Saturday, 17 May 2003

Japan 27 United States 69

The USA Eagles recorded a 69-27 win over Japan at the Matthew J Boxer Stadium in Balbao, San Francisco, opening their Super Powers Cup campaign in the best way possible.

With the half-time score at 17-all, the home team opened the floodgates in the second period, outscoring the visitors by 62-10, thanks to eight second-half tries, with the USA scoring just two tries in the second stanza.

USA inside centre Kain Cross scored a hat-trick of tries on the day, while South African-born left wing Riaan Van Zyl and fullback Link Wilfley weighed in with a brace of tries each.

Fly-half Mike Hercus converted seven of his team's 11 tries for a points-haul of 14.

Japan scored just four tries, with wing Daisuke Ohata opening his side's account with a well-taken try within the first 10 minutes, taking his tally to 27 tries in only 27 appearances.

The "Cherry Blossoms" found themselves ahead by 17-5 at one stage in the first half, after a try from Japan's fly-half Soshi Fuchigami, but tries from Cross and Van Zyl saw the teams go into half-time on level terms.

This will be the USA's last home match of 2003 and clearly the World Cup in Australia is very much in mind after the USA's strong performances in beating Spain in répechage.

Next month the USA plays Canada and England in the Churchill Cup, both matches in Vancouver.  In July the Eagles play the USA in a Superpowers Cup match.  In August it takes part in the Pan-American Championship in Buenos Aires, along with Argentina, Canada and Uruguay.

Japan have played this year against Sri Lanka and the Arabian Gulf, both matches producing big victories.  In addition they have spent time acclimatising in Australia where they beat Queensland "A" before losing to them, the Brumby Runners and Sydney.

The Eagles and Japan find themselves in Pool B -- alongside France, Scotland and Fiji -- at the Rugby World Cup later this year, with the teams set to meet in Gosford on Monday, October 27.

The Teams:

Japan:  1 Shin Hasegawa, 2 Masaaki Sakata, 3 Masahiko Toyoyama, 4 Kouichi Kubo, 5 Adam Parker, 6 Naoya Okubo, 7 Takuro Miuchi (c), 8 Takeomi Ito, 9 Wataru Murata, 10 Soshi Fuchigami, 11 Daisuke Ohata, 12 Hideki Namaba, 13 George Konia, 14 Yohei Shinomiya, 15 Tsutomu Matsuda
Reserves:  Lautangi Vatuvei, Toru Kurihara, Yuji Sonoda
Unused:  Masao Amino, Yasunori Watanabe, Masato Yamamoto, Reuben Parkinson

United States:  1 Dan Dorsey, 2 Kirk Khasigian, 3 Mike MacDonald, 4 Luke Gross, 5 Dave Hodges (c), 6 Conrad Hodgson, 7 Kort Schubert, 8 Dan Lyle, 9 Kevin Dalzell, 10 Mike Hercus, 11 David Fee, 12 Kain Cross, 13 Phillip Eloff, 14 Riaan Van Zyl, 15 Link Wilfley
Reserves:  Mark Griffin, Tasi Mo'unga, Cayo Nicolau, Shaun Paga, Mose Timoteo, Jacob Waasdorp
Unused:  Kimball Kjar

Attendance:  1852
Referee:  Kuklinski b.

Points Scorers

Japan
Tries:  Fuchigami S. 1, Ohata D. 1, Shinomiya Y. 1, Konia G.N. 1
Conv:  Fuchigami S. 2
Pen K.:  Fuchigami S. 1

United States
Tries:  Cross K. 3, Fee D.W. 1, Mo'unga F. 1, Nicolau C. 1, Timoteo M.A. 1, Wilfley L.M. 2, Van Zyl R. 2
Conv:  Hercus M. 7

Sunday, 30 March 2003

Awesome England clinch Grand Slam

England buried the ghosts of past Grand Slam failures to seal their first championship clean sweep since 1995 with an emphatic win over Ireland at Lansdowne Road.

The mishaps at Wembley, Murrayfield and Dublin two years ago were consigned to history as Clive Woodward's side swept to victory in commanding fashion.

An early try from Lawrence Dallaglio and second-half scores from Mike Tindall, Will Greenwood (2) and Dan Luger proved more than sufficient to douse the Irish fire.

Jonny Wilkinson added 15 points from two drop goals, three conversions and a penalty to secure England's 12th-ever Grand Slam.

