England edge over line for autumn clean sweep but Argentina fume over Curry scuffle

A picture


Up on the scoreboard England have ended their autumn firmly in credit.A first four-Test autumn clean sweep at Twickenham since 2016, a total of 17 tries scored and a winning run that now stretches to 11 Tests.By the time the 2026 Six Nations comes around those will be the primary facts when Steve Borthwick’s team regather with the aim of pushing further onwards and upwards.Their final game of the year, though, was a curate’s egg with a distinctly sour aftertaste.An angry Felipe Contepomi, the Pumas’ head coach, alleged afterwards he had been shoved and sworn at by Tom Curry in a post-match scuffle in the tunnel and complained the Sale flanker had been guilty of a “reckless” tackle that led to his full-back Juan Cruz Mallía suffering a serious knee injury and reduced Argentina to 14 men late on.

Contepomi even used the word “bully” in his post-match press conference and his tirade ended up eclipsing many of the finer details of the contest itself.It is rare to hear a leading Test coach being as searingly forthright after a match these days, although England declined to throw further fuel on the intensifying diplomatic flames.Borthwick, instead, responded by describing his player’s character as “impeccable”.On the pitch, however, England could hardly have complained had the Pumas nicked victory in the closing moments.At 17-0 up in the first half there appeared to be only one winner but by the end the hosts were clinging on desperately and in danger of surrendering their dignity.

They were ultimately indebted to 12 points from the boot of George Ford and a promising first home start by Max Ojomoh, who scored a sharp early try and also provided assists for further scores by the Exeter duo of Immanuel Feyi-Waboso and Henry lade.It completed England’s most successful autumn since they beat South Africa, Fiji, Argentina and Australia on successive weekends in the first year of Eddie Jones’s tenure.If an outbreak of pushing and shoving at the final whistle, involving Curry and Henry Pollock, was not the obvious way to celebrate England are unquestionably getting better at finding different ways to win.To knock them over at home these days you certainly need to take a high proportion of your chances and, ideally, not give them a head start.Argentina could initially do neither but, as Scotland discovered at Murrayfield a week earlier, they can be dangerous if allowed back into a contest.

With 15 minutes left there was only one point in it until Slade’s try finally gave his side a decisive edge.It was certainly not England’s prettiest effort of the autumn, however.Without a number of injured squad members, their gameplan was clear from early on and did not include many, if any, frills.Between them the two sides kicked the ball 78 times, with England responsible for 40 of them.To be fair the tactics initially worked perfectly, with England going 10-0 ahead in as many minutes on a clear, cool afternoon.

A Ford drop goal, rapidly becoming a specialité de la maison, was followed by an opportunist try for Ojomoh, two Pumas succeeding only in knocking the ball back into the Bath centre’s path and giving him a free run to the line.Argentina, by contrast, were not at their sharpest: their first two lineout throws were called not straight and they were held up over the line with men lurking outside.When Santi Carreras, on temporarily for Tomás Albornoz, saw a penalty attempt crash back off a post it reflected their general inaccuracy.It felt even more costly when England nailed a second precisely-executed try.With nothing doing down the blindside Ford slipped the ball back inside to Ojomoh who sent a perfect cross kick straight into the arms of the unmarked Feyi-Waboso on the right.

If ever there was a good advertisement for having a second playmaker at inside centre this was it,Albornoz did finally knock over a 45-metre penalty to make it 17-3 but the initiative was still very much with England,Their kicking game was definitely working, to the point where Ford could almost have been wearing a ringmaster’s top hat and tails at times,Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionGiven Argentina’s ability to score a lot of points quickly, however, the onus was on England to keep pushing forward rather than sitting back,A third try before the interval would have helped but, from a commanding lineout maul, Luke Cowan-Dickie could not quite ground the ball to the French referee’s satisfaction.

It was precisely the encouragement Argentina needed.The second half was only four minutes old when Juan Martín González broke clear in midfield and, with defenders back-pedalling, Justo Piccardo charged over beside the posts.A penalty awarded against Maro Itoje on the floor then made it a four-point ball game and England visibly needed fresh impetus.England Steward; Feyi-Waboso, Slade, Ojomoh, Daly; Ford, Spencer (Mitchell 59); Genge (Baxter 50), Cowan-Dickie (Dan 71, Opoku-Fordjour (Stuart 50), Itoje (capt; Ewels 73), Coles, Pepper (Pollock 50), Underhill (Curry 50), Earl.Replacement M Smith.

Tries Ojomoh, Feyi-Waboso, Slade,Cons Ford 3,Pen Ford,Drop goal Ford,Argentina Cruz Mallía; Isgró, Moroni, Piccardo, Delguy; Albornoz (S Carreras 8-21, 50), Benítez Cruz (Moyano 50); Gallo (Wenger 59), Montoya (Ruiz 66), Delgado (Rapetti 55), Petti (Molina 59), Rubiolo, González, Kremer (Matera 45-52, 63), S Grondona (Oviedo 45).

Tries Piccardo, Isgro.Cons Albornoz, S Carreras.Pens Albornoz 2, S Carreras.Referee Pierre Brousset (Fr).The Pumas, though, had also stacked their bench and another Carreras penalty closed the gap to a single point.

Ford tried to restore some order with another drop-goal but his effort drifted wide and left England to try to locate a different avenue of escape.This time it came in the form of a try from Slade with 14 minutes left, again courtesy of an Ojomoh offload with England already enjoying an advantage.Another Ford penalty gave his side further breathing space and, this time, the Pumas could not quite wriggle their way out of trouble despite a defiant late try for the Harlequins winger Rodrigo Isgró.The most contentious exchanges of the day, though, were still to come.
recentSee all
A picture

Minister indicates sympathy for artists in debate over AI and copyright

People rightly want to get get paid for their work, says Liz Kendall, in apparent change of tack to predecessor The technology secretary, Liz Kendall, has indicated she is sympathetic to artists’ demands not to have their copyrighted works scraped by AI companies without payment and said she wanted to “reset” the debate.In remarks that suggest a change in approach from her predecessor, Peter Kyle, who had hoped to require artists to actively opt out of having their work ingested by generative AI systems, she said “people rightly want to get paid for the work that they do” and “we have to find a way that both sectors can grow and thrive in future”.The government has been consulting on a new intellectual property framework for AI which, in the case of the most common large language models (LLMs), requires vast amounts of training data to work effectively.The issue has sparked impassioned protests from some of Britain’s most famous artists. This month Paul McCartney released a silent two-minute 45 second track of an empty studio on an album protesting against copyright grabs by AI firms as part of a campaign also backed by Kate Bush, Sam Fender, the Pet Shop Boys and Hans Zimmer

A picture

Americans are feeling the pain of the affordability crisis: ‘There’s not any wiggle room’

Frozen dinners were useful when no one was home to cook. A fancy cheese or apple roll felt like a family treat. But not any more. “We can’t afford to do those little luxuries any more because they’re just too expensive to feed five with,” says Cat Hill. “There’s not any wiggle room

A picture

Meet the AI workers who tell their friends and family to stay away from AI

When the people making AI seem trustworthy are the ones who trust it the least, it shows that incentives for speed are overtaking safety, experts sayKrista Pawloski remembers the single defining moment that shaped her opinion on the ethics of artificial intelligence. As an AI worker on Amazon Mechanical Turk – a marketplace that allows companies to hire workers to perform tasks like entering data or matching an AI prompt with its output – Pawloski spends her time moderating and assessing the quality of AI-generated text, images and videos, as well as some factchecking.Roughly two years ago, while working from home at her dining room table, she took up a job designating tweets as racist or not. When she was presented with a tweet that read “Listen to that mooncricket sing”, she almost clicked on the “no” button before deciding to check the meaning of the word “mooncricket”, which, to her surprise, was a racial slur against Black Americans.“I sat there considering how many times I may have made the same mistake and not caught myself,” said Pawloski

A picture

Bro boost: women say their LinkedIn traffic increases if they pretend to be men

Do your LinkedIn followers consider you a “thought leader”? Do hordes of commenters applaud your tips on how to “scale” your startup? Do recruiters slide into your DMs to “explore potential synergies”?If not, it could be because you’re not a man.Dozens of women joined a collective LinkedIn experiment this week after a series of viral posts suggested that, for some, changing their gender to “male” boosted their visibility on the network.Others rewrote their profiles to be, as they put it, “bro-coded” – inserting action-oriented online business buzzwords such as “drive”, “transform” and “accelerate”. Anecdotally, their visibility also increased.The uptick in engagement has led some to speculate that an in-built sexism in LinkedIn’s algorithm means that men who speak in online business jargon are more visible on its platform

A picture

NFL Week 12: Chiefs hit back to beat Colts in overtime, Lions tame Giants and Packers crush Vikings

What a finish. Double overtime madness. The final scores and records now the dust has settled.(6-5) Baltimore Ravens 23-10 New York Jets (2-9)(8-3) Chicago Bears 31-28 Pittsburgh Steelers (6-5)(3-8) Cincinnati Bengals 20-26 New England Patriots (10-2)(7-4) Detroit Lions 34-27 New York Giants (2-10)(7-3-1) Green Bay Packers 23-6 Minnesota Vikings (4-7)(6-5) Kansas City Chiefs 23-20 Indianapolis Colts (8-3)(1-10) Tennessee Titans 24-30 Seattle Seahawks (8-3)That was an incredible comeback from Kansas City. The defense just completely shut the Colts out in the second half

A picture

Contepomi accuses ‘bully’ Curry of reckless tackle and shoving Argentina coach

Tom Curry found himself at the centre of a storm after England’s win against Argentina, as Felipe Contepomi accused the flanker not only of a “reckless” tackle on Juan Cruz Mallía but of shoving him, the Pumas’ coach, in the tunnel afterwards. Mallía, the full-back, was forced off late on with what is thought to be an anterior cruciate ligament injury, which meant Argentina, who had used all their replacements, had to finish the match with 14 men.“How old is he?” said Contepomi of Curry. “Twenty-seven? And strong. And I am 48 and he comes and just [shoves me]