England tuned up for their tour of Australia and New Zealand with a confidence-boosting 36-26 win against the Barbarians at Twickenham on Sunday.
James Haskell, Shontayne Hape, Ben Foden and Mike Tindall all touched down as England made the most of some generous defending to cruise to victory.
Toulon-bound winger Paul Sackey scored a try in each half for the Barbarians and replacements David Smith and Census Johnson rumbled over to give the scoreline an air of respectability.
PHOTO: AFP
England were to head off yesterday for a five-match tour that includes two Tests against the Wallabies, two meetings with the Australian Barbarians and a clash with the New Zealand Maori.
All three teams will pose a far sterner test than the Barbarians.
The match did at least give England manager Martin Johnson a chance to run the rule over a clutch of returning players and new faces before the tour starts in earnest on Tuesday next week.
Charlie Hodgson, back after two years in the international wilderness, made a lively contribution at fly-half and finished with 10 points before a bloody nose forced him off, while the back row of Nick Easter, Delon Armitage and Haskell were all prominent.
Scrum-half Danny Care responded well to the gauntlet that Ben Youngs threw down with his performance for Leicester in Saturday’s Premiership final.
England made countless linebreaks and Mark Cueto was a constant danger with scything runs from deep, but there remain question marks over Hape at inside center.
England kept the pressure on with good hands from Foden and a Steve Thompson charge before the Barbarians were penalized for offside and this time Hodgson converted.
The Sale fly-half showed good strength to wriggle out of two tackles on half-way before offloading for Dave Attwood to rampage forward as England began to tick.
Hodgson slotted a second penalty before Haskell showed some clever footwork to skip away from Sackey and Ross Skeate, who collided in pantomime fashion as the Stade Francais flanker touched down.
England extended their lead to 20-0 when Hape stepped through a giant gap between Fritz and Ben Kay to score on his senior debut.
Finally the Barbarians offered something worth cheering as Jean-Baptiste Elissalde, a member of Toulouse’s European Cup-winning team, brilliantly collected his own chip and sent Sackey over for the try.
Sackey fended Hodgson off on his way through and the England fly-half was forced to make way for Olly Barkley.
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