
Student's Wimbledon fairytale over as ace serves lesson
Among those working here is Oliver Tarvet from St Albans, an ancient town just north of London, who is back home for the holidays from the University of San Diego.
There he is majoring in communications, with a minor in marketing, and he will certainly have a story to tell and sell when he returns to California for his final year.
Tarvet, 21, has a different role to most students at Wimbledon. He's actually playing, and on Wednesday he found himself on Centre Court enjoying a fairytale beyond imagination.
The world No.733 was given a wildcard into qualifying, unexpectedly parlayed that into a main-draw place, then won his opening-round match against No.117-ranked Leonardo Riedi to earn an encounter with defending champ and world No.2 Carlos Alacaraz on the sport's most famous court.
That's where the dream ended, the Spaniard winning 6-1 6-4 6-4. Except it didn't, really. Tarvet winning nine games was some achievement, and one in which every point was roared on by the home crowd.
In the first set he forced eight break points, in the second he took one to go up 2-0, repeating the feat to lead 3-2 in the third. Alcaraz, obviously, prevailed in the end, but Tarvet looks to be a name to remember.
Next door on No.1 Court on Wednesday there was an upset home win, with former semi-finalist Cameron Norrie stunning American 12th seed Frances Tiafoe.
Norrie is now ranked 61, lost in the first round of both his warm-up events, and had never previously beaten a top-20 player at Wimbledon. But that mattered little as the British No.3 came back from losing the first set to win 4-6 6-4 6-3 7-5.
"I'm enjoying my tennis more than ever. It was really nice coming up to get into the top 10, but it's just tough, really tough, to stay there," Norrie said.
"It's nice to hunt the other guys. I was coming into the match today against Frances being the underdog, playing for free.
"It was a lot easier than in the past when I previously played Frances. I was the highest seeded player, the pressure was on me."
Norrie now plays Mattia Bellucci after the Italian beat 23rd seed Jiri Lehecka. The Czech had been seen as an outside bet after reaching the Queen's Club final last month, but lost 7-6 (7-4) 6-1 7-5.
Elsewhere rising Brazilian star Joao Fonseca was overcome with emotion after beating Jenson Brooksby 6-4 5-7 6-2 6-4. The teenager was noisily supported by his compatriots as he became the first Brazilian man to reach the third round since Thomaz Bellucci in 2010.
"It's something to be proud of," said Fonseca, who is playing in his fourth tour-level event on grass. "I'm very happy the way that I've developed on this surface, I'm evolving, so I'm happy with it."
American fifth seed Taylor Fritz was taken to five sets before overcoming Canadian Gabriel Diallo under the No.1 Court roof.
Russian seeds Andrey Rublev (No.14) and Karen Khachanov (No.17) both came back from dropping the opening set to win, defeating South African Lloyd Harris and Japan's Shintaro Mochizuki in four and five sets respectively.
There are students everywhere at Wimbledon. Serving in the restaurants, watering the plants, helping out in the media centre. It's a much sought-after summer job.
Among those working here is Oliver Tarvet from St Albans, an ancient town just north of London, who is back home for the holidays from the University of San Diego.
There he is majoring in communications, with a minor in marketing, and he will certainly have a story to tell and sell when he returns to California for his final year.
Tarvet, 21, has a different role to most students at Wimbledon. He's actually playing, and on Wednesday he found himself on Centre Court enjoying a fairytale beyond imagination.
The world No.733 was given a wildcard into qualifying, unexpectedly parlayed that into a main-draw place, then won his opening-round match against No.117-ranked Leonardo Riedi to earn an encounter with defending champ and world No.2 Carlos Alacaraz on the sport's most famous court.
That's where the dream ended, the Spaniard winning 6-1 6-4 6-4. Except it didn't, really. Tarvet winning nine games was some achievement, and one in which every point was roared on by the home crowd.
In the first set he forced eight break points, in the second he took one to go up 2-0, repeating the feat to lead 3-2 in the third. Alcaraz, obviously, prevailed in the end, but Tarvet looks to be a name to remember.
Next door on No.1 Court on Wednesday there was an upset home win, with former semi-finalist Cameron Norrie stunning American 12th seed Frances Tiafoe.
