Wallabies firing again in time for England clash after return to free-running DNA
<p>Victory over hosts at Twickenham 12 months ago proved a launchpad for Australia to begin climb back from nadir</p><p>If only Henry Slade had managed to stop Ben Donaldson getting that offload away, if only Ollie Sleightholme had been able to make that wrap-up tackle on Len Ikitau, if only Marcus Smith was able to catch Max Jorgensen. But Slade didn’t, Sleightholme couldn’t, Smith wasn’t, and Jorgensen scored in the corner. This time last year the <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2024/nov/09/england-australia-autumn-nations-series-rugby-union-match-report">Wallabies beat England 42-37</a>, their first victory against them at Twickenham in nine years, and it was, the players will tell you themselves, the moment when everything changed. “This game last year was a big turning point for us as a group,” says the Australia captain, Harry Wilson. “It really made us believe that on our day we can beat anybody in the world.”</p><p>Twelve months ago England weren’t worried about the Wallabies so much as they were worried for the Wallabies. The one thing an Australian team doesn’t want is pity, but that’s what they got. They had won two Tests out of nine in 2023, when they <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/sport/blog/2023/sep/25/wallabies-face-humiliating-rugby-world-cup-exit-after-shambolic-defeat-to-wales">embarrassed themselves at the World Cup</a>, and, after a few months during which he seemed to spend most of his time bowling around in a cork hat and shouting at everyone about how rubbish Australian rugby was, their head coach <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/sport/2023/oct/29/eddie-jones-resigns-as-wallabies-coach-after-nine-month-nightmare">Eddie Jones had defected to Japan</a>. A couple of their better players had hopped codes to play in the NRL and they had dropped to ninth in the world rankings. It was all getting a bit existential.</p> <a href
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