Victory was built on a rock-solid defence, which resisted every Irish effort to unhinge it as the powerful visiting pack ground their opponents into submission.

The home side could only manage a first-half penalty and drop goal from David Humphreys, as England reeled off 29 unanswered second-half points.

Aiming for a first Grand Slam in 55 years, Ireland were quickest out of the blocks.

Humphreys fell inches short with a penalty attempt from inside his own half, but they capitalised on their early pressure in the fifth minute.

Steve Thompson's wayward line-out throw was seized on by Keith Gleeson and taken on by Marcus Horan, and with England conceding a penalty, Humphreys landed a smart drop goal.

But the visitors responded with interest and were ahead within three minutes.

A wheeled Irish scrum allowed Richard Hill to pressurize Peter Stringer, Matt Dawson pounced and his break released Dallaglio to dive over unopposed under the posts.

Wilkinson converted for a 7-3 lead, but Ireland refused to be cowed and slashing breaks from Brian O'Driscoll and the dangerous Geordan Murphy tested England's defence.

Humphreys failed to convert the pressure with a bad penalty miss after 17 minutes, and another Murphy counter broke down when the full-back failed to release Denis Hickie.

Humphreys did reduce the arrears with a 40m penalty when England were penalised at a scrummage, but the visitors started to dominate possession.

Josh Lewsey showed his confidence with an inside-outside break and Wilkinson stretched the lead to 10-6 with a right-footed drop goal just before the half-hour.

He repeated the trick in first-half injury time to give England some breathing space as the frenetic pace continued unabated.

Hill and Matt Dawson both departed for running repairs in the first period, with Graham Rowntree also forced off before the interval, to be replaced by Trevor Woodman.

Wilkinson appeared to have followed suit as he clutched his notoriously fragile shoulder on the resumption, only to regain his feet and thump over what looked a sumptuous drop goal.

But the score was ruled out for an earlier offence on the advice of a touch judge, and Ireland remained within a converted score.

Wilkinson was forced off after 54 minutes, with Paul Grayson pitched into the fray, but returned seven minutes later just as Grayson was converting Tindall's match-clinching try.

Again the forwards did the hard yards, before Grayson and Greenwood created space for the Bath centre to barge his way through the remaining cover on an angled run.

Dallaglio was held up short as England went for the kill, but instead it was Greenwood who was bundled over by his pack after 65 minutes.

Wilkinson added a penalty 10 minutes from time and Greenwood intercepted Murphy's pass to stroll over for his second in injury time.

England's superiority was confirmed as Dan Luger added a final flourish with a fifth try, Wilkinson adding the extras to spark the red rose celebrations.

The scorers:

Ireland 6:
Pens:  Humphreys
Drop goals:  Humphreys

England 42:
Tries:  Dallaglio, Tindall, Greenwood 2, Luger
Cons:  Wilkinson 3 Grayson
Pen:  Wilkinson
Drops:  Wilkinson 2

Ireland:  Ireland: G Murphy (Leicester), J Bishop (London Irish), B O'Driscoll (Leinster, capt), K Maggs (Bath), D Hickie (Leinster), D Humphreys (Ulster), P Stringer (Munster), M Horan (Munster), S Byrne (Leinster), J Hayes (Munster), M O'Kelly (Leinster), G Longwell (Ulster), V Costello (Leinster), K Gleeson (Leinster), A Foley (Munster).
Replacements:  F Sheahan (Munster), J Fitzpatrick (Ulster), P O'Connell (Munster), A Quinlan (Munster), G Easterby (Llanelli), R O'Gara (Munster), G Dempsey (Leinster).

England:  Josh Lewsey (Wasps), Jason Robinson (Sale), Will Greenwood (Harlequins), Mike Tindall (Bath), Ben Cohen (Northampton), Jonny Wilkinson (Newcastle vice-captain), Matt Dawson (Northampton), Graham Rowntree (Leicester), Steve Thompson (Northampton), Jason Leonard (Harlequins), Martin Johnson (Leicester, captain), Ben Kay (Leicester), Richard Hill (Saracens), Neil Back (Leicester), Lawrence Dallaglio (Wasps)
Replacements:  Dorian West (Leicester), Trevor Woodman (Gloucester), Danny Grewcock (Bath), Joe Worsley (London Wasps), Kyran Bracken (Saracens), Paul Grayson (Northampton), Dan Luger (Harlequins).