Norrie is now ranked 61, lost in the first round of both his warm-up events, and had never previously beaten a top-20 player at Wimbledon. But that mattered little as the British No.3 came back from losing the first set to win 4-6 6-4 6-3 7-5.
"I'm enjoying my tennis more than ever. It was really nice coming up to get into the top 10, but it's just tough, really tough, to stay there," Norrie said.
"It's nice to hunt the other guys. I was coming into the match today against Frances being the underdog, playing for free.
"It was a lot easier than in the past when I previously played Frances. I was the highest seeded player, the pressure was on me."
Norrie now plays Mattia Bellucci after the Italian beat 23rd seed Jiri Lehecka. The Czech had been seen as an outside bet after reaching the Queen's Club final last month, but lost 7-6 (7-4) 6-1 7-5.
Elsewhere rising Brazilian star Joao Fonseca was overcome with emotion after beating Jenson Brooksby 6-4 5-7 6-2 6-4. The teenager was noisily supported by his compatriots as he became the first Brazilian man to reach the third round since Thomaz Bellucci in 2010.
"It's something to be proud of," said Fonseca, who is playing in his fourth tour-level event on grass. "I'm very happy the way that I've developed on this surface, I'm evolving, so I'm happy with it."
American fifth seed Taylor Fritz was taken to five sets before overcoming Canadian Gabriel Diallo under the No.1 Court roof.
Russian seeds Andrey Rublev (No.14) and Karen Khachanov (No.17) both came back from dropping the opening set to win, defeating South African Lloyd Harris and Japan's Shintaro Mochizuki in four and five sets respectively.
There are students everywhere at Wimbledon. Serving in the restaurants, watering the plants, helping out in the media centre. It's a much sought-after summer job.
Among those working here is Oliver Tarvet from St Albans, an ancient town just north of London, who is back home for the holidays from the University of San Diego.
There he is majoring in communications, with a minor in marketing, and he will certainly have a story to tell and sell when he returns to California for his final year.
Tarvet, 21, has a different role to most students at Wimbledon. He's actually playing, and on Wednesday he found himself on Centre Court enjoying a fairytale beyond imagination.
The world No.733 was given a wildcard into qualifying, unexpectedly parlayed that into a main-draw place, then won his opening-round match against No.117-ranked Leonardo Riedi to earn an encounter with defending champ and world No.2 Carlos Alacaraz on the sport's most famous court.
That's where the dream ended, the Spaniard winning 6-1 6-4 6-4. Except it didn't, really. Tarvet winning nine games was some achievement, and one in which every point was roared on by the home crowd.
In the first set he forced eight break points, in the second he took one to go up 2-0, repeating the feat to lead 3-2 in the third. Alcaraz, obviously, prevailed in the end, but Tarvet looks to be a name to remember.
Next door on No.1 Court on Wednesday there was an upset home win, with former semi-finalist Cameron Norrie stunning American 12th seed Frances Tiafoe.
Norrie is now ranked 61, lost in the first round of both his warm-up events, and had never previously beaten a top-20 player at Wimbledon. But that mattered little as the British No.3 came back from losing the first set to win 4-6 6-4 6-3 7-5.
"I'm enjoying my tennis more than ever. It was really nice coming up to get into the top 10, but it's just tough, really tough, to stay there," Norrie said.
"It's nice to hunt the other guys. I was coming into the match today against Frances being the underdog, playing for free.
"It was a lot easier than in the past when I previously played Frances. I was the highest seeded player, the pressure was on me."
Norrie now plays Mattia Bellucci after the Italian beat 23rd seed Jiri Lehecka. The Czech had been seen as an outside bet after reaching the Queen's Club final last month, but lost 7-6 (7-4) 6-1 7-5.
Elsewhere rising Brazilian star Joao Fonseca was overcome with emotion after beating Jenson Brooksby 6-4 5-7 6-2 6-4. The teenager was noisily supported by his compatriots as he became the first Brazilian man to reach the third round since Thomaz Bellucci in 2010.
"It's something to be proud of," said Fonseca, who is playing in his fourth tour-level event on grass. "I'm very happy the way that I've developed on this surface, I'm evolving, so I'm happy with it."
