2016 England rugby union tour of Australia
In June 2016, England played a three-test series against Australia as part of the 2016 mid-year rugby union tests.[1] They played the Wallabies across the three weeks of the June International window, 11 June–25 June, and contested the Cook Cup, which England had previously won eight times to Australia's twelve. The series was part of the fourth year of the global rugby calendar established by the International Rugby Board, which runs through to 2019.[2]
2016 England rugby union tour of Australia | |||||
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Coach(es) | Eddie Jones | ||||
Tour captain(s) | Dylan Hartley | ||||
Top test point scorer(s) | Owen Farrell (66) | ||||
Top test try scorer(s) | 9 players with 1 try | ||||
Summary |
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Total |
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Test match |
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Opponent |
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Tour chronology | |||||
Previous tour | New Zealand 2014 | ||||
Next tour | Argentina 2017 |
England won all three matches—the first time it had won a test series in Australia. After defeating the hosts in the second match, England retained the Cook Cup and achieved second place in the World Rugby Rankings,[3] demoting Australia to fourth. Australia had not lost every match in a home series since being "whitewashed" by South Africa in 1971.[4]
The Australian media joked about the England rugby team after the third test as the United Kingdom had voted to leave the European Union just two days earlier. [5]
Fixtures
Date and time | Venue | Home | Score | Away |
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11 June 2016, 20:00 AEST (UTC+10) | Suncorp Stadium, Brisbane | Australia |
28–39 | |
18 June 2016, 20:00 AEST (UTC+10) | AAMI Park, Melbourne | Australia |
7–23 | |
25 June 2016, 20:00 AEST (UTC+10) | Allianz Stadium, Sydney | Australia |
40–44 | |
Squads
Note: Ages, caps and clubs are as per 11 June, the first test match of the tour.
England
On 22 May, Eddie Jones named a 32-man squad for England's tour of Australia. An additional 5 players (Dave Attwood, Luther Burrell, Ollie Devoto, Matt Kvesic, Tommy Taylor) were also named ahead of the test match against Wales on 29 May, the day after the Aviva Premiership final between Saracens and Exeter Chiefs.[6] Ben Te'o, whose mother is English, was named in the squad, despite playing for Irish province Leinster, since he will be moving to Worcester Warriors for the 2016/17 season, making him eligible for selection.
On 30 May, Luther Burrell replaced Manu Tuilagi in the touring squad after Tuilagi withdrew from the squad due to injury.[7]
Coaching team:
- Head coach:
Eddie Jones - Defence coach:
Paul Gustard - Attack/Skills coach:
Glen Ella - Forwards coach:
Steve Borthwick
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Australia
On 26 May 2016, Michael Cheika named a 39-man extended squad for their June test series against England.[8]
On 30 May 2016, Reece Hodge was called up to the squad to replace the injured Mike Harris.[9]
On 3 June 2016, Michael Cheika named a final 33-man squad for the test series, with Adam Coleman, Liam Gill, James Hanson, Leroy Houston, Eto Nabuli and Joe Powell missing out on the final cut.[10]
On 12 June, Matt Toomua joined the squad as un-listed member of the squad after recovering from his knee surgery.[11] Liam Gill also joined the squad after David Pocock was ruled out of the rest of the series.[12][13]
On 20 June, Ben McCalman was ruled out of the last test of the series due to injury and was replaced by Leroy Houston in the squad.[14]
On 23 June, Adam Coleman was named in an extended match-day 23 for the final test, despite not being in the initial 33-man squad.[15]
Coaching team:
- Head coach:
Michael Cheika - Defence coach:
Nathan Grey - Forwards coach:
Mario Ledesma - Backs/Attack coach:
Stephen Larkham
MatchesFirst test
Notes:
Second test
Notes:
Third test
Notes:
StatisticsKey
See also
References
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