Saturday, 29 March 2003

Scotland edge fierce Italy

Scotland gave coach Ian McGeechan the perfect Six Nations send-off with a hard fought but entertaining victory over Italy on Saturday.

The former Lions coach, who began his home championship career as centre for Scotland in 1973, retires at the end of the season.

And the Scottish team made sure he left Murrayfield smiling, thanks to tries from Jason White, James McLaren, Kenny Logan and Chris Paterson.

Italy hit back through Mirco Bergamasco, Ramiro Pez and Scott Palmer but the home side held out to secure fourth position in the Six Nations table.

The Azzurri started superbly and touched over with less than five minutes on the clock.

Alessandro Troncon made the best of some quick recycled ball inside the Scotland 22 and Bergamasco's strong run gave the home side a quick reality check.

Pez failed with the extras, before the two fly-halves swapped penalties.

Scotland finally found their composure and when Bryan Redpath opted to take a quick free-kick on the Italy 10 metre line, White powered over taking most of the visiting defence with him.

At 8-8 and with an inspired Logan cutting the visitors to shreds, it was no surprise when McGeechan's team finally grabbed the lead.

Another Logan run sent Italy backwards and Gregor Townsend's long, floated pass gave McLaren space to grab his fifth international try.

Paterson's second penalty lifted Scotland eight points clear, but a moment of genius from Pez caught the Scottish defence sleeping.

A show of the ball from the Rotherham number 10 was enough to send him underneath the posts and his conversion cut the deficit to just one point.

With both sides willing to play some free-flowing rugby in the afternoon sun, Logan improved on his already impressive performance just before the break.

Taking a quick tap penalty the Wasps veteran burst through four Italian tackles for a vital try that Paterson improved on in front of the posts.

Try-scorer White limped off after the break to be replaced by Ross Beattie, as Italy started to dominate possession.

For 10 minutes the visitors bombarded the Scotland line and they were rewarded with a straightforward penalty in front of the posts.

The five-point deficit set up an intense final quarter.

But when Simon Taylor released Paterson after striding away superbly from the back of the scrum, it secured some vital breathing space.

Paterson did well to finish off the move with a delicate chip and chase and then slotted the conversion but the 12 point lead did not last long.

As they have done all season, Italy finished the match on top and with just 10 minutes to go replacement back-rower Palmer strode over for the visitors' final seven pointer.

With the match in the balance, Paterson added his third penalty in injury time to dampen Italy's hopes and ultimately relegate them to fifth place in the championship table.

The scorer:

Scotland 33:
Tries:  White, McLaren, Logan, Paterson
Con:  Paterson (2)
Pen:  Paterson (3)

Italy 25:
Tries:  Bergamasco, Pez, Palmer
Con:  Pez (2)
Pen:  Pez (2)

Scotland:  G Metcalfe, C Paterson, J McLaren, A Craig, K Logan, G Townsend, B Redpath (capt), T Smith, G Bulloch, B Douglas, S Murray, N Hines, J White, S Taylor, A Mower.
Replacements:  R Russell, G Kerr, S Grimes, R Beattie, M Blair, G Ross, K Utterson.

Italy:  M Bergamasco, P Vaccari, A Masi, G Raineri, D Dallan , R Pez, A Troncon (capt), A Lo Cicero C Festuccia, R Martinez, C Bezzi, M Giacheri, A De Rossi, A Persico, M Phillips.
Replacements:  F Ongaro, L Castrogiovanni, S Dellape, S Palmer, M Mazzantini, G Peens, N Mazzucato.

France complete Wales whitewash

Wales were condemned to their first Six Nations whitewash after being outclassed by Bernard Laporte's side in the Stade de France.

The men in red had a bright opening 20 minutes and took the lead with a superb Gareth Thomas try.

But the French forwards gradually gained the upper hand, allowing scrum-half Dimitri Yachvili to direct the show and kick 18 points.

Thomas Castaignede, Vincent Clerc and Frederic Michalak ran in tries for the home side as they secured their first win over Wales at the stadium, and handed the visitors their first wooden spoon in eight years.

Wales tore into the French in the first 20 minutes, showing the confidence garnered from their undefeated record in two previous games at the Stade de France.

A France knock on in the third minute was run back from deep in Wales' half, Craig Morgan and Iestyn Harris combining well on the left.

Colin Charvis drove on from quick recycled ball and the ball was spun out for Thomas to convert the overlap on the right, Stephen Jones sending the conversion wide.

