Rugby League World Cup: England's Chris Heighington in squad for final

  • Published
  • comments
England's Chris Heighington (left)Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

England's Chris Heighington (left) faced Lebanon earlier in the competition

Rugby League World Cup final

Venue: Suncorp Stadium, Queensland

Date: Saturday, 2 December

Kick-off: 09:00 GMT

Coverage: Watch live coverage from 08:30 GMT on BBC One, Connected TV, online & the BBC Sport app and listen to live commentary on BBC Radio 5 live and sports extra and read text updates on BBC Sport website. Watch highlights from 18:00 on BBC Two

Veteran forward Chris Heighington has been recalled by England for Saturday's World Cup final against Australia.

The 34-year-old Australian-born lock, who played in the first two games, has been selected on a huge bench of forwards as James Roby starts at hooker in place of the injured Josh Hodgson.

Either St Helens forward Roby will play the entire game or, with no backs named as replacements, one of the half-backs will move to the hooker role when the 32-year-old is rested and captain Sean O'Loughlin will likely move from the pack to stand-off.

Wigan loose forward O'Loughlin is himself recovering from a quad injury picked up in the semi-final win over Tonga but is named in the team.

"Sean's doing everything possible to get fit," said England prop Chris Hill. "He's moving a lot better. We've got a couple of days yet so we'll wait and see.

"If he doesn't play, obviously it's a loss but that's why we've brought a squad, someone else will step in."

Australia coach Mal Meninga has selected an unchanged squad for the final at Brisbane's Suncorp Stadium.

Australian Gerard Sutton will referee the final, which starts at 09:00 GMT and is live on BBC One, with England's Ben Thaler the video referee.

The squads

England: G Widdop (St George Illawarra); J McGillvary (Huddersfield), K Watkins (Leeds), J Bateman (Wigan), R Hall (Leeds); K Brown (Warrington), L Gale (Castleford); C Hill (Warrington), J Roby (St Helens), J Graham (Canterbury Bulldogs), S Burgess (South Sydney), E Whitehead (Canberra), S O'Loughlin (Wigan, capt).

Interchanges: A Walmsley (St Helens), B Currie (Warrington), T Burgess (South Sydney), C Heighington (Cronulla).

Australia squad: B Slater, D Gagai, W Chambers, J Dugan, V Holmes, M Morgan, C Cronk, Woods, C Smith, D Klemmer, B Cordner, M Gillett, J McGuire, W Graham, J McLean, R Campbell-Gillard, T Frizell, F Kaufusi, T Trbojevic, J Mansour, J Maloney.

'We're not deluding ourselves about the challenge' - O'Loughlin

The Kangaroos have already got the better of England in this tournament when they recorded a 18-4 win in Melbourne last month.

And while the hosts looked superb in their 54-6 in the semi-final win over Fiji last week, England only just managed hold off Tonga in their last-four match.

In the build-up to the first final between the teams in 22 years, when England coach Wayne Bennett was asked if England can beat Australia, he responded: "Probably not. But we will be there next week. We will still go to the game."

England are currently 7-1 to win the final in Brisbane while Australia are 7-1 odds-on.

O'Loughlin said his side will have to defend well against a typically slick Australia team that has scored 204 tournament points as opposed to their 125.

"We've shown glimpses during this World Cup that we're a good side," he told BBC Radio 5 live. "You saw a bit of that against Tonga.

"The Australians go into the final as favourites. We're not deluding ourselves about the challenge we have in front of us. We know we've got to up our game a little bit.

"They attack very well with threats all over the field. At this stage of the competition it's all about who defends well. We don't want to give them extra opportunities to attack us."

England last reached this stage in 1995 when they were defeated 16-8 by the Kangaroos at Wembley. Prior to that the home nations competed as Great Britain, who won the competition on three occasions - the last of which was in 1972.

They have reached the semi-final on the previous three occasions, losing to New Zealand each time.

Who will win the final?

Sorry, we can't display this part of the article any more.

If you are viewing this page on the BBC News app please click here, external to vote.

Sorry, we can't display this part of the article any more.
Sorry, we can't display this part of the article any more.

You can follow the fortunes of your favourite team with live match notifications sent straight to your phone or tablet via the BBC Sport app. Line-up, kick-off, score, half-time and full-time options are available for all teams participating at the World Cup.

Related Internet Links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.