Try: Hook 20' c
Prydie 72' m
A.W. Jones 77' c
Con: S. Jones (2/3)
Pen: S. Jones (3/3) 8', 18', 45'
Drop: Hook (1/1) 11'
Report[9] Try: Ndungane 30' m
Potgieter 42' c
de Jongh 59' c
Con: Pienaar (2/3)
Pen: Pienaar (4/4) 16', 23', 35', 74'
Steyn (1/1) 55'
Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Attendance: 60,527
Referee: Alan Lewis (Ireland)
15Lee Byrne
14Leigh Halfpenny
13James Hook
12Jamie Roberts
11Tom Prydie
10Stephen Jones
9Mike Phillips
8Ryan Jones (c)
7Sam Warburton 77'
6Jonathan Thomas
5Deiniol Jones 57'
4Bradley Davies
3Adam Jones 57'
2Matthew Rees
1Paul James
Substitutes:
16Huw Bennett
17John Yapp 57'
18Alun Wyn Jones 57'
19Rob McCusker 77'
20Richie Rees
21Dan Biggar
22Andrew Bishop
Coach:
Warren Gatland
15François Steyn 75'
14Gio Aplon
13Jaque Fourie
12Juan de Jongh
11Odwa Ndungane 33'
10Ruan Pienaar
9Ricky Januarie
8Joe van Niekerk
7Dewald Potgieter 55'
6Francois Louw
5Victor Matfield
4Danie Rossouw 76'
3BJ Botha 57'
2John Smit (c)
1CJ van der Linde 76'
Substitutes:
16Chiliboy Ralepelle 76'
17Jannie du Plessis 57'
18Alistair Hargreaves 76'
19Ryan Kankowski 55'
20Meyer Bosman
21Zane Kirchner 75'
22Bjorn Basson 33'
Coach:
Peter de Villiers

Week 3

8 June 2010
18:00 AWST (UTC+08)
Australian Barbarians 28–28  England[10]
Report[11]
ME Bank Stadium, Perth
Attendance: 10,208
Referee: Stuart Dickinson (Australia)
12 June 2010
19:35 NZST (UTC+12)
New Zealand  66–28  Ireland
Try: C. Smith (2) 10' c, 47' c
Read 21' c
B. Franks 27' c
Cowan (2) 30' c, 33' c
S. Whitelock (2) 50' c, 78' c
Tialata 65' c
Con: Carter (7/7)
Weepu (2/2)
Pen: Carter (1/1) 4'
Report[12] Try: Tuohy 36' c
O'Driscoll 54' c
Bowe 60' c
D'Arcy 75' c
Con: O'Gara (3/3)
Sexton (1/1)
Yarrow Stadium, New Plymouth
Attendance: 25,000[13]
Referee: Wayne Barnes (England)
15Israel Dagg
14Cory Jane 63'
13Conrad Smith
12Benson Stanley
11Joe Rokocoko
10Dan Carter 54'
9Jimmy Cowan 40'
8Kieran Read
7Richie McCaw (c)
6Jerome Kaino 38'
5Anthony Boric
4Brad Thorn 50'
3Owen Franks 70'
2Keven Mealamu 63'
1Ben Franks 52' 70'
Substitutes:
16Aled de Malmanche 63'
17Neemia Tialata 52'
18Sam Whitelock 50'
19Victor Vito 38'
20Piri Weepu 40'
21Aaron Cruden 54'
22Zac Guildford 63'
Coach:
Graham Henry
15Rob Kearney 70'
14Tommy Bowe
13Brian O'Driscoll (c)
12Gordon D'Arcy
11Andrew Trimble
10Ronan O'Gara 70' 24' to 34'
9Tomás O'Leary 70'
8Jamie Heaslip 15'
7David Wallace
6John Muldoon 32'
5Mick O'Driscoll 36'
4Donncha O'Callaghan
3Tony Buckley
2Seán Cronin 79'
1Cian Healy 77'
Substitutes:
16John Fogarty 79'
17Tom Court 77'
18Dan Tuohy 36'
19Shane Jennings 32'
20Eoin Reddan 70'
21Jonathan Sexton 70'
22Geordan Murphy 70'
Coach:
Declan Kidney
12 June 2010
18:00 AWST (UTC+08)
Australia  27–17  England
Try: Elsom 17' c
Cooper (2) 30' c, 56' c
Con: O'Connor (3/3)
Pen: O'Connor 72'
Cooper 78'
Report[14] Try: Penalty try (2) 53' c, 70' c
Con: Flood (2/2)
Pen: Flood 43'
Subiaco Oval, Perth
Attendance: 32,228
Referee: Nigel Owens (Wales)
15James O'Connor
14Digby Ioane
13Rob Horne
12Berrick Barnes
11Drew Mitchell
10Quade Cooper
9Luke Burgess
8Richard Brown
7David Pocock
6Rocky Elsom (c)
5Nathan Sharpe