American fifth seed Taylor Fritz was taken to five sets before overcoming Canadian Gabriel Diallo under the No.1 Court roof.
Russian seeds Andrey Rublev (No.14) and Karen Khachanov (No.17) both came back from dropping the opening set to win, defeating South African Lloyd Harris and Japan's Shintaro Mochizuki in four and five sets respectively.
There are students everywhere at Wimbledon. Serving in the restaurants, watering the plants, helping out in the media centre. It's a much sought-after summer job.
Among those working here is Oliver Tarvet from St Albans, an ancient town just north of London, who is back home for the holidays from the University of San Diego.
There he is majoring in communications, with a minor in marketing, and he will certainly have a story to tell and sell when he returns to California for his final year.
Tarvet, 21, has a different role to most students at Wimbledon. He's actually playing, and on Wednesday he found himself on Centre Court enjoying a fairytale beyond imagination.
The world No.733 was given a wildcard into qualifying, unexpectedly parlayed that into a main-draw place, then won his opening-round match against No.117-ranked Leonardo Riedi to earn an encounter with defending champ and world No.2 Carlos Alacaraz on the sport's most famous court.
That's where the dream ended, the Spaniard winning 6-1 6-4 6-4. Except it didn't, really. Tarvet winning nine games was some achievement, and one in which every point was roared on by the home crowd.
In the first set he forced eight break points, in the second he took one to go up 2-0, repeating the feat to lead 3-2 in the third. Alcaraz, obviously, prevailed in the end, but Tarvet looks to be a name to remember.
Next door on No.1 Court on Wednesday there was an upset home win, with former semi-finalist Cameron Norrie stunning American 12th seed Frances Tiafoe.
Norrie is now ranked 61, lost in the first round of both his warm-up events, and had never previously beaten a top-20 player at Wimbledon. But that mattered little as the British No.3 came back from losing the first set to win 4-6 6-4 6-3 7-5.
"I'm enjoying my tennis more than ever. It was really nice coming up to get into the top 10, but it's just tough, really tough, to stay there," Norrie said.
"It's nice to hunt the other guys. I was coming into the match today against Frances being the underdog, playing for free.
"It was a lot easier than in the past when I previously played Frances. I was the highest seeded player, the pressure was on me."
Norrie now plays Mattia Bellucci after the Italian beat 23rd seed Jiri Lehecka. The Czech had been seen as an outside bet after reaching the Queen's Club final last month, but lost 7-6 (7-4) 6-1 7-5.
Elsewhere rising Brazilian star Joao Fonseca was overcome with emotion after beating Jenson Brooksby 6-4 5-7 6-2 6-4. The teenager was noisily supported by his compatriots as he became the first Brazilian man to reach the third round since Thomaz Bellucci in 2010.
"It's something to be proud of," said Fonseca, who is playing in his fourth tour-level event on grass. "I'm very happy the way that I've developed on this surface, I'm evolving, so I'm happy with it."
American fifth seed Taylor Fritz was taken to five sets before overcoming Canadian Gabriel Diallo under the No.1 Court roof.
Russian seeds Andrey Rublev (No.14) and Karen Khachanov (No.17) both came back from dropping the opening set to win, defeating South African Lloyd Harris and Japan's Shintaro Mochizuki in four and five sets respectively.