Wales were inches away from adding a second try in the sixth minute, Morgan catching opposite number Aurelien Rougerie sleeping following a Stephen Jones kick, outsprinting him, but failing to ground the ball.

It took until the second quarter for the French to settle, but then the visitors' line-out woes creeped back into their game and Gethin Jenkins came under presure on the tighthead of the scrum, gifting Bernard Laporte's side territory and possession.

Welsh tackling was heroic, but the constant pressure had to tell.  From a forward drive in the 27th minute the ball was sent back to Castaignede and the Saracens centre cut back on the angle to score under the posts, Yachvili converting.

The young scrum-half added a penalty, but Jones missed his third kick of the half to leave the score 10-5 at the break, much to the displeasure of the expectant home crowd.

France exploded out of the blocks in the second period, a Xavier Garbajosa break taking them to the Welsh line.

Borderline defence that toyed with the sin bin and a Raphael Ibanez knock-on restricted the home team to just another Yachvili penalty.

Five minutes later another French forward drive led to recycled ball being spun slickly through the backs, reaching Vincent Clerc whose nifty footwork saw him over on the right for a converted try.

Yachvili added another penalty before Colin Charvis was sin binned n the 65th minute for coming in from the side of a ruck.

The French forwards seized the chance to drive into 14-man Wales before delivering a try on a plate to fly-half Frederic Michalak.

France coasted for the final 15 minutes, looking as they have through much of this Six Nations - barely out of first gear as they ease towards the World Cup.

Their pragmatic approach yielded a late penalty in front of the posts by Yachvili, leaving the crowd baying for more tries.

The scorers:

France 33:
Tries:  T Castaignede, V Clerc, F Michalak
Cons:  D Yachvili (3)
Pens:  Yachvili (4)

Wales 5:
Try:  G Thomas

TEAMS

France:  C Poitrenaud (Stade Toulousain), A Rougerie (Montferrand), T Castaignede (Saracens), D Traille (Pau), X Garbajosa (Stade Toulousain), F Michalak (Stade Toulousain), D Yachvili (Biarritz), J-J Crenca (Agen), R Ibanez (Castres), S Marconnet (Stade Français), F Pelous (Stade Toulousain, capt), O Brouzet (Montferrand), S Betsen (Biarritz), O Magne (Montferrand), I Harinordoquy (Pau).
Reps:  J-B Rue (Agen), O Milloud (Bourgoin), D Auradou (Stade Français), P Tabacco (Stade Français), J-B Elissalde (Stade Toulousain), G Merceron (Montferrand), V Clerc (Stade Toulousain).

Wales:  R Williams (Cardiff), C Morgan (Cardiff), M Taylor (Swansea), I Harris (Cardiff), G Thomas (Bridgend), S Jones (Llanelli), D Peel (Llanelli), I Thomas (Llanelli), M Davies (Pontypridd), G Jenkins (Pontypridd), R Sidoli (Pontypridd), G Llewellyn (Neath), C Charvis (Swansea), M Williams (Cardiff, capt), D Jones (Llanelli).
Reps:  M Madden (Llanelli), S Williams (Northampton), G Thomas (Bath), G Cooper (Bath), M Watkins (Llanelli), G Williams (Bridgend), T Shanklin (Saracens).

Ref:  Paddy O'Brien (New Zealand)

Sunday, 23 March 2003

France punish passionate Italy

France demolished Italy in a free-flowing game in Rome to finally show some of the form they were expected to display in this year's RBS Six Nations championship.

Tries from Serge Betsen, Damian Traille (2), Aurelien Rougerie (2), Frederic Michalak and Thomas Castaignede punished the Italians, who spent most of the first hour on the back foot.

Scrum-half Dimitri Yachvili enjoyed a superb day with the boot to finish the match with a personal tally of 18 points.

The home side did hit back through tries from Ramiro Pez, Mirco Bergamasco, Aaron Persico and Matthew Phillips.

But despite looking the better side for much of the second period were ultimately left with too much to do.

Italy struggled to gain any meaningful possession early on and the few scraps they did win were quickly turned over by an impressive French back-row.

The visitors opened the scoring after just three minutes when Traille fed Betsen who ran over for the first five pointer.

Yachvili added the extras and grabbed a further three points when Italy were penalised for hands in the ruck deep inside their 22.

At 10-0 down, John Kirwan's side looked helpless against a ferocious French onslaught.