4Dean Mumm
3Salesi Ma'afu
2Saia Faingaa
1Ben Daley
Substitutes:
16Huia Edmonds
17James Slipper
18Mark Chisholm
19Matt Hodgson
20Will Genia
21Peter Hynes
22Kurtley Beale
Coach:
Robbie Deans
15Ben Foden
14Mark Cueto
13Mike Tindall
12Shontayne Hape
11Chris Ashton
10Toby Flood
9Danny Care
8Nick Easter
7Lewis Moody (c)
6Tom Croft
5Tom Palmer
4Simon Shaw
3Dan Cole
2Steve Thompson
1Tim Payne
Substitutes:
16George Chuter
17David Wilson
18Courtney Lawes
19James Haskell
20Ben Youngs
21Jonny Wilkinson
22Mathew Tait
Team manager:
Martin Johnson
12 June 2010
14:00 SAST (UTC+02)
South Africa  42–17  France
Try: Spies 2' c
Aplon (2) 7' c, 49' c
Steenkamp 31' m
Louw 75' c
Con: Steyn (3/4)
Pienaar (1/1)
Pen: Steyn (3/3) 10', 23', 46'
Report[15] Try: Rougerie 28' c
Andreu 79' c
Con: Parra (1/1)
Skrela (1/1)
Pen: Parra (1/1) 40'+3'
Newlands, Cape Town
Attendance: 46,885
Referee: Bryce Lawrence (New Zealand)
15Zane Kirchner 61'
14Gio Aplon
13Jaque Fourie 30' to 35'
12Wynand Olivier 61'
11Bryan Habana
10Morné Steyn 65'
9Ricky Januarie
8Pierre Spies
7Francois Louw
6Schalk Burger 50' 57' 60'
5Victor Matfield
4Danie Rossouw 60'
3BJ Botha 56'
2John Smit (c) 40'
1Gurthrö Steenkamp
Substitutes:
16Chiliboy Ralepelle 40'
17Jannie du Plessis 56'
18Flip van der Merwe 60' 69' to 79'
19Dewald Potgieter 50' 57' to 60'
20Ruan Pienaar 65'
21Juan de Jongh 61'
22Jean de Villiers 30' 35' 61'
Coach:
Peter de Villiers
15Clément Poitrenaud 71'
14Vincent Clerc
13David Marty 78'
12Maxime Mermoz
11Aurélien Rougerie
10François Trinh-Duc
9Morgan Parra 66'
8Julien Bonnaire
7Wenceslas Lauret 52'
6Thierry Dusautoir (c)
5Romain Millo-Chluski 52'
4Lionel Nallet
3Nicolas Mas
2Dimitri Szarzewski 64'
1Thomas Domingo 40'
Substitutes:
16Guilhem Guirado 64'
17Jean-Baptiste Poux 40'
18Julien Pierre 52'
19Louis Picamoles 52'
20Dimitri Yachvili 66' 74' to 80'
21David Skrela 71'
22Marc Andreu 78'
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont
12 June 2010
15:45 ART (UTC-03)
Argentina  16–24  Scotland
Try: Tiesi 3' m
Leguizamón 30' m
Pen: Contepomi (2) 12', 80'
Report[16] Pen: Parks (6) 6', 23', 39', 52', 68', 80'+3'
Drop: Parks (2) 40'+5', 75'
Estadio José Fierro, Tucumán
Attendance: 31,898
Referee: Dave Pearson (England)
15Martín Rodríguez
14Lucas Borges
13Gonzalo Tiesi
12Santiago Fernández
11Horacio Agulla
10Felipe Contepomi (c)
9Alfredo Lalanne
8Juan Martín Fernández Lobbe
7Juan Manuel Leguizamón
6Genaro Fessia
5Patricio Albacete
4Manuel Carizza
3Martín Scelzo
2Mario Ledesma
1Rodrigo Roncero
Substitutes:
16Agustín Creevy
17Marcos Ayerza
18Mariano Galarza
19Alejandro Campos
20Agustín Figuerola
21Ignacio Mieres
22Lucas González Amorosino
Coach:
Santiago Phelan
15Hugo Southwell
14Max Evans
13Nick De Luca
12Graeme Morrison
11Sean Lamont
10Dan Parks
9Rory Lawson
8Johnnie Beattie
7John Barclay
6Kelly Brown
5Alastair Kellock (c)
4Jim Hamilton
3Moray Low
2Ross Ford
1Allan Jacobsen
Substitutes:
16Scott Lawson
17Geoff Cross
18Scott MacLeod
19Alasdair Strokosch
20Mike Blair
21Phil Godman
22Jim Thompson
Coach:
Andy Robinson
  • Scotland become the first side to defeat Argentina in Tucumán.

Week 4

15 June 2010
19:30 AEST (UTC+10)
Australian Barbarians 9–15  England
Report[17]
Bluetongue Stadium, Gosford
Attendance: 9,053
Referee: Steve Walsh (Australia)
18 June 2010
19:35 NZST (UTC+12)
New Zealand Māori 31–28 Ireland XV[18]
Try: Gear, Sweeny, Lowe
Con: McAlister (1/3), Ripia (1/1)
Pen: McAlister (3/3), Ripia (1/1)
Report[19] Try: Wallace
Con: Sexton (1/1)
Pen: Sexton (7/8)
Rotorua International Stadium, Rotorua
Attendance: 13,500
Referee: Mark Lawrence (South Africa)
19 June 2010
19:35 NZST (UTC+12)
New Zealand  42–9  Wales
Try: Mealamu 18' c
Jane 31' m
Carter (2) 52' c, 68' c
Kahui 71' c
Con: Carter (4/5)
Pen: Carter (3/4) 24', 50', 63'
Report[20] Pen: Halfpenny (1/1) 15'
S. Jones (1/2) 34'
Drop: S. Jones 3'
Carisbrook, Dunedin
Attendance: 29,000
Referee: George Clancy (Ireland)
15Israel Dagg
14Cory Jane
13Conrad Smith
12Benson Stanley
11Joe Rokocoko
10Dan Carter
9Jimmy Cowan
8Kieran Read
7Richie McCaw (c)
6Victor Vito
5Anthony Boric
4Brad Thorn
3Owen Franks
2Keven Mealamu
1Ben Franks
Substitutes:
16Aled de Malmanche
17Tony Woodcock
18Sam Whitelock
19Adam Thomson
20Piri Weepu
21Aaron Cruden
22Richard Kahui
Coach:
Graham Henry
15Lee Byrne
14Leigh Halfpenny
13Andrew Bishop
12Jamie Roberts
11Tom Prydie
10Stephen Jones
9Mike Phillips
8Ryan Jones (c)
7Gavin Thomas
6Jonathan Thomas
5Alun Wyn Jones
4Bradley Davies
3Adam Jones
2Matthew Rees
1Paul James
Substitutes:
16Huw Bennett
17John Yapp
18Deiniol Jones
19Rob McCusker
20Tavis Knoyle
21Dan Biggar
22Jonathan Davies
Coach:
Warren Gatland
  • This was intended to be the last rugby Test played at Carisbrook; however, the stadium would host the All Blacks' 2011 World Cup warm-up against at Fiji. Carisbrook's replacement, Forsyth Barr Stadium at University Plaza, ultimately opened in August 2011.
