South Africa came from 18-3 behind to claim a 32-29 victory over Wales, but they were indebted to Damian Willemse who kicked a last-minute penalty to snatch the win.
Wales defended superbly in the opening exchanges and took their chances when they presented themselves.
Louis Rees-Zammit showed his searing speed to touch down twice while Dan Biggar kicked a conversion, a penalty and a drop-goal to give Wayne Pivac’s men an 18-3 lead at the break.
The Springboks’ response came through an Elton Jantjies three-pointer but he was replaced at the start of the second period and Willemse did a much better job in the fly-half position.
They were able to build pressure and eventually touched down twice via their trusty maul as Bongi Mbonambi and Malcolm Marx went over.
Two more Biggar three-pointers kept the hosts at arm’s length but the Boks were unrelenting and Cheslin Kolbe crossed the whitewash to move South Africa to within touching distance of the tourists.
A penalty try ― once again via their lineout drive ― took the home side into the lead and led to Wales going down to 12 men as Rhys Carre followed Alun Wyn Jones and Rees-Zammit into the bin.
Jones returned to help the visitors level matters when Dewi Lake scored, but there was late heartbreak for Pivac’s charges when a deliberate Biggar knock-on resulted in Willemse kicking the winning points.
A minute’s silence was held before kick-off in memory of former Wales and British and Irish Lions captain Phil Bennett, who died last month, while the Wales players wore black armbands.
And Wales scored a try after just three minutes that would have thrilled Bennett, with a flowing move ending in Liam Williams sending wing Rees-Zammit clear, and the Gloucester speedster cruised home from 35 metres out.
Biggar underlined the quality of his team’s start by landing a 40-metre drop-goal that left South Africa eight points adrift inside the first 10 minutes.
The Springboks needed a response, but a long-range Jantjies penalty hit one post and then struck the other before bouncing to safety from a Welsh perspective.
Jantjies made no mistake off the tee three minutes later, though, before Biggar cancelled out that penalty and the opening quarter ended with Wales 11-3 ahead.
Jantjies then missed another penalty, and he also struggled tactically, but his sharp break put Wales under pressure, only for the visitors to claim a second try eight minutes before half-time.
Centre Nick Tompkins’ challenge on Jantjies saw the ball bounce clear, and Rees-Zammit kicked ahead before gathering possession and surging clear for his second try.
Biggar’s conversion made it 18-3, and although the skipper was then yellow-carded for slowing the ball down after a try-saving tackle on Springboks scrum-half Faf de Klerk, South Africa had a mountain to climb, trailing by 15 points at the break.
The comeback
South Africa had to start eating into Wales’ lead, and they claimed their first try after 46 minutes when Mbonambi was driven over by his fellow forwards.
Full-back Willemse added the conversion after moving to fly-half instead of a substituted Jantjies, before Biggar rejoined the action.
South Africa, helped by their enviable strength off the replacements’ bench, had Wales on the back foot, while the visitors saw substitute prop Tomas Francis taken off after suffering what appeared to be a nasty injury.
And before Wales could regroup, the Springboks struck again, as replacement hooker Marx touched down, making it 18-15.
Biggar kicked two penalties during a six-minute spell either side of the hour mark, which meant Wales went into the final quarter with a nine-point advantage.
The Springboks hit back, though, through a try for wing Kolbe that Willemse converted from the touchline, before Jones was yellow-carded for being offside in the build-up to Kolbe’s score.
Rees-Zammit was also sin-binned following a technical infringement, reducing Wales to 13 players, and South Africa went ahead with a penalty try after Wales collapsed a maul, before Carre became their third player in the sin-bin at the same time.
Incredibly with three minutes left, Wales drew level through Lake’s try, but Biggar was then guilty of a deliberate knock-on and Willemse kicked the match-winner.
Swain received his marching orders for headbutting Jonny Hill in the 34th minute but the Wallabies dug deep and secured the result, which is their first victory over Eddie Jones’ team in nine attempts.
As the scoreline suggests, New Zealand were deserved winners as they dominated proceedings for long periods and eventually outscored their visitors by six tries to three.
It was also Michael Cheika’s debut match as head coach and his side did him proud, withstanding a Scottish comeback to go 1-0 ahead in the three-Test series.
Although Les Bleus outscored their hosts by five tries to two they did not always have things going their way as Japan were competitive for long periods but they fell off the pace as the match progressed.
The home side were full value for their win as they made an excellent start to the match and raced into a 32-10 lead at half-time.
After a strong first half which saw Townsend’s men lead by 28-0, the Chileans showed more fight to score a try of their own.
A penalty try was followed up by crossings from Charles Ollivon, Damian Penaud (2), Baptiste Couilloud, Louis Carbonel, Max Spring and Antoine Hastoy, while Hastoy added two conversions and former England second-row George Kruis knocked over three.
Led by player of the match Antoine Dupont, Les Bleus responded to Ireland’s win over Scotland as they saw off a gritty England at the Stade de France.
In an entertaining and drama-filled encounter, the visitors were full value for their win as they had the upper-hand for long periods and were leading 12-7 at half-time.
Andy Farrell’s men controlled the majority of the match and moved into a 14-0 lead thanks to tries from Dan Sheehan and Cian Healy.
A red card for England second-row Charlie Ewels with just over a minute played handed the hosts a monumental task of overcoming Andy Farrell’s men.
While the defeat once again leaves the Azzurri with the Wooden Spoon, there were plenty of positives for the hosts as they crossed through Callum Braley and a second-half double from impressive replacement Ange Capuozzo, who was making his Test debut.
Les Bleus now go into their final game against England with a huge chance of claiming their first Six Nations title and Grand Slam since 2010.
After an early injury to Gianmarco Lucchesi, Faiva was brought onto the field, but he was then sent off for a dangerous tackle 10 minutes later.
Wayne Pivac’s men were poor in the first half, conceding a string of penalties and seeing Liam Williams sin-binned for a cynical infringement, and they were punished by Smith.
Les Bleus scored six tries in all against their hosts as they exacted revenge over Scotland for their win in Paris last year, with this another big statement.
Smith scored the opener, set up Elliot Daly’s try with a bullet pass and controlled the game nicely for the opening 50 minutes before the Red Rose lost their intensity and allowed the hosts to gain a foothold.
Off the back of their opening round victory over Italy, Les Bleus flexed their muscles to beat an Ireland side that had demolished Wales one week ago.
In a fixture that did not live up to its billing, entertaining moments were lacking as Wales ground out a victory that derails Scotland’s Grand Slam hopes.
It was not the most auspicious of performances from Les Bleus, especially in the opening half-hour, but they eventually pulled away.
Gregor Townsend’s men were on the back foot for much of the first half but still went into the break 10-6 ahead thanks to Ben White’s try and Finn Russell’s penalty.
As the scoreline suggests, this was a one-sided affair with Ireland dominating for long periods and they eventually outscored their opponents by four tries to none with Andrew Conway leading the way with two five-pointers. Their other points came through tries from Bundee Aki and Garry Ringrose while captain Johnny Sexton succeeded with three conversions and a penalty.
Back-row Josh van der Flier scored twice as the Irish wrapped up a fruitful end-of-year campaign in style at the Aviva Stadium.
Marcus Smith knocked over the crucial points with 90 seconds remaining to prevent the Springboks from completing a comeback win on an afternoon of high drama.
The All Blacks, who were seeking an immediate response to
Substitute Priestland’s penalty with the final kick of a frantic game thwarted the Wallabies and sent a 68,000 Principality Stadium crowd wild.