But if the New Zealander thought it could not get any worse, Traille proved him immediately wrong with a quickfire double to punish some woeful Italian defending.

Two conversions and a late first-half penalty took Yachvili's total to 14 points before Aurelien Rougerie added France's fourth thanks to some strong running from number eight Imanol Harinordoquy.

Seconds later, Michalak added yet another after Olivier Magne charged down a poor Paolo Vaccari clearance.

With half-time approaching, Pez grabbed a consolation try after a superb individual break, but even his conversion could do little to dent an impressive French lead.

Any thoughts Italy had of regrouping were instantly dispelled when Castaignede scorched over seconds after the break.

Yachvili slotted his sixth conversion to push his side two points shy of their half-century, before Italy finally found some form.

For the best part of 10 minutes France struggled to get their hands on the ball and Bergamasco rewarded Italy's perseverance with his side's second try.

At 48-15 down there was never any doubt of an upset, but it did not stop the Azzurri from hitting back again when Persico grabbed a third for his side almost immediately from the re-start.

Pez's kick pushed his side up to 22 points -- before Rougerie ran over to ease the defending Six Nations champions past the 50-point mark.

Italy had impressed in the second-half, after a poor opening period and were not to be denied the last word, however.

With seconds remaining Philips exploited space on the blind side from a scrum on the French 10-metre line.

But depite their fightback they had let themselves down in the opening-half -- as they did against Twickenham -- a fact that will not be lost on Kirwan in the build-up to their final game against Scotland.

The scorers:

Italy 27:
Tries:  Pez, Bergamasco, Persico, Phillips
Pen:  Pez
Conv:  Pez (2)

France 53:
Tries:  Betsen, Traille (2), Rougerie (2), Michalak, Castaignede
Pen:  Yachvili (2)
Conv:  Yachvili (6)

Italy:  M. Bergamasco, Mazzucato, Vaccari, Raineri, Dallan, Dominguez, Troncon, Lo Cicero, Festuccia, Martinez, Bezzi, Giacheri, De Rossi, Persico, Phillips.
Replacements:  Ongaro, Castrogiovanni, Dellape, Palmer, Mazzantini, Pez, Masi.

France:  Poitrenaud, Rougerie, Castaignede, Traille, Garbajosa, Michalak, Yachvili, Crenca, Ibanez, Marconnet, Pelous, Brouzet, Betsen, Magne, Harinordoqui.
Replacements:  Rue, Milloud, Auradou, Tabacco, Elissalde, Merceron, Clerc.

Referee:  Nigel Williams (Wales)

Saturday, 22 March 2003

England sweep Scotland aside

England booked their Six Nations Grand Slam decider against Ireland in Dublin with a hard-fought win over a passionate Scotland at Twickenham.

It was not a performance to send their fans home in raptures but 18 points from the boot of Jonny Wilkinson and tries from Josh Lewsey, Ben Cohen and Jason Robinson (2) proved enough to maintain England's date with destiny.

Scotland, for their part, performed valiantly, but they never looked able to out-wit a well organised England defence at a stadium in which they have failed to register a try since 1999.

England never managed to set Twickenham alight.  But with all eyes on Dublin, they will be happy enough to have reached the final game of the championship unscathed.

The home side ran up a quick six point lead, courtesy of sloppy Scottish defending and Wilkinson made no mistake with the resulting penalties.

Already under pressure, Scotland received a double blow when they lost two players for some dreadfully cynical play in as many minutes.

Andrew Mower was the first to see the yellow card after a high tackle on Lewsey.  Seconds later, number eight Simon Taylor was sent on his way for a wayward tackle on Mike Tindall.

Struggling in the set piece and two men down, Bryan Redpath was handsomely rewarded for a superb darting run with a penalty outside England's 22.

Paterson brought his side back within three points and from the re-start Robinson did his bit to even things up numerically, when he became the third player sent to the bin for another high tackle -- this time on winger Kenny Logan.

A fine touch-line kick from Paterson levelled the scores.

But it also prompted England's best move of the half, allowing Lewsey to grab his third try in two games when the Scottish defence finally ran out of men in the left-hand corner.

At 13-6 down, Scotland may have been behind on the scoreboard, but led by Tom Smith and Gordon Bulloch they constantly broke the gain-line and put England on the back foot.

Another Paterson penalty reduced the arrears to just four points before Wilkinson replied from in front of the posts to end an action-packed 40 minutes.

If England stuttered in the first half, they came out roaring in the second.

Ten minutes of pressure resulted in a Scottish scrum deep in their 22 and when Redpath made a mess of his attempted clearance Cohen touched over for his easiest try of the season.

Wilkinson made no mistake with the conversion and added another three to his tally virtually from the re-start when Scott Murray was penalised for offside.

With the scoreline reading 26-9 England looked more at ease.

And when Jason Robinson extended the lead with a blistering midfield run to outpace a flagging Scottish defence, Clive Woodward even opted to give Wilkinson a well deserved rest.

The Newcastle captain, who slotted his final conversion with well-practised ease, was replaced by veteran Paul Grayson, making his first start for England since 1999.

In one last push, Scotland pressed hard to force England onto the back foot, only to concede yet another seven points when Matt Dawson released Robinson inside the Scottish 22.

With only the line in front of him, the Sale flyer duly touched down for his second and Grayson's conversion pushed England three points short of their previous record before the whistle was blown.

The scorers:

England 40:
Tries:  Lewsey, Cohen, Robinson (2)
Con:  Wilkinson (3), Grayson
Pens:  Wilkinson (4)

Scotland 9:
Pens:  Paterson (3)

Teams:

England:  Lewsey, Robinson, Greenwood, Tindall, Cohen, Wilkinson, Dawson, Rowntree, Thompson, Leonard, Johnson, Kay, Hill, Back, Dallaglio.
Replacements:  Regan, Woodman, Grewcock, J. Worsley, Gomarsall, Grayson, Luger.

Scotland:  G. Metcalfe, Paterson, McLaren, Craig, Logan, Townsend, Redpath, T. Smith, Bulloch, Douglas, Murray, Hines, White, Mower, Taylor.
Replacements:  Russell, G. Kerr, Grimes, Beattie, Blair, G. Ross, Utterson.

Referee:  Alan Lewis (Ireland).

Irish pip Wales in thriller

An injury-time drop goal by replacement Ronan O'Gara kept Ireland's Grand Slam hopes alive at the Millennium Stadium.

The Irish looked to have blown their chances of a mouth-watering decider against England when Wales fly-half Stephen Jones flashed over a drop goal of his own in a pulsating final few minutes in Cardiff.

But O'Gara, showing immense coolness under pressure, won the day for the visitors with a vital three points inside 30 seconds of the restart.

Wales will take the plaudits for outscoring Ireland by three tries to two, but Steve Hansen's men remain bottom of the Six Nations table with one game left.

The game began as frenetically as it finished, but it was Ireland who nudged ahead after six minutes thanks to a penalty from David Humphreys.

The first try of the game came on 15 minutes, when Jones broke through from open play to scrambled over in the corner.

Jones added the touchline conversion, but within five minutes Humphreys had cut the lead to one point with his second penalty.

Humphreys pushed Ireland ahead in the 27th minute with his third penalty after another Welsh indiscretion in front of their posts.

But the visitors were not allowed to get into any sort of rhythm, with Wales playing the only decent rugby on show in the early exchanges.

Ireland finally wrestled free from the Welsh manacles in first-half injury time.

Brian O'Driscoll and Leo Cullen made tentative attempts to break through before Geordan Murphy swivelled past his defender to put flanker Keith Gleeson over in the left-hand corner.

Gleeson's second try immediately after the restart after Anthony Foley charged down a clearance kick by Tom Shanklin.

But Wales struck back on 52 minutes with a great try.

Good work by Colin Charvis and Rhys Williams allowed flanker Martyn Williams to go over for his first try for his country, with Jones adding the conversion.

O'Driscoll almost crossed before Ireland went further in front when Humphreys rifled over his fourth penalty to make the score 22-14.

Back came the home side again, with Gareth Thomas claiming his 29th try for Wales, with Jones slotting the conversion to make it a one-point game.

Jones saw a 47-metre penalty just drift wide of the right-hand upright.

But he made no mistake with a drop goal two minutes into injury time.

The kicks looked as though it had given Wales a morale-boosting victory, but Irish substitute O'Gara broke Welsh hearts with his last-gasp kick.

The scorers:

Wales 24:
Tries:  S Jones, M Williams, G Thomas
Dg:  S Jones
Cons:  S Jones 3

Ireland 25:
Tries:  Gleeson 2
Dg:  O'Gara
Pens:  Humphreys 4

Teams:

Wales:  R Williams (Cardiff), M Jones (Llanelli), M Taylor (Swansea), T Shanklin (Saracens), G Thomas (Bridgend), S Jones (Llanelli), G Cooper (Bath), I Thomas (Llanelli), J Humphreys (Bath, capt), G Jenkins (Pontypridd), R Sidoli (Pontypridd), G Llewellyn (Neath), C Charvis (Swansea), M Williams (Cardiff), D Jones (Llanelli).
Replacements:  M Davies (Pontypridd), M Madden (Llanelli), S Williams (Northampton), G Thomas (Bath), D Peel (Llanelli), I Harris (Cardiff), M Watkins (Llanelli).

Ireland:  G Murphy (Leicester), J Bishop (London Irish), B O'Driscoll (Leinster, capt), K Maggs (Bath), D Hickie (Leinster), D Humphreys (Ulster), P Stringer (Munster), M Horan (Munster), S Byrne (Leinster), J Hayes (Munster), M O'Kelly (Leinster), L Cullen (Leinster), A Quinlan (Munster), K Gleeson (Leinster), A Foley (Munster).
Replacements:  F Sheahan (Munster), J Fitzpatrick (Ulster), D O'Callaghan (Munster), E Miller (Leinster), G Easterby (Llanelli), R O'Gara (Munster), J Kelly (Munster).

Referee:  Steve Lander (England).

Sunday, 9 March 2003

England overpower brave Italy

England strolled to a six-try RBS Six Nations victory over Italy at Twickenham despite defending for most of the match.

Clive Woodward's side extended their winning streak at headquarters to 20 games, and stayed on course for a Grand Slam decider with Ireland on 30 March.

England raced to a 33-0 lead within 20 minutes but went into their shells as the plucky Italians dominated possession for over 50 minutes.

The home side scored tries through Josh Lewsey (2), Steve Thompson, James Simpson-Daniel, Mike Tindall and Dan Luger.

But in a chaotic start to the second half they lost fly-half and captain Jonny Wilkinson with a sore shoulder and his replacement Charlie Hodgson with a leg injury.

Italy scored a second-half consolation try through full-back Mirco Bergamasco but despite their possession, coach John Kirwan's side were never likely to trouble the Six Nations favourites.

England set off at a blistering pace and within two minutes they had put full-back Lewsey over in the left corner from an attacking lineout on the right.

Wilkinson converted and the home side soon scored again after opting to kick for touch from a penalty.

Number eight Lawrence Dallaglio and scrum-half Matt Dawson both sniped for the line before hooker Thompson squeezed over.

Italy were shellshocked and England came again inside three minutes when the backs combined to send over wing Simpson-Daniel after a perfectly timed pass from Lewsey.

Wilkinson was again spot on with the extras and before Italy knew what was happening, England's Lewsey had made it four tries.

The Wasps player broke a tackle in midfield and motored 40 yards, teasing Bergamasco in the process, to score just to the left of the posts, which Wilkinson converted.

Italy had still barely touched the ball but England went over for a fifth try on 20 minutes through centre Tindall, who took an inside pass at pace from Lewsey to roar over.

But despite a 33-0 deficit, Italy dominated the rest of the half and went close through Aaron Persico and Bergamasco.

Two minutes after the break England lost Wilkinson, who went off with a sore shoulder, to be replaced by Hodgson.

But the Sale fly-half was in turn injured, ushering in 20-year-old Leicester centre Ollie Smith, with Will Greenwood switching to number 10 and former captain Dallaglio taking charge.

Italy continued to attack, with England seemingly content to defend phase after phase.

Kirwan's side were eventually rewarded for their attacking efforts with a try in the corner from Bergamasco on the hour.

But after defending since the 20th minute, England scored a sixth try through Luger after a slick break from Smith.

And despite a merry-go-round of replacements, England were able to keep Italy at bay for the rest of the match without troubling the visitors' line themselves.

The scorers:

England 40
Tries:  Lewsey (2), Thompson, Simpson-Daniel, Tindall, Luger
Cons:  Wilkinson (4), Dawson

Italy 5
Tries:  Bergamasco

Teams:

England:  Lewsey, Simpson-Daniel, Greenwood, Tindall, Luger, Wilkinson, Dawson, Rowntree, Thompson, Morris, Grewcock, Kay, J. Worsley, Hill, Dallaglio.
Replacements:  Regan, M. Worsley, Shaw, Sanderson, Bracken, Hodgson, Smith.

