Wales 27-6 France

21 02 2014

Thoughts…

  1. Wales generally defended superbly, particularly in the second half, when France dominated possession (apart from the Picamoles sin bin period). Rhys Priestland twice made excellent covering tackles after initial line breaks, and at other times France threw away try-scoring chance. But Dan “Chopper” Lydiate, replicating his 2012 form, Sam Warburton and Gethin Jenkins put in brilliant shifts in the loose

    Wales: still just about in with a chance of a third successive Six Nations title

  2. Rhys Webb gave Wales a real boost, supplying much quicker ball than the backs have been used to. Mike Phillips’s steps before passing are really frustrating when you want to see Wales pick up the pace
  3. Wales had a bit of luck with both tries – George North’s (to get into that position was thanks to the sort of back interplay that was totally non-existent last week, but it was reliant on a bad French mistake) and Sam Warburton’s (not convinced it was over the line before he rolled it forward. Still, the captain deserved it)
  4. France weren’t great. To say the least. They weren’t quite headless chickens, but didn’t see much more clued-up than that. Rivalled Wales’s performance against Ireland in the fluffed lines stakes
  5. But it ended up with Wales’s joint-biggest win over the French since 1931 (the other time was a 21-0 win in 1950). Les Bleus have now failed to score in four consecutive games against Wales, dating back to THAT World Cup quarterfinal
  6. It’s a massive uphill task, but Wales are back in the hunt for the championship. From that point of view, an English win over Ireland tomorrow would be ideal…

 





Six Nations predictions, week two

6 02 2014

Ireland 26-22 Wales

There’s loads of apparently overblown hype ahead of this one, much of it as a result of Warren Gatland’s decision to pick an in-form player as the Lions romped to victory Down Under last summer. But no doubt this is a massive game. Both teams have to visit Twickenham this Six Nations, so can hardly afford a slip-up here as they chase the title. If some of the recent results are anything to go by, we could be in for a classic:

Paul O'Connell in the lineout for Ireland as they beat Wales 17-15 in the Six Nations at the Millennium Stadium in 2009 as they clinch a first Grand Slam since 1948

Paul O’Connell (pictured at the Millennium Stadium in 2009 as Ireland won their first Grand Slam in 61 years) is back for the Wales game

 

 

  • 2013: Wales 22-30 Ireland – visitors go 23-3 up at half time
  • 2012: Ireland 21-23 Wales – Bradley Davies not red carded; last-minute penalty seals Welsh win
  • 2011: Wales 19-13 Ireland – wrongly awarded Mike Phillips try seals Welsh win
  • 2009: Wales 15-17 Ireland – last-minute missed penalty from halfway seals Irish Grand Slam (why didn’t Henson take it?)

I think Ireland at home will be slightly too strong for a Wales side which will (have to) improve significantly from last week’s win against Italy. I’d have predicted Wales if it was being played at the Millennium Stadium, but it’s not, so I haven’t. Then again, Wales haven’t lost away in the Six Nations since March 2011, so…

Scotland 13-21 England

In stark contrast to Ireland-Wales fixtures, this rivalry has been dreary of late. England have scored just one try – a charge down by Charlie Hodgson (below) – in their last four visits to Murrayfield, although that’s still one more than their hosts have managed:

  • 2012: Scotland 6-13 England
  • 2010: Scotland 15-15 England
  • 2008: Scotland 15-9 England
  • 2006: Scotland 18-12 England


That’s right, there have been 30 penalties, two drop goals and a solitary try in the last 320 minutes of Calcutta Cup action in Edinburgh. Yawn. Surely that record won’t continue on Saturday? England looked good against France while Scotland defended stoutly for a half against Ireland. England will surely be too strong that weekend, although poor weather might (again) curtail any hopes of expansive rugby.

France 34-13 Italy

Italy did well against Wales, but France will be way too strong for them. There’s a good reason Italy, who have won just once since last year’s Six Nations (against Fiji), are as long as 16-1 to win at the Stade de France.





Two Japan rugby highlights from recent years

8 06 2013

It’s Japan v Wales this morning (more on that later), and so an excuse to post these sensational passages of play by Japan:

Japan’s incredible team try in the 2007 World Cup against Wales

Andrew Miller’s monster drop goal in the 2003 Rugby World Cup

Unfortunately, I haven’t managed to find any clips from the France v Japan game at the 2011 World Cup, when the eventual finalists were ahead by just 25-21 with 13 minutes left.





