Katy Daley-Mclean helps England over line after Canada revival

The England coach had made 10 changes to the starting side from the win over the USA, including the return to the back row of his captain Sarah Hunter.
Things seemed to be going according to plan when the England pack
submerged the visitors with wave after wave of relentless driving mauls
in the first 25 minutes, two of them bringing tries for the hooker Lark
Davies and another for the Saracens flanker Poppy Cleall.
But with Lucy Attwood missing all three conversions to stretch the lead, Canada bounced back. Their centre Alex Tessier scored a well-taken try just before the break after a clever kick over the English defence from Anais Holly.
After the interval Canada somehow survived some intense pressure from the England pack and scored a spectacular try in front of a disbelieving Castle Park crowd.
Canada’s full-back Elissa Alarie intercepted a pass from Rachael Burford in her own 22 and ran a lung-bursting 90 metres pursued by the England wing Kelly Smith to score in the corner.
Ten minutes later Smith had recovered to score a try that gave England some breathing space, Burford cleverly flicking on a pass from Leanne Riley to dive over in the opposite number.
Katy Daley-Mclean had come on for her 101st cap, the fly-half giving England more direction after Canada’s revival. The Red Roses were home and dry when last week’s captain Abbie Scott, outstanding in the second row, was driven over the line by the replacement second row, the Yorkshire-born Zoe Aldcroft.
Aldcroft was impressive for 15 minutes and will be in contention for a starting place when England face Ireland at Twickenham on Saturday evening.
And so, we have an update for you on some good news. Thanks to all the readers who have supported our independent, investigative journalism through contributions, membership or subscriptions, we are starting to overcome the urgent financial situation we were faced with. Today we have been supported by more than a million readers around the world. Our future is starting to look brighter. But we have to maintain and build on that level of support for every year to come, which means we still need to ask for your help.
Ongoing financial support from our readers means we can continue pursuing difficult stories in the challenging times we are living through, when factual reporting has never been more critical. The Guardian is editorially independent – our journalism is free from commercial bias and not influenced by billionaire owners, politicians or shareholders. This is important because it enables us to challenge the powerful and hold them to account. With your support, we can continue bringing The Guardian’s independent journalism to the world.
If everyone who reads our reporting, who likes it, enjoys it, helps to support it, our future would be so much more secure.
But with Lucy Attwood missing all three conversions to stretch the lead, Canada bounced back. Their centre Alex Tessier scored a well-taken try just before the break after a clever kick over the English defence from Anais Holly.
After the interval Canada somehow survived some intense pressure from the England pack and scored a spectacular try in front of a disbelieving Castle Park crowd.
Canada’s full-back Elissa Alarie intercepted a pass from Rachael Burford in her own 22 and ran a lung-bursting 90 metres pursued by the England wing Kelly Smith to score in the corner.
Ten minutes later Smith had recovered to score a try that gave England some breathing space, Burford cleverly flicking on a pass from Leanne Riley to dive over in the opposite number.
Katy Daley-Mclean had come on for her 101st cap, the fly-half giving England more direction after Canada’s revival. The Red Roses were home and dry when last week’s captain Abbie Scott, outstanding in the second row, was driven over the line by the replacement second row, the Yorkshire-born Zoe Aldcroft.
Aldcroft was impressive for 15 minutes and will be in contention for a starting place when England face Ireland at Twickenham on Saturday evening.
We have some news …
… three years ago, we knew we had to try to make The Guardian sustainable by deepening our relationship with our readers. The revenues from our newspaper had diminished and the technologies that connected us with a global audience had moved advertising money away from news organisations. We knew we needed to find a way to keep our journalism open and accessible to everyone, regardless of where they live or what they can afford.And so, we have an update for you on some good news. Thanks to all the readers who have supported our independent, investigative journalism through contributions, membership or subscriptions, we are starting to overcome the urgent financial situation we were faced with. Today we have been supported by more than a million readers around the world. Our future is starting to look brighter. But we have to maintain and build on that level of support for every year to come, which means we still need to ask for your help.
Ongoing financial support from our readers means we can continue pursuing difficult stories in the challenging times we are living through, when factual reporting has never been more critical. The Guardian is editorially independent – our journalism is free from commercial bias and not influenced by billionaire owners, politicians or shareholders. This is important because it enables us to challenge the powerful and hold them to account. With your support, we can continue bringing The Guardian’s independent journalism to the world.
If everyone who reads our reporting, who likes it, enjoys it, helps to support it, our future would be so much more secure.
Katy Daley-Mclean helps England over line after Canada revival
Reviewed by Unknown
on
11:18 AM
Rating:
No comments: