GRR on X  GRR on Facebook GRR in Instagram GRR Vimeo Library GRR on YouTube RuggaMatrix America Podcasts Support GRR on Patreon

USA Holds Off Canada as Mooneyham Nabs Brace

irish rugby tours

USA Holds Off Canada as Mooneyham Nabs Brace

Conner Mooneyham goes in for his first try. David Barpal photo.

The USA booked a spot in the Pacific Nations Cup in Japan, and, perhaps more importantly, got back on the winning side with a 28-15 defeat of Canada Saturday night at Dignity Health Sports Park in Carson, Calif.

The USA will go on now to Japan to play the Japanese in the second pool match in the PNC, but win or lose in that game, they will play in the semifinals against either Samoa or Fiji (most likely) a week later.

This was not a perfect game, and several silly and avoidable turnovers almost led to Canadian tries—tries that Japan most assuredly would score. However, some desperate cover defense and overall hard work off the ball ensured a USA victory. 

The Eagles started the game well, securing the ball off their kickoff and moving into the Canadian 22. But a slightly mistimed run stymied their first attack and certainly, while the Eagles had two weeks together before this game, the timing of everything with test match opposition is something else.

Canada survived the first period of pressure and then when they got a penalty in the middle of the field, flyhalf Peter Nelson pointed to the posts and smacked over an impressive 49-meter kick to give his side the lead at 3-0. Very soon after that Canada was penalized for no tackler release and Luke Carty equalized for the USA. The Eagles continued on the front foot. A good kick chase set up quick hands to Conner Mooneyham on the right wing and he looked very dangerous. While he was stopped, soon afterward the USA got their first try. 

Some more good passing from the tight five players, who obviously had been working on that part of their game, set up a 3-on-2 with No. 8 Jamason Fa'anana-Schultz, center Tomasso Boni, and Mooneyham. They executed that nicely and Mooneyham tore off down the sideline. He lost his footing near the tryline but his momentum took him over. Carty took too long to line up the conversion so it remained 8-3.

Opening It Up

Soon it was 13-3. With Canada on the attack they tried a grubber was USA fullback Mitch Wilson trapped between his legs. He promptly retrieved the ball and booted it downfield. The chase was on and when eventually the ball returned to the right side, with Carty looping Tavite Lopeti and sending a huge pass to Mooneyham for the wings second.

That made it 13-3. Notably, Mooneyham seemed to pick up a knock on that earlier kick-chase. He remained in the game but seemed to be in some discomfort when he went into contact. 

Canada kept working and off a gator roll by the USA they were able to get some territory. Wing Nic Benn almost scored but was held up by Wilson. Moments later, off a lineout, the Canadians ran a maul and then executed a nice inside pass play to put Benn over. That made it 13-8.

The Eagles had some chances as Carty started to identify opportunities to pop little kicks into the corner. The Americans did not think much of the Canadian lineout and they weren't wrong. Several overthrows were interspersed with shorter throws that were picked off.

Still, they managed to secure enough ball to avoid giving up a try on their own throw.

But a mistake in the Canadian backline turned the ball over in their half. The Eagles didnt rush it, consolidated possession, and then Carty popped a little chip kick over the defense. The USA flyhalf regathered his own kick and had Wilson by his side. Carty immediately passed to his fullback and Wilson raced in from 20 meters out to score. Now it was three tries for Life University alumni, and a lead of 18-8.

Canada's opportunities to answer were undercut once again by lineout woes, and the half ended 18-8 for the USA.

Second Half

It all went the USA's way early in the second period. Canadian prop Calixto Martinez was sin binned and Carty slotted a 42-meter kick right afterward. The Eagles almost made it 26-8 after that and Mooneyham almost made it a hat trick as a wide kick from Carty just rolled off the wing's fingertips. 

And then Canada got hit with a tough call. Overall, Italian referee Gianluca Gnecchi was on top of his game, but in one instance Canada was controlling the scrum and had earned a penalty; at the same time captain and No. 8 Lucas Rumball picked up the ball, powered past scrumhalf JP Smith, and was gone on a huge run. Too bad, Gnecchi had already blown his whistle. Rumball, who has been a shining light for a Canadian team that needs it, was understandably miffed.