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The Advertiser
4 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Tupou confirms move as Waratahs show Wallabies the way
Confirming he's played his last game in a NSW Waratahs jersey, Taniela Tupou isn't sure about his Wallabies future with the giant prop struggling to make a case for inclusion in the first Test against the British and Irish Lions. While NSW coach Dan McKellar believes he provided a blueprint for Australian success in the series opener in Brisbane on July 19, Tupou didn't have the impact he hoped for in the Waratahs' 21-10 loss to the tourists in Sydney. Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt's chief demand was to see the 29-year-old tighthead be "really strong at set piece" but that was Tupou's weakness at Allianz Stadium on Saturday night, giving away four penalties. Tupou at least put his hand up for some big carries, at times skittling the Lions defence as the undermanned Waratahs made their sloppy rivals work for their win. He confirmed post match that he will move to France to play for Racing 92 but hoped to again pull on the Wallabies jersey before his shift. "I hope so. I know what Taniela can do, the challenge is can I get out there and do it for Australia," said a frustrated Tupou. "I'm not in the team at the moment so I'm not sure what the goal is for the next few weeks. If I'm in, I'm in. If I'm not, I'll be on the side and supporting the boys." Tupou said he wanted to stay in Australia but understood that, after a below-par season, Rugby Australia wouldn't match the money on offer. "As much as I wanted to stay in Australia, Rugby Australia is going to do what they're going to do. I'm at peace with it," Tupou said. "I understand what they're doing. It's like if I'm paying you to work for me and you're not working for me, why am I keeping you? "And that's exactly what happened to me ... I wasn't performing." McKellar felt Tupou was under a lot of scrutiny and was unlucky with some of the scrum penalties, and believed he would still be in consideration for the Wallabies squad, which will be named next Friday. After the Western Force and Queensland both suffered heavy losses to the Lions, McKellar said the fighting Waratahs showed how to rattle their rivals. The Lions dominated possession, territory, line-breaks and visits in the opposition quarter but the Waratahs line-speed and physicality suffocated their attack, forcing them into repeat errors. "We spoke about putting them under pressure and terrorising them with our press defence because we felt they hadn't faced that in the early games," McKellar said. "They're an outstanding team, a really strong group but they've got two arms and two legs, and if we take away their time and space and if we back that up with accuracy with our physicality, then we can create turnover opportunity off the back of it and we did that." Confirming he's played his last game in a NSW Waratahs jersey, Taniela Tupou isn't sure about his Wallabies future with the giant prop struggling to make a case for inclusion in the first Test against the British and Irish Lions. While NSW coach Dan McKellar believes he provided a blueprint for Australian success in the series opener in Brisbane on July 19, Tupou didn't have the impact he hoped for in the Waratahs' 21-10 loss to the tourists in Sydney. Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt's chief demand was to see the 29-year-old tighthead be "really strong at set piece" but that was Tupou's weakness at Allianz Stadium on Saturday night, giving away four penalties. Tupou at least put his hand up for some big carries, at times skittling the Lions defence as the undermanned Waratahs made their sloppy rivals work for their win. He confirmed post match that he will move to France to play for Racing 92 but hoped to again pull on the Wallabies jersey before his shift. "I hope so. I know what Taniela can do, the challenge is can I get out there and do it for Australia," said a frustrated Tupou. "I'm not in the team at the moment so I'm not sure what the goal is for the next few weeks. If I'm in, I'm in. If I'm not, I'll be on the side and supporting the boys." Tupou said he wanted to stay in Australia but understood that, after a below-par season, Rugby Australia wouldn't match the money on offer. "As much as I wanted to stay in Australia, Rugby Australia is going to do what they're going to do. I'm at peace with it," Tupou said. "I understand what they're doing. It's like if I'm paying you to work for me and you're not working for me, why am I keeping you? "And that's exactly what happened to me ... I wasn't performing." McKellar felt Tupou was under a lot of scrutiny and was unlucky with some of the scrum penalties, and believed he would still be in consideration for the Wallabies squad, which will be named next Friday. After the Western Force and Queensland both suffered heavy losses to the Lions, McKellar said the fighting Waratahs showed how to rattle their rivals. The Lions dominated possession, territory, line-breaks and visits in the opposition quarter