19 June 2010
20:00 AEST (UTC+10)
Australia  20–21  England
Try: Giteau (2) 21', 41'
Con: Giteau (2/2)
Pen: Giteau (2/6) 7', 14'
Report[21] Try: Youngs 17' c
Ashton 26' m
Con: Flood (1/2)
Pen: Flood (2/3) 2', 44'
Wilkinson (1/2) 51'
ANZ Stadium, Sydney
Attendance: 48,392
Referee: Romain Poite (France)
15James O'Connor
14Drew Mitchell
13Rob Horne
12Matt Giteau
11Digby Ioane
10Quade Cooper
9Will Genia
8Richard Brown
7David Pocock
6Rocky Elsom (c)
5Nathan Sharpe
4Dean Mumm
3Salesi Ma'afu
2Saia Faingaa
1Ben Daley
Substitutes:
16Huia Edmonds
17James Slipper
18Mark Chisholm
19Matt Hodgson
20Luke Burgess
21Berrick Barnes
22Adam Ashley-Cooper
Coach:
Robbie Deans
15Ben Foden
14Mark Cueto
13Mike Tindall
12Shontayne Hape
11Chris Ashton
10Toby Flood
9Ben Youngs
8Nick Easter
7Lewis Moody (c)
6Tom Croft
5Tom Palmer
4Courtney Lawes
3Dan Cole
2Steve Thompson
1Tim Payne
Substitutes:
16George Chuter
17David Wilson
18Simon Shaw
19James Haskell
20Danny Care
21Jonny Wilkinson
22Delon Armitage
Team manager:
Martin Johnson
19 June 2010
15:00 SAST (UTC+02)
South Africa  29–13  Italy
Try: Habana 17' c
Louw 30' m
Steyn 39' c
Kirchner 48' c
Con: Steyn (3/4)
Pen: Steyn (1/1) 14'
Report[23] Try: Parisse 63' c
Con: Bergamasco (1/1)
Pen: Bergamasco (2/3) 12', 68'
Puma Rugby Stadium, Witbank
Attendance: 12,560[24]
Referee: Andrew Small (England)
15Zane Kirchner
14Gio Aplon
13Jean de Villiers
12Butch James
11Bryan Habana
10Morné Steyn
9Ricky Januarie
8Pierre Spies
7Dewald Potgieter
6Francois Louw
5Victor Matfield (c)
4Bakkies Botha
3Jannie du Plessis
2Chiliboy Ralepelle
1Gurthrö Steenkamp
Substitutes:
16Bandise Maku
17CJ van der Linde
18Alistair Hargreaves
19Ryan Kankowski
20Ruan Pienaar
21Juan de Jongh
22Bjorn Basson
Coach:
Peter de Villiers
15Luke McLean
14Kaine Robertson
13Andrea Masi
12Matteo Pratichetti
11Mirco Bergamasco
10Craig Gower
9Tito Tebaldi
8Sergio Parisse (c)
7Alessandro Zanni
6Simone Favaro
5Quintin Geldenhuys
4Valerio Bernabò
3Martin Castrogiovanni
2Leonardo Ghiraldini
1Salvatore Perugini
Substitutes:
16Fabio Ongaro
17Lorenzo Cittadini
18Marco Bortolami
19Paul Derbyshire
20Simon Picone
21Riccardo Bocchino
22Gonzalo Canale
Coach:
Nick Mallett
19 June 2010
15:45 ART (UTC-03)
Argentina  9–13  Scotland
Report[25]
José María Minella, Mar del Plata
Attendance: 16,821
Referee: Christophe Berdos (France)
15Martín Rodríguez
14Lucas González Amorosino
13Gonzalo Tiesi
12Santiago Fernández
11Horacio Agulla
10Felipe Contepomi (c)
9Agustín Figuerola
8Juan Martín Fernández Lobbe
7Juan Manuel Leguizamón
6Genaro Fessia
5Patricio Albacete
4Manuel Carizza
3Martín Scelzo
2Mario Ledesma
1Rodrigo Roncero
Substitutes:
16Agustín Creevy
17Marcos Ayerza
18Santiago Guzmán
19Alejandro Campos
20Nicolás Vergallo
21Rafael Carballo
22Lucas Borges
Coach:
Santiago Phelan
15Hugo Southwell
14Sean Lamont
13Max Evans
12Graeme Morrison
11Simon Danielli
10Dan Parks
9Rory Lawson
8John Barclay
7Johnnie Beattie
6Kelly Brown
5Alastair Kellock (c)
4Jim Hamilton
3Moray Low
2Ross Ford
1Allan Jacobsen
Substitutes:
16Scott Lawson
17Alasdair Dickinson
18Scott MacLeod
19Alasdair Strokosch
20Mike Blair
21Phil Godman
22Nick De Luca
Coach:
Andy Robinson
  • Scotland earn their first series win ever against Argentina.

Week 5

23 June 2010
19:35 NZST (UTC+12)
New Zealand Māori 35–28  England[10]
Try: Hosea Gear (3) 13', 42', 45'
Liam Messam 18'
Con: Luke McAlister (3) 15', 19', 44'
Pen: Luke McAlister 11'
Willie Ripia (2) 73', 75'
Report[26] Try: Steffon Armitage 4'
Danny Care 48'
Chris Ashton 40'
Con: Charlie Hodgson (2) 5', 39'
Pen: Charlie Hodgson (3) 2', 9', 34'
McLean Park, Napier
Attendance: 22,000
Referee: Craig Joubert (South Africa)
15Robbie Robinson
14Sean Maitland
13Dwayne Sweeney
12Luke McAlister
11Hosea Gear
10Stephen Brett
9Aaron Smith
8Liam Messam (c)
7Tanerau Latimer
6Karl Lowe
5Jarrad Hoeata
4Hayden Triggs
3Ben Afeaki
2Corey Flynn
1Clint Newland
Substitutes:
16Dane Coles
17Bronson Murray
18Isaac Ross
19Colin Bourke
20Te Ruki Tipuna
21Willie Ripia
22Jackson Willison
Coach:
Jamie Joseph[27]
15Delon Armitage
14David Strettle
13Mathew Tait
12Brad Barritt
11Chris Ashton
10Charlie Hodgson
9Danny Care
8Phil Dowson
7Steffon Armitage
6Chris Robshaw (c)
5Geoff Parling
4Dave Attwood
3Paul Doran-Jones
2George Chuter
1David Flatman
Substitutes:
16Rob Webber
17Dan Cole
18Dan Ward-Smith
19James Haskell
20Ben Youngs
21Shane Geraghty
22Ben Foden
Team manager:
Martin Johnson
26 June 2010
19:35 NZST (UTC+12)
New Zealand  29–10  Wales
Try: Cory Jane 24'
Aaron Cruden 80'
Con: Dan Carter 25'
Piri Weepu 80'
Pen: Dan Carter (5) 13', 40', 44', 51', 55'
Report[28] Try: Jamie Roberts 77'
Con: Paul James 78'
Pen: Leigh Halfpenny 3'
Waikato Stadium, Hamilton
Attendance: 20,000[29]
Referee: Jonathan Kaplan (South Africa)
15Mils Muliaina
14Cory Jane
13Richard Kahui
12Benson Stanley
11Zac Guildford
10Dan Carter
9Jimmy Cowan
8Kieran Read
7Richie McCaw (c)
6Jerome Kaino
5Tom Donnelly
4Brad Thorn
3Neemia Tialata
2Keven Mealamu
1Tony Woodcock
Substitutes:
16Aled de Malmanche
17Owen Franks
18Sam Whitelock
19Adam Thomson
20Piri Weepu
21Aaron Cruden
22Rene Ranger
Coach:
Graham Henry
15Lee Byrne
14Leigh Halfpenny
13Jonathan Davies
12Jamie Roberts
11Tom Prydie
10Dan Biggar
9Mike Phillips
8Ryan Jones (c)
7Gavin Thomas
6Jonathan Thomas
5Alun-Wyn Jones
4Bradley Davies
3Adam Jones
2Matthew Rees
1Paul James
Substitutes:
16Huw Bennett
17Craig Mitchell
18Deiniol Jones
19Rob McCusker
20Richie Rees
21Stephen Jones
22Will Harries
Coach:
Warren Gatland
  • This was referee Jonathan Kaplan's 17th game involving New Zealand, a new refereeing record for games involving any one country.