From the ensuing penalty Canada's lineout didn't work and the USA was able to get out of trouble. Bonis snagged the ball out of his opposite number's hands, and Carty popped another kick to the corner. Canada cleared, but off the next USA lineout, Lopeti weaved his way past several Canadian defenders. The Eagles swarmed in, won the ball, and on the next pass hooker Kapeli Pifeleti powered to the line but was held up ... or was he?

Held up was the call, but on a TMO check it was clear he hand grounds the ball on the line first. Try good. Conversion good. USA up 28-8.

Canada's answer was to take the USA apart on some kicking back-and-forth. The USA defense became scattered and when Ben Lesage sidestepped a blitzing Corey Daniel, it was a four-on-one. Cooper Coats was set free and with his try and Nelson's conversion, it was a two-score game again at 28-15.

The next 15 minutes or so seemed to be about the USA trying stuff and it backfiring on them. A huge run from Fa'anana-Schultz ended with the No. 8 losing the ball as he was tackled. Canada countered and looked very threatening. Mooneyham's tackle, driving a ballcarrier into touch, saved the day.

Desperate Times

Another big chance out wide ended when Canada lost the ball in contact. And even worse was an attack the USA was running in the Canadian half that ended with a dropped ball. The Canadians kicked ahead and the ball was booted further into the USA's in-goal. Only a desperate chase back from Wilson prevented a try.

A jackle in the ruck by Paddy Ryan inside the USA 22 stopped another attack. Dom Besag came on to make a tackle right under the posts that forced a knock-on when Canada looked like they would surely score. Jason Damm made a massive tackle to help prevent a score, and then another mistake set up a long chase and it was Besag again who made the try-saver.

The heroics were heroic, but the momentum-shifting mistakes will need to be cleaned up if the USA wants to challenge Japan.

USA 28
Tries: Mooneyham 2, Wilson, Pifeleti
Convs: Carty
Pens: Carty 2

Canada 15
Tries: Benn, Coats
Convs: Nelson
Pens: Nelson

Standouts for the USA included Carty, who was named player of the game and whose control of the tempo was very good. This was probably his best performance in a USA jersey. Captain Greg Peterson was very, very good, making big carries, leading the defense, and making the lineout time miserable for Canada. Mooneyham had those big moments but among the outside backs Wilson probably had the best showing. Up front the tight five as a whole performed well. Fa'anana-Schultz was huge for about 55 minutes and then ran into some issues. 

"It was a really tough two weeks for us," said Peterson after the game." The boys worked really hard ... but everything we practiced we implemented, which was great. A couple of times we dropped off a little bit but the work the guys put in to come back was unreal."

"We had some opportunities to score tries and we didn't," said Canada's captain, Rumball. "Whetherthatw as from execution or effort, we're going to have to have a really hard look at it."

Upon being awarded Man of the Match, Carty added that "the forwards did their job and that opened up some holes. The win was really the result of the work we've put in the last two weeks."

Canada Lineup:
1. Calixto Martinez; 2. Andrew Quattrin; 3. Conor Young; 4. Izzak Kelly; 5. Kaden Duguid; 6. Mason Flesch; 7. Ethan Fryer; 8. Lucas Rumball; 9. Jason Higgins; 10. Peter Nelson; 11. Nic Benn; 12. Talon McMullin; 13. Ben LeSage; 14. Takoda McMullin; 15. Andrew Coe

Reserves: 16. Dewald Kotze (@61); 17. Djustice Sears-Duru (@61); 18. Cole Keith (@61); 19. James Stockwood (@69); 20. Matthew Oworu (@42-50); 21. Brock Gallagher; 22. Mark Balaski; 23. Cooper Coats (@56)

USA Lineup:
1. Jack Iscaro; 2. Kapeli Pifeleti; 3. Alex Maughan; 4. Jason Damm; 5. Greg Peterson; 6. Paddy Ryan; 7. Cory Daniel; 8. Jamason Fa'anana-Schultz; 9. JP Smith; 10. Luke Carty; 11. Nate Augspurger; 12. Tommaso Boni; 13. Tavite Lopeti; 14. Conner Mooneyham; 15. Mitch Wilson

Reserves: 16. Sean McNulty (@61); 17. Jake Turnbull (@77); 18. Pono Davis (@61); 19. Viliami Helu (@61); 20. Thomas Tu'avao (@61); 21. Ethan McVeigh (@73); 22. Dominic Besag (@61); 23. Chris Mattina