but the Waratahs line-speed and physicality suffocated their attack, forcing them into repeat errors. "We spoke about putting them under pressure and terrorising them with our press defence because we felt they hadn't faced that in the early games," McKellar said. "They're an outstanding team, a really strong group but they've got two arms and two legs, and if we take away their time and space and if we back that up with accuracy with our physicality, then we can create turnover opportunity off the back of it and we did that." Confirming he's played his last game in a NSW Waratahs jersey, Taniela Tupou isn't sure about his Wallabies future with the giant prop struggling to make a case for inclusion in the first Test against the British and Irish Lions. While NSW coach Dan McKellar believes he provided a blueprint for Australian success in the series opener in Brisbane on July 19, Tupou didn't have the impact he hoped for in the Waratahs' 21-10 loss to the tourists in Sydney. Wallabies coach Joe Schmidt's chief demand was to see the 29-year-old tighthead be "really strong at set piece" but that was Tupou's weakness at Allianz Stadium on Saturday night, giving away four penalties. Tupou at least put his hand up for some big carries, at times skittling the Lions defence as the undermanned Waratahs made their sloppy rivals work for their win. He confirmed post match that he will move to France to play for Racing 92 but hoped to again pull on the Wallabies jersey before his shift. "I hope so. I know what Taniela can do, the challenge is can I get out there and do it for Australia," said a frustrated Tupou. "I'm not in the team at the moment so I'm not sure what the goal is for the next few weeks. If I'm in, I'm in. If I'm not, I'll be on the side and supporting the boys." Tupou said he wanted to stay in Australia but understood that, after a below-par season, Rugby Australia wouldn't match the money on offer. "As much as I wanted to stay in Australia, Rugby Australia is going to do what they're going to do. I'm at peace with it," Tupou said. "I understand what they're doing. It's like if I'm paying you to work for me and you're not working for me, why am I keeping you? "And that's exactly what happened to me ... I wasn't performing." McKellar felt Tupou was under a lot of scrutiny and was unlucky with some of the scrum penalties, and believed he would still be in consideration for the Wallabies squad, which will be named next Friday. After the Western Force and Queensland both suffered heavy losses to the Lions, McKellar said the fighting Waratahs showed how to rattle their rivals. The Lions dominated possession, territory, line-breaks and visits in the opposition quarter but the Waratahs line-speed and physicality suffocated their attack, forcing them into repeat errors. "We spoke about putting them under pressure and terrorising them with our press defence because we felt they hadn't faced that in the early games," McKellar said. "They're an outstanding team, a really strong group but they've got two arms and two legs, and if we take away their time and space and if we back that up with accuracy with our physicality, then we can create turnover opportunity off the back of it and we did that."


The Advertiser
4 hours ago
- The Advertiser
Wallabies survive Fiji flair for comeback victory
The Wallabies have shown they have a mountain to climb to match the British and Irish Lions after clawing their way to an ugly 21-18 victory over Fiji in Newcastle. Losing their last Test against the Pacific Islanders, ending a 69-year win streak, the Australians narrowly avoided more unwanted history as Fiji looked to go back-to-back for the first time. There were shades of Saint Etienne, where the Wallabies suffered their World Cup humiliation, when Australia fell behind in the 55th minute but they managed to scramble for the much-needed win. Skipper Harry Wilson managed to get the ball down over his head with just over a minute remaining to secure a heart-stopping win. But it came at a cost with flyhalf Noah Lolesio stretchered from the field in the 60th minute after his head slammed into the turf as he was tackled. The Wallabies' bumbling performance overshadowed the Lions' own struggles ahead of the July 19 series opener in Brisbane after the tourists battled to see off an undermanned Waratahs outfit in Sydney on Saturday night. Despite perfect conditions in front of a 28,000-strong crowd for the day match at McDonald Jones Stadium and with the prime ministers of both countries in the stands, Australia failed to mount any real pressure in the first half with too many turnovers and some aimless kicking. The hosts led 14-5 at halftime with Dave Porecki opening the scoring in the eighth minute through a Wallabies maul. The hooker was playing his first Test in 652 days, sidelined in 2024 due to an achilles injury, but Porecki only last 26 minutes before being forced off due to a head knock. The Wallabies had to wait until the 36th minute when the finally strung some attack together to send Fraser McReight across the line. But they then let a 14-point lead