26 June 2010
20:00 AEST (UTC+10)
Australia  22–15  Ireland
Try: Luke Burgess 17'
Quade Cooper 39'
Pen: Quade Cooper (2) 12', 33'
Matt Giteau (2) 52', 61'
Report[30] Pen: Jonathan Sexton (5) 2', 9', 22', 29', 35'
Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane
Attendance: 45,498
Referee: Bryce Lawrence (New Zealand)
15James O'Connor
14Drew Mitchell
13Rob Horne
12Matt Giteau
11Adam Ashley-Cooper
10Quade Cooper
9Luke Burgess
8Richard Brown
7David Pocock
6Rocky Elsom (c)
5Mark Chisholm
4Dean Mumm
3Salesi Ma'afu
2Saia Faingaa
1Ben Daley
Substitutes:
16Huia Edmonds
17James Slipper
18Mitch Chapman
19Matt Hodgson
20Josh Valentine
21Berrick Barnes
22Kurtley Beale
Coach:
Robbie Deans
15Rob Kearney
14Tommy Bowe
13Brian O'Driscoll (c)
12Paddy Wallace
11Andrew Trimble
10Jonathan Sexton
9Tomas O'Leary
8Chris Henry
7Shane Jennings
6Niall Ronan
5Mick O'Driscoll
4Donncha O'Callaghan
3Tony Buckley
2Seán Cronin
1Cian Healy
Substitutes:
16Damien Varley
17Tom Court
18Dan Tuohy
19Rhys Ruddock
20Eoin Reddan
21Ronan O'Gara
22Geordan Murphy
Coach:
Declan Kidney
26 June 2010
15:00 SAST (UTC+02)
South Africa  55–11  Italy
Try: Steyn (2) 11' c, 30' c
Spies 37' c
du Plessis 51' c
Habana 56' c
van der Merwe 60' c
BJ Botha 70' c
Con: Steyn (6/6)
Pienaar (1/1)
Pen: Steyn (2) 4', 20'
Report[31] Try: Sepe 65' m
Pen: Bergamasco (2) 8', 14'
Buffalo City Stadium, East London
Attendance: 12,984
Referee: Andrew Small (England)
15Gio Aplon
14Jean de Villiers
13Jaque Fourie
12Juan de Jongh
11Bryan Habana
10Morné Steyn
9Ricky Januarie
8Pierre Spies
7Francois Louw
6Schalk Burger
5Andries Bekker
4Bakkies Botha
3Jannie du Plessis
2John Smit (c)
1Gurthrö Steenkamp
Substitutes:
16Chiliboy Ralepelle
17BJ Botha
18Flip van der Merwe
19Dewald Potgieter
20Ruan Pienaar
21Butch James
22Wynand Olivier
Coach:
Peter de Villiers
15Luke McLean
14Michele Sepe
13Gonzalo Canale
12Andrea Masi
11Mirco Bergamasco
10Craig Gower
9Simon Picone
8Sergio Parisse (c)
7Paul Derbyshire
6Manoa Vosawai
5Marco Bortolami
4Carlo Del Fava
3Lorenzo Cittadini
2Fabio Ongaro
1Salvatore Perugini
Substitutes:
16Leonardo Ghiraldini
17Franco Sbaraglini
18Quintin Geldenhuys
19Alessandro Zanni
20Tito Tebaldi
21Riccardo Bocchino
22Matteo Pratichetti
Coach:
Nick Mallett
  • Springbok captain John Smit became the first rugby player to win 50 Tests as captain.
  • Bryan Habana scored his 38th Test try, equalling the South African record of Joost van der Westhuizen.
26 June 2010
15:30 ART (UTC-03)
Argentina  41–13  France
Try: Fernández Lobbe 40' c
Contepomi (2) 48' c, 68' c
González Amorosino 58' m
Con: Contepomi (3/4)
Pen: Contepomi (5) 4', 8', 26', 37', 65'
Report[32] Try: Malzieu 53' c
Con: Parra (1/1)
Pen: Porical 2'
Parra 18'
José Amalfitani Stadium, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 32,460
Referee: Stuart Dickinson (Australia)
15Martín Rodríguez
14Lucas González Amorosino
13Gonzalo Tiesi
12Santiago Fernández
11Rafael Carballo
10Felipe Contepomi (c)
9Nicolás Vergallo
8Juan Martín Fernández Lobbe
7Alejandro Campos
6Genaro Fessia
5Patricio Albacete
4Manuel Carizza
3Martín Scelzo
2Mario Ledesma
1Rodrigo Roncero
Substitutes:
16Agustín Creevy
17Marcos Ayerza
18Juan Figallo
19Mariano Galarza
20Juan Manuel Leguizamón
21Agustín Figuerola
22Horacio Agulla
Coach:
Santiago Phelan
15Jérôme Porical
14Vincent Clerc
13Florian Fritz
12Lionel Mazars
11Julien Malzieu
10François Trinh-Duc
9Morgan Parra
8Julien Bonnaire
7Louis Picamoles
6Thierry Dusautoir (c)
5Lionel Nallet
4Pascal Papé
3Nicolas Mas
2Dimitri Szarzewski
1Fabien Barcella
Substitutes:
16Guilhem Guirado
17Jean-Baptiste Poux
18Julien Pierre
19Grégory Lamboley
20Dimitri Yachvili
21Clément Poitrenaud
22Aurélien Rougerie
Coach:
Marc Lièvremont
  • This game was referee Stuart Dickinson's 50th Test match.
