The Wallaroos have earned a pulsating 33-26 triumph over South Africa in Cape Town, as record-equalling Ash Marsters came up with a heroic last-ditch steal to put the Australian womenâs side in sight of the WXV2 tournament title.
The excellent allround display on Saturday was headlined by two spectacular performances from flying wingers Desiree Miller and record-breaker Maya Stewart, and sets up a title-deciding match against unbeaten Scotland at the same venue next week.
The Wallaroos, maintaining the resurgent form that saw them crush Wales the previous week, went over for five tries, scored by Siokapesi Palu, Georgina Friedrichs, Eva Karpani, player of the match Miller and Stewart, whose 14th Wallaroosâ try took her past Tricia Brownâs record.
But on the day she equalled the Wallaroos appearance record of Liz Patu with her 33rd cap, it felt fitting that evergreen 30-year-old flanker Marsters should come up with the decisive final defensive play at the Athlone Stadium.
With the Springboksâ power-packed forwards camped on the Australian line and hunting a post-siren try that would almost certainly lead to a drawn match, Marsters somehow managed to hold firm under extreme pressure to get her hands on the ball for the decisive penalty.
âIt was a very stressful last five minutes – but thatâs Australian heart right there, that ticker, girls in the trenches working for each other, and it shows what wearing this jersey means for us,â said Australian captain Michaela Leonard. âWeâve definitely turned a corner after a difficult year, weâve shown we can do it when we get it right.â
Australia were slick in the early exchanges, Palu ploughing over from a fourth-minute pick-and-go with Zimbabwean-born Friedrichs then sent in by a dazzling run down the right edge from Stewart, who bulldozed through full-back Eloise Webb before offloading.
South African halfback Unam Tose then charged down Caitlyn Halseâs kick to touch down, but tighthead prop Karpani barrelled over for a third Australian score in just 13 minutes.
Two more Wallaroo scores were disallowed before the break. One was through carelessness when Cecilia Smith dropped the ball over the line while finishing off a brilliant team move and the other, snaffled by Miller just before the break, was ruled out for an earlier knock-on.
As it was, Sinazo Mcatshulwaâs try just after the half-hour mark meant Australia had to settle for a 21-12 halftime lead.
There was an early concern after the break when lock Atasi Lafai was sent to the bin for a high tackle but it didnât stop Australia scoring while short-handed as Miller scooted unstoppably down the left wing.
Stewart then raced over on the other wing for her record-breaking try only for the Springboks, roared on in the stands by inspirational menâs captain Siya Kolisi, to rally through their own replacementsâ âBomb Squadâ.
Zintle Mpupha and Micke Gunter both went over to take the match into a one-score game in the final minute before Marstersâ great last-second piece of pilfering.
Earlier, Scotland also made it two wins from two with their 19-13 victory over Japan, setting up next weekâs grand finale.