slip when Lolesio ignored sending the ball dead for halftime and instead put a dinky kick through that Fiji pounced on. They worked the ball to Salesi Rayasi, with the debutant fullback beating three Australian defenders to put his team on the scoreboard. Australia looked to play with more width in the second half with winger Max Jorgensen crossing in the 48th minute, but the try was disallowed due to a forward pass from fullback Tom Wright in the build-up. Fellow winger Harry Potter also had a first half try denied due to Wright forward pass. Momentum then swung the Fijians way as they embraced their traditional sevens style of play, putting the Wallabies on the back foot. After a Caleb Muntz penalty they hit the lead when winger Jiuta Wainiqolo made a jinking run downfield before off-loading for flanker Lekima Tagitagivalu to score. Muntz added the extras for a 15-14 lead. They looked to have added another minutes later but the try was denied with Australia's Potter going into the touch before the ball was turned over. Another Muntz penalty in the 67th minute left Australia needing a try to snatch back the lead, with Wilson finding his way through the Fiji defence to secure the win. The Wallabies have shown they have a mountain to climb to match the British and Irish Lions after clawing their way to an ugly 21-18 victory over Fiji in Newcastle. Losing their last Test against the Pacific Islanders, ending a 69-year win streak, the Australians narrowly avoided more unwanted history as Fiji looked to go back-to-back for the first time. There were shades of Saint Etienne, where the Wallabies suffered their World Cup humiliation, when Australia fell behind in the 55th minute but they managed to scramble for the much-needed win. Skipper Harry Wilson managed to get the ball down over his head with just over a minute remaining to secure a heart-stopping win. But it came at a cost with flyhalf Noah Lolesio stretchered from the field in the 60th minute after his head slammed into the turf as he was tackled. The Wallabies' bumbling performance overshadowed the Lions' own struggles ahead of the July 19 series opener in Brisbane after the tourists battled to see off an undermanned Waratahs outfit in Sydney on Saturday night. Despite perfect conditions in front of a 28,000-strong crowd for the day match at McDonald Jones Stadium and with the prime ministers of both countries in the stands, Australia failed to mount any real pressure in the first half with too many turnovers and some aimless kicking. The hosts led 14-5 at halftime with Dave Porecki opening the scoring in the eighth minute through a Wallabies maul. The hooker was playing his first Test in 652 days, sidelined in 2024 due to an achilles injury, but Porecki only last 26 minutes before being forced off due to a head knock. The Wallabies had to wait until the 36th minute when the finally strung some attack together to send Fraser McReight across the line. But they then let a 14-point lead slip when Lolesio ignored sending the ball dead for halftime and instead put a dinky kick through that Fiji pounced on. They worked the ball to Salesi Rayasi, with the debutant fullback beating three Australian defenders to put his team on the scoreboard. Australia looked to play with more width in the second half with winger Max Jorgensen crossing in the 48th minute, but the try was disallowed due to a forward pass from fullback Tom Wright in the build-up. Fellow winger Harry Potter also had a first half try denied due to Wright forward pass. Momentum then swung the Fijians way as they embraced their traditional sevens style of play, putting the Wallabies on the back foot. After a Caleb Muntz penalty they hit the lead when winger Jiuta Wainiqolo made a jinking run downfield before off-loading for flanker Lekima Tagitagivalu to score. Muntz added the extras for a 15-14 lead. They looked to have added another minutes later but the try was denied with Australia's Potter going into the touch before the ball was turned over. Another Muntz penalty in the 67th minute left Australia needing a try to snatch back the lead, with Wilson finding his way through the Fiji defence to secure the win. The Wallabies have shown they have a mountain to climb to match the British and Irish Lions after clawing their way to an ugly 21-18 victory over Fiji in Newcastle. Losing their last Test against the Pacific Islanders, ending a 69-year win streak, the Australians narrowly avoided more unwanted history as Fiji looked to go back-to-back for the first time. There were shades of Saint Etienne, where the Wallabies suffered their World Cup humiliation, when Australia fell behind in the 55th minute but they managed to scramble for the much-needed win. Skipper Harry Wilson managed to get the ball down over his head with just over a minute remaining to secure a heart-stopping win. But it came at a cost with flyhalf Noah Lolesio stretchered from the field in the 60th minute after his head slammed into the turf as he was tackled. The Wallabies' bumbling performance overshadowed the Lions' own struggles ahead of the July 19 series