Lions squad verdict: the backs

30 04 2013

Leigh Halfpenny

The best full back in the northern hemisphere, the outstanding player of the Six Nations, safer than houses under the high ball and a deadly accurate goalkicker

Stuart Hogg

A superb talent – he is only 20 – with pace to burn, as his Six Nations try against Italy proved. Will be an exciting part of the Lions midweek team

Rob Kearney

Once the best Six Nations full back, he has watched Halfpenny consolidate his own claim to that crown. But Kearney is still too much of a safe pair of hands to leave behind

Tommy Bowe Read the rest of this entry »





Wales 30-3 England: two days on, still unbelievable

18 03 2013

Forty-eight hours after the most dominant Welsh performance over a tier one side I can remember, it still seems amazing.

It was a performance of incredible intensity, as one-sided as any match in the Six Nations in the last few seasons. It was tight until half-time, true, but even trailing only 12-3, you felt England were beaten. They threatened briefly early on, then briefly at the death, but never really looked like penetrating a Welsh defence which has now gone nearly four and a half games without conceding a try.

Celebrations at the Millennium Stadium after Wales 30-3 Six Nations championship decider win over England

The atmosphere at the Millennium Stadium was the best I have ever experienced

Wales truly dominated. English fans don’t exactly worship Steve Walsh, and I’ll not pretend to be an expert in the officiating of the scrums. But Joe Marler was totally humiliated by Adam Jones (a possible player of the tournament) to the extent it was almost embarrassing for the Welsh fans.

That was the most obvious head-to-head victory for a Welsh player, but I can’t think of any clash where an Englishman had the upper hand. The Ian Evans and Alun Wyn Jones were again immense. The back row? Man-of-the-match Tipuric was sublime in the loose, Sam Warburton again embarrassed those who had questioned him, and Toby Faletau was as bruising as ever.

It was the same story among the backs. Dan Biggar’s confidence continues to build, and his drop goal effectively sealed the championship for Wales. George North was dangerous, Alex Cuthbert was lethal: simply no comparison with Mike Brown and Chris Ashton. Brad Barritt and Manu Tuilagi were one-dimensional, not-quite-powerful-enough, and – in Tuilagi’s case – wasteful of England’s only decent chances. Again, the English pairing were outclassed by their Welsh opponents, here a resurgent Jamie Roberts and Jonathan Davies.

And, of course, the last line of defence. Leigh Halfpenny, probably player of the tournament. Probably the outstanding player in European rugby at the moment. A metronomic goal kicker, safer than houses under the high ball, fearless in the tackle. Rob Kearney has long been touted as the likely Lions full back, with Halfpenny back in his original position on the wing. But, as one rugby blog puts it, “Anyone suggesting that Kearney should get the Lions shirt is either lying, blind or mad.”

All this in an atmosphere unlike any I have ever experienced in sport. The pyrotechnics as Wales entered the field of play, knowing they needed a seven-point win to retain their title – a margin Welsh fans might have been hopeful of, but were hardly expecting – were spectacular.

God Save the Queen was belted out well by the sizeable English contingent at the Millennium Stadium, but the response with Hen Wlad Fy Nhadau was just incredible. JPR Williams attributes the passion of the crowd – fed on by the players – to the Welsh win. Perhaps; if I had been an English player there would have been nothing I’d have enjoyed more than silencing the crowd.

Wales celebrate retaining their Six Nations title

Wales celebrate thrashing England to retain their Six Nations title in dominant fashion

But the crowd refused to be silent. If I close my eyes I can still hear Hymns and Arias and Bread of Heaven reverberating around the cauldron of noise. Not to mention “Easy, easy” – a bit unclassy maybe, but no less true. And, from a section of the crowd just behind me, “All we need is eight, eight is all we need”. As it turned out, England would probably have been grateful to have escaped from Cardiff with a loss that small, as they gazed at Ryan Jones and Gethin Jenkins raising the Six Nations trophy towards a stunned and emotional Millennium Stadium crowd.

Speaking of emotion, Rob Howley’s face was a picture of it by the final whistle. The last home game I saw was Wales’s capitulation to Argentina, and I thought at that stage he was simply not cut out to be a coach. I’m glad for Howley, my favourite player when I was growing up, to have been proved emphatically wrong.

