IRL Men's Rugby League World Cup : Group C

Sun 3rd November 2013   - KO  16:00 -
  Attendance: 7280

Scotland

30

FT

30

Half Time
14 - 12

Italy

Tries

Matthew Russell
Ben Hellewell x(2)
Kane Linnett
Danny Addy

Anthony Minichiello
Chris Centrone
Cameron Ciraldo
Ray Nasso x(2)

Goals

Danny Brough x(5)

Josh Mantellato x(5)

Matthew Russell
Full Back
Anthony Minichiello
Alex Hurst
Right Wing
Josh Mantellato
Ben Hellewell
Right Centre
James Tedesco
Kane Linnett
Left Centre
Aidan Guerra
Brett Carter
Left Wing
Chris Centrone
Danny Brough
Stand Off
Ben Falcone
Peter Wallace
Scrum Half
Ryan Ghietti
Adam Walker
Prop
Anthony Laffranchi
Ian Henderson
Hooker
Dean Parata
Luke Douglas
Prop
Paul Vaughan
Danny Addy
Second Row
Mark Minichiello
Dale Ferguson
Second Row
Cameron Ciraldo
Ben Kavanagh
Loose Forward
Joel Riethmuller
Ben Fisher
Int 1
Kade Snowden
Brett Phillips
Int 2
Ryan Tramonte
Mitchell Stringer
Int 3
Brenden Santi
Oliver Wilkes
Int 4
Ray Nasso
Reserve 1

Scotland and Italy played out a thrilling draw at Derwent Park, Workington, to maintain their respective unbeaten records in Rugby League World Cup 2013, leaving both sides in with a chance of qualifying to the knockout stages.

Neither side got off to the quickest of starts, exchanging sets of six until Matty Russell found a gap in the Italian defence to open the scoring, and Kane Linnett pounced on a Josh Mantellato fumble, before the Azzuri hit back with tries from Cameron Ciraldo and Ray Nosso to leave Scotland 14-12 up at half time.

The second half saw Scotland and Italy exchanging tries through Danny Addy, Ben Hellewell, Nasso and Chris Centrone before the Italians took the lead through Minichiello only to be pegged back by Hellewell, with neither side able to score what would have been match-winning drop-goals.

Scotland struggled to challenge the Italian line, and at the third time of asking, Danny Brough kicked to goal to give Scotland a 2-0 lead.

Recognising the momentum built after his penalty, Brough overruled a call from the touchline to kick for goal. The decision paid off two minutes later when Russell jinked  through the Italian defence to score the opening try of the game after lengthy deliberation from the video ref.

Scotland added more pressure onto the Italian defence when  Peter Wallace took over positional kicking duties to kick a forty-twenty.

Scotland extended their lead when Brough dabbed a kick through, and after rebounding off Mantellato and James Tedesco, Linnett pounced on the ball to give Scotland a 12-0  lead before Brough expertly added the extras.

Italy, who had failed to significantly test Scotland, carved out their first opportunity when Ryan Ghietti looked out wide for Mantellato, but the kick was plucked out of the air by Alex Hurst.

Italy did get on the scoreboard shortly after however, when Ghietti’s miskick was collected by  Ciraldo who managed to quickly gather and touch down to bring the Azzuri back into the game.

After more pressure from Italy and another penalty awarded just 10 metres out, Nasso drove to the line from dummy-half with the Scots unable to stop the hooker from going over, with Mantellato adding the extras to leave the Italians two adrift at the break.

Scotland started the second half in perfect fashion when Brough’s high kick was taken down by Brett Carter who offloaded to Hellewell who found Addy inside to score in seemingly unlikely circumstances.

Italy responded immediately and closed the gap once again in a carbon-copy of their second try, as Nasso ran over from dummy-half.

Italy could not stop Scotland restoring their advantage again though when creator Hellewell became scorer when he received Hurst’s pass to go over with Brough again adding the extras.

The Azzurri again gave themselves a way back into the match when Guerra showed excellent speed of thought to find Centrone who scored his second try of the game.

Italy took the lead for the first time in the game when the ball popped up in the air from Tedesco’s grubber before Minichiello pounced before Mantellato extended the lead to four points.

As the clock ticked over to 70 minutes, Brough showed just why he was awarded Super League’s Man of Steel when he collected his own speculative kick from the halfway line. The kick triggered what was arguably the try of the game as Hellewell touched down to level the scores.

With just minutes remaining Scotland had the first opportunity to win the game when Brough found space to kick a drop-goal, but his attempt was scuffed and Italy came away with possession but found their own drop-goal attempt to be unsuccessful to leave both sides with a share of the spoils.