opener in Brisbane after the tourists battled to see off an undermanned Waratahs outfit in Sydney on Saturday night. Despite perfect conditions in front of a 28,000-strong crowd for the day match at McDonald Jones Stadium and with the prime ministers of both countries in the stands, Australia failed to mount any real pressure in the first half with too many turnovers and some aimless kicking. The hosts led 14-5 at halftime with Dave Porecki opening the scoring in the eighth minute through a Wallabies maul. The hooker was playing his first Test in 652 days, sidelined in 2024 due to an achilles injury, but Porecki only last 26 minutes before being forced off due to a head knock. The Wallabies had to wait until the 36th minute when the finally strung some attack together to send Fraser McReight across the line. But they then let a 14-point lead slip when Lolesio ignored sending the ball dead for halftime and instead put a dinky kick through that Fiji pounced on. They worked the ball to Salesi Rayasi, with the debutant fullback beating three Australian defenders to put his team on the scoreboard. Australia looked to play with more width in the second half with winger Max Jorgensen crossing in the 48th minute, but the try was disallowed due to a forward pass from fullback Tom Wright in the build-up. Fellow winger Harry Potter also had a first half try denied due to Wright forward pass. Momentum then swung the Fijians way as they embraced their traditional sevens style of play, putting the Wallabies on the back foot. After a Caleb Muntz penalty they hit the lead when winger Jiuta Wainiqolo made a jinking run downfield before off-loading for flanker Lekima Tagitagivalu to score. Muntz added the extras for a 15-14 lead. They looked to have added another minutes later but the try was denied with Australia's Potter going into the touch before the ball was turned over. Another Muntz penalty in the 67th minute left Australia needing a try to snatch back the lead, with Wilson finding his way through the Fiji defence to secure the win.


Perth Now
4 hours ago
- Perth Now
Wallabies survive Fiji flair for comeback victory
The Wallabies have shown they have a mountain to climb to match the British and Irish Lions after clawing their way to an ugly 21-18 victory over Fiji in Newcastle. Losing their last Test against the Pacific Islanders, ending a 69-year win streak, the Australians narrowly avoided more unwanted history as Fiji looked to go back-to-back for the first time. There were shades of Saint Etienne, where the Wallabies suffered their World Cup humiliation, when Australia fell behind in the 55th minute but they managed to scramble for the much-needed win. Skipper Harry Wilson managed to get the ball down over his head with just over a minute remaining to secure a heart-stopping win. But it came at a cost with flyhalf Noah Lolesio stretchered from the field in the 60th minute after his head slammed into the turf as he was tackled. The Wallabies' bumbling performance overshadowed the Lions' own struggles ahead of the July 19 series opener in Brisbane after the tourists battled to see off an undermanned Waratahs outfit in Sydney on Saturday night. Despite perfect conditions in front of a 28,000-strong crowd for the day match at McDonald Jones Stadium and with the prime ministers of both countries in the stands, Australia failed to mount any real pressure in the first half with too many turnovers and some aimless kicking. The hosts led 14-5 at halftime with Dave Porecki opening the scoring in the eighth minute through a Wallabies maul. The hooker was playing his first Test in 652 days, sidelined in 2024 due to an achilles injury, but Porecki only last 26 minutes before being forced off due to a head knock. The Wallabies had to wait until the 36th minute when the finally strung some attack together to send Fraser McReight across the line. But they then let a 14-point lead slip when Lolesio ignored sending the ball dead for halftime and instead put a dinky kick through that Fiji pounced on. They worked the ball to Salesi Rayasi, with the debutant fullback beating three Australian defenders to put his team on the scoreboard. Australia looked to play with more width in the second half with winger Max Jorgensen crossing in the 48th minute, but the try was disallowed due to a forward pass from fullback Tom Wright in the build-up. Fellow winger Harry Potter also had a first half try denied due to Wright forward pass. Momentum then swung the Fijians way as they embraced their traditional sevens style of play, putting the Wallabies on the back foot. After a Caleb Muntz penalty they hit the lead when winger Jiuta Wainiqolo made a jinking run downfield before off-loading for flanker Lekima Tagitagivalu to score. Muntz added the extras for a 15-14 lead. They looked to have added another minutes later but the try was denied with Australia's Potter going into the touch before the ball was turned over. Another Muntz penalty in the 67th minute left Australia needing a try to snatch back the lead, with Wilson finding his way through the Fiji defence to secure the win.