With each one of their 13 wins this year, England have gradually established a definitive tactical identity. Far more than trophies or other accolades, such a solid strategic foundation will hearten Eddie Jones when he reflects on his first 12 months in charge.

It was emblematic of England’s progress prior to facing Australia on Saturday that a tentative, incoherent opening felt unfamiliar. But, as they did a week previously in different circumstances during a gutsy defeat of Argentina, the hosts rallied and applied themselves to a problem.

Thanks to self-confidence, resilience and riding one or two pieces of luck, England overturned the Wallabies. This run-down highlights the finer details of another impressive performance.

Sluggish start

Many themes of the game were resonant of June’s series-opener at Suncorp Stadium. That night in Brisbane saw Australia storm out of the blocks, troubling the tourists with ball in hand.

Michael Cheika’s men spent 83 per cent of the first 15 minutes in the England half on Saturday, piercing the gain-line with 30 carries according to Sky Sports statistics. Much as it had done in Cardiff against Wales, Australia’s slick phase patterns posed danger and picked holes.

Take this pattern with four minutes on the clock. Scrum-half Nick Phipps finds tighthead Sekope Kepu, who is flanked by number eight Lopeti Timani on his left and fellow prop Scott Sio on his right in a midfield pod of three forwards – the framework that underpins Australia’s attack.