CHANDLER Cunningham-South borrowed Cole Palmer's iconic celebration after scoring a stunning try for England.
The Harlequins star ran in a superb try to open the scoring in England's clash with Australia at Twickenham.
The 21-year-old needed just five minutes to get himself a try and ensured he celebrated apropriately.
Taking a leaf out of Chelsea and England football ace Cole Palmer's book, Cunningham-South rubbed his arms to mimic the footballer's "cold" celebration.
The try was certainly deserving of a special celebration as sequence of seven delightful passes opened up the flank for Cunningham-South to dive down and put some points on the board.
Fans were loving the try and loads of them were impressed by the celebration too.
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On social media one fan wrote: "Loving the fact that Cunningham-South hit the ‘Cole Palmer’ celebration after his try. The celebration has officially landed in Rugby".
While another added: "What a try by England. Beautiful handling and passing. Brilliant by Cunningham-South and a nice celly there, Cole Palmer's influence is immense".
Things got even better for Cunningham-South when he scored another try just a few minutes later to widen England's lead.
Unbelievably, despite Palmer becoming synonymous with the celebration, there's debate around who the originator actually is.
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The celebration was actually started by Aston Villa star Morgan Rogers.
And Palmer even admitted that he only started doing the celebration as a nod to his former Manchester City academy teammate.
Speaking in December last year, Palmer said: "My boy Morgs did one for Middlesbrough, so I told him I’d do it too if I scored.”
While Rogers opened up on the celebration theft when speaking to TNT Sports earlier this season.
Probed on if it was true that Palmer nicked his moves, he said: "Yeah, it's true. Cheeky boy, isn't he? He's run with it.
"I'll let him have it - he's scored 40 goals or something stupid so I can't really argue with that, can I?"