Australia win, England sent packing

Australia have secured a Rugby World Cup quarter-final berth with a tense 33-13 win over England, knocking the hosts out in the pool stage.

The Wallabies' victory - their biggest ever at Twickenham - lifts Australia to the top of Pool A, ahead of Wales on points difference, and consigns England to the ignominy of being the first World Cup hosts to fail to reach the knockout stages.

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First-five Bernard Foley stole the spotlight with a flawless two-try display and 100 percent kicking record as he enjoyed a personal haul of 28 points to silence the 81,010-strong crowd.

The win is Australia's first over England at a World Cup since the 1991 final at Twickenham, and goes some way towards avenging quarter-final losses in 1995 and 2007 - not to mention the 2003 final.

The Wallabies had to withstand a second-half comeback, as England drew within seven points with 15 minutes remaining.

But that was snuffed out with the 71st minute sin-binning of England five-eighth Owen Farrell for tackling Matt Giteau without the ball - with Australia kicking two more penalties before running in an 80th-minute try to veteran Matt Giteau to complete the rout.

It gave Foley an Australian points record against England, bettering that of Matt Burke's haul in the 76-0 thrashing in 1998.

The unfashionable No.10, who has had to fight the polarising Quade Cooper to hold onto his spot in the team, crossed for a brace of first-half tries and knocked over both conversions and a penalty as the Wallabies led 17-3.

Makeshift No.8 David Pocock was again outstanding at the breakdown, as England had no answer to the brilliant ball thief, coughing up possession time and again.

Much of the pre-match talk centred around the scrum, and whether the Wallabies would turn to mush as they had in the past.

Instead the opposite happened and England fell to pieces, conceding three first-half scrum penalties - and six by fulltime - as respected French referee Romain Poite came down hard on English loosehead prop Joe Marler for boring in at an angle.

Marler was hooked after 50 minutes following a terse exchange with Poite about coming in at an angle after he'd conceded a fourth penalty.

With England's set piece failing to fire, the Wallabies' electric backline was given time and opportunity to unleash - and they did.

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