For the record:

  1. In terms of points scored, it was Wales’s largest ever win over England (though previous wins have been more convincing on the scoring system of the day).
  2. Wales have now won three matches in a row against England – for the first time since the late 1970s.
  3. In the all-time series between the sides, Wales and England have won 56 matches each.
  4. Both sides have also now won 26 championships all time (though England have 12 Grand Slams to Wales’s 11. Thanks to the three people who told me I originally said Wales had only won one).
  5. It was Wales’s biggest win over any opponent since their 66-0 triumph against Fiji in the 2011 World Cup.
  6. It was Wales’s biggest win over a Six Nations opponent since their 47-8 triumph against Italy in 2008.
  7. It was England’s biggest defeat since they were thrashed 42-6 by South Africa in November 2008.
  8. Since the opening weekend, Wales have not conceded a try. In the same period, England have scored just one.
  9. Leigh Halfpenny scored more points in the tournament than France and Ireland.




Rugby has changed so much since Wales’s win in Paris in 1999

12 02 2013

If you haven’t yet seen Scrum V Classics’ look back at Wales’s 34-33 win over France in Paris in 1999, make sure you do (it’s available until Saturday).

It was first of two one-point victories in that season’s Five Nations – the final edition of the tournament – but, being only 10 years old at the time, I have a hazy memory of it. In fact, I can only remember Thomas Castaignède’s 82nd-minute missed penalty, and I still get nervous as I watch him line it up.

But having just watched the extended highlights, I was struck by quite how much rugby has changed in a decade and a half:

  • Defences were ill-disciplined and, frankly, quite poor: witness the first 15 minutes of the game, during which Wales could have scored about four tries. Games may not be as exciting these days, but rather than increasing weakness in attack, it is primarily because fitness levels are so much higher. Professional rugby was only a few years old in 1999, and concepts such as the Welsh trips to ice chambers in Poland would have been completely alien to those players. Dafydd James (6ft 3in, 15st 8lb) was a big winger, and in that respect was a bit of a freak. For reference: George North is 6ft 4in, 17st 2lb and Alex Cuthbert is 6ft 6in, 17st.
  • When was the last time an international game saw nearly 70 points without one side running away with it? I might have forgotten a really obvious recent one, but I have no problem thinking of low-scorers. This weekend, we’ve seen France 6-16 Wales and Ireland 6-12 England. A few weeks ago, I shivered in front of Leicester 9-5 Toulouse. In the 2011 World Cup, we saw New Zealand 8-7 France, France 9-8 Wales, Australia 11-9 South Africa, Ireland 15-6 Australia…
  • Kickers then – the metronomic Neil Jenkins aside – were much less reliable. Give away a penalty in your own half against pretty much any of the top sides today, and you’re likely to concede three points. But Castaignède missed three relatively straightforward kicks in that game in ’99, and even Jenkins couldn’t convert from further out. Now, with defences meaner, the importance of kicks at goal has intensified: in the France-Wales and Ireland-England games this weekend, only one try was scored.
  • Scrums were less of an issue. This is possibly my biggest bugbear at the moment. More than eight minutes of the France-Wales game this weekend was eaten up at scrumtime; it’s a huge chunk of the game to be wasted, and it happens at every game at every professional level. I don’t really have a clue about whether penalties and free kicks given at scrums (11 out of 16 on Saturday resulted in one of the two) are justified, so I don’t know if the referees themselves know. But it is a mess, frustrating and pointless. I don’t know what can be done to stop the wasting of so much time at scrums, although decent pitches would help – I’m looking at you, Stade de France and Millennium Stadium – but I would like to see the IRB decide the game clock should stop from the moment a scrum is awarded until the ball is out of there (or a similar variation). This might well be the subject of a future post all of its own.
  • On a fairly superficial level, the players’ kits were baggy, long-sleeved and look pretty cumbersome. No high-tech jerseys back then; indeed, no sponsors either.
  • Obviously the rules, which are always adapting, were different; for example, TMOs were yet to be introduced. It was slightly strange seeing Wales’s number 17 showing off a bit of unlikely pace – until I realised it was Gareth Thomas. That number is now used for replacement props.
  • I realised Huw Llewelyn Davies was, and is, a superb commentator.