  • Argentina score their biggest win ever over France. The Pumas' previous record win over Les Bleus was their 34–10 win in the third-place game of the 2007 Rugby World Cup.
  • Argentina captain Felipe Contepomi became the 18th player in history to amass 500 career Test points.
gollark: I'll add it to my spirit quotes list.
gollark: That poor innocent GPU.
gollark: This is graphics card abuse and should not be tolerated.
gollark: For example, there might be a better way to do a particular thing, or relevant problems/safety issues.
gollark: If you know why someone wants something, you can give better answers.

See also

References

  1. "2010 Bundaberg Rum Rugby Series Inbound Tour Program" (Press release). Australia Rugby Union. 21 September 2009. Archived from the original on 3 March 2016. Retrieved 21 September 2009.
  2. "Springboks resume where they left off" (Press release). South African Rugby Union. 8 October 2009. Retrieved 8 October 2009.
  3. "French Test confirmed for Newlands in Cape Town" (Press release). South African Rugby Union. 2 February 2010. Retrieved 3 February 2010.
  4. "England 35-26 Barbarians". 30 May 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  5. "Irish Rugby : Barbarians Take Thomond Verdict". archive.org. 7 June 2010. Archived from the original on 7 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  6. 2008, Mediaclan. "Ireland v Barbarians Rugby tickets 2015 - Barbarians Ireland Rugby Tickets May 2015". www.ticketbooth.org.uk. Retrieved 14 September 2017.CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  7. "Wallabies run riot against Fiji". abc.net.au. 5 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  8. Growden, Greg (7 June 2010). "ACT faces real test to win 'next best' internationals". The Sydney Morning Herald.
  9. "Wales 31-34 South Africa". 5 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  10. "Tours". Rugby First. Archived from the original on 23 June 2010. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  11. "O'Connor stars as Baa-Baas snatch draw". theroar.com.au. 8 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  12. "Irish Rugby : All Blacks Dominate Against 14-Man Ireland". archive.org. 14 June 2010. Archived from the original on 14 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017.CS1 maint: BOT: original-url status unknown (link)
  13. Rees, Paul (12 June 2010). "Dan Carter passes 1,000 points as New Zealand trounce 14-man Ireland". The Guardian. London.
  14. Jenkins, Graham. "Australia hold off England assault". scrum.com. Retrieved 14 September 2017.
  15. http://www.sport24.co.za/Rugby/Boks-crush-France-at-Newlands-20100612/
  16. "Argentina 16-24 Scotland". 12 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  17. Growden, Greg (16 June 2010). "England win, but crowd loses with no tries scored in a pointless fixture". Retrieved 14 September 2017 via The Sydney Morning Herald.
  18. "Ireland Fixtures & Results". Irish Rugby. Archived from the original on 17 February 2013. Retrieved 13 July 2010.
  19. "New Zealand Maori 31-28 Ireland". 18 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  20. "New Zealand 42-9 Wales". 19 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  21. "Australia 20-21 England". 19 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  22. Chris Hewett (20 June 2010). "Youngs' England sense rosy future after win for the ages". The Independent. London.
  23. "Springboks ease to win over Italy". 19 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  24. United Kingdom
  25. "Argentina 9-13 Scotland". 19 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  26. Cleary, Mick (23 June 2010). "New Zealand Maori 35 England 28". Retrieved 14 September 2017 via The Telegraph.
  27. "NZ Maori team named for 2010". 3 News. Archived from the original on 29 September 2012. Retrieved 30 September 2010.
  28. "New Zealand 29-10 Wales". 26 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  29. "New Zealand 29 - 10 Wales". Archived from the original on 2 August 2012. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC.
  30. "Australia 22-15 Ireland". 26 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  31. "South Africa 55-11 Italy". 26 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
  32. "Contepomi-led Pumas crush France". 26 June 2010. Retrieved 14 September 2017 via BBC News.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.