Seven weeks after their drab pool game in which 14-man England beat Argentina on goalkicks, the same teams gave a wholehearted effort on Friday that showed they dearly wanted the bronze medal.
Playing Sam Underhill and Tom Curry together in a World Cup game for the first time since the 2019 final paid dividends for England in an grinding first half.
They were England’s top two tacklers and got the only two turnovers in a first half that was fairly even except on the scoreboard.
Curry was superb in a week when he and his family were abused online for complaining he was the subject of a racial slur from South Africa during the semifinals last weekend. Underhill, an emergency replacement playing his first test in more than a year, played like a man who should have started more for England lately.
Marcus Smith was on hand to send No. 8 Ben Earl through a gap and soft defence for the opening try. Farrell’s conversion and two penalties sent England ahead 13-0.
Argentina thought they were playing a Barbarians game and gave up two kickable penalties to try a lineout and scrum, both of which were wasted.
The next penalty, though, was kicked over by Emiliano Boffelli, which pleased a crowd of 77,647 giving the Pumas partisan support.
Farrell kicked England 16-3 ahead, and just when the game was plodding along, it was given a welcome lift by the Pumas, who swept down the left touchline and finished with scrumhalf Tomas Cubelli diving off a ruck through English legs to score.
The game really came alive straight after halftime when, out of nothing, Pumas flyhalf Santiago Carreras slipped front-rowers Theo Dan and Ellis Genge and glided around Smith to score between the posts.
But Carreras immediately undid his brilliant work when he was charged down by Dan, who picked up and scored.
Farrell and Boffelli had the posts zeroed in all night, combining for a perfect 10 out of 10 goalkicks. Their penalties plus a penalty by replacement Sanchez pushed the score to 26-23 with 12 minutes to go.
The minutes were dominated by Argentina but Sanchez pulled his second chance from wide out, and Ford smothered Carreras when he was tearing for the line.
It finished the best third-place game since 2007, when Argentina beat host France, and gave England a full set of World Cup medals after gold in 2003 and silvers in 2007 and 2019.
- with AP