Italy:  M. Bergamasco, Mazzucato, Vaccari, Raineri, Dallan, Pez, Troncon, De Carli, Festuccia, Martinez, Bezzi, Giacheri, De Rossi, Persico, Phillips.
Replacements:  Ongaro, Castrogiovanni, Bortolami, Palmer, Mazzantini, Peens, Masi.

Referee:  Alain Rolland (Ireland)

Saturday, 8 March 2003

Scots punish woeful Wales

In a game that had been billed as a wooden spoon play-off, Scotland finally found their RBS Six Nations feet to bury Wales with a dominant forward display.

The defeat leaves Steve Hansen's heavily-criticised Wales side facing games against Ireland and France to restore some pride from a miserable campaign.

A powerful performance from Scotland's front five, coupled with dynamic displays from Simon Taylor, James White and Andrew Mower in the back row, was just enough to give the home side the much-needed victory.

The Welsh did rally in the second half -- and claimed two consolation tries at the death -- but it was a case of too little too late.

Scotland opened the scoring in the fifth minute when wing Chris Paterson slotted over a penalty after an infringement by Welsh prop Ben Evans.

Their slender lead took on a more substantial look when Scottish prop Bruce Douglas drove over following good work from the home pack.

Although it is unlikely to feature in many Six Nations highlights packages, Douglas' try was, nonetheless, the first Scotland had managed this year.

Paterson added the extras to make it 10-0 after 15 minutes.

Welsh fly-half Stephen Jones trimmed this lead by three points with a penalty of his own, but this was only temporary respite as Scotland immediately claimed their second try of the season.

Once again it was a forward who crossed the line, this time the impressive Taylor.  Paterson converted to make it 17-3 after 20 minutes.

But this sparked the Welsh into life and they scored a wonderful try of their own when scrum-half Gareth Cooper touched down after a flowing passage of play.

Jones converted to make it 17-10, but Paterson knocked over a penalty just before the interval to stretch Scotland's lead to double figures once more.

Paterson kicked his third penalty immediately after the restart to give the hosts a significant 23-10 margin before the game slipped into a 30-minute stalemate.

Wales pushed and probed -- creating a number of half chances -- but Scotland were able to soak up the pressure without too much difficulty.

The home side's only wobble came when centre James McLaren was sin-binned for a professional foul with 10 minutes remaining.

Wales, fortified by the arrival of Iestyn Harris from the bench, passed up kickable penalties and poured forward in search of a second try.

But the Scots held out, and Paterson, who was perfect with the boot, capped his day with an opportunist try when Rhys Williams made a mess of a Tom Smith grubber kick.

With the game lost, Wales claimed two injury-time tries through Mark Taylor and Williams.

But these consolation efforts were at least 10 minutes too late to alter the result or save their season.

The scorers:

Scotland 30:
Tries:  Douglas, Taylor, Paterson
Cons:  Paterson 3
Pens:  Paterson 3

Wales 22:
Try:  Cooper, Taylor, Rhys Williams
Con:  Jones 2
Pen:  Jones

Scotland:  G. Metcalfe, Paterson, McLaren, Utterson, Logan, Townsend, Redpath, T. Smith, Bulloch, Douglas, Murray, Grimes, White, Mower, Taylor.
Replacements:  Russell, G. Kerr, Hines, Petrie, Blair, G. Ross, Craig.

Wales:  K. Morgan, R. Williams, Taylor, Shanklin, G. Thomas, S. Jones, V. Cooper, I. Thomas, G. Williams, Evans, Sidoli, S. Williams, D. Jones, M. Williams, G. Thomas.
Replacements:  M. Davies, Jenkins, Llewellyn, Charvis, Peel, Harris, Watkins.

Referee:  Pablo Deluca (Argentina)

Heroic Ireland edge out France

Ireland confirmed their Grand Slam potential with a hard-fought 15-12 win over France in the RBS Six Nations at Lansdowne Road.

Twelve points from the boot of fly-half David Humphreys and an opportunistic drop-goal from Geordan Murphy edged out the French, whose points all came from Francois Gelez penalties.

But it was Ireland's incredible defence which won the game as they endured a torrid final five minutes with France throwing everything at them.

Murphy gave Ireland the ideal start with a sweetly-struck drop-goal in the opening minute.

The full-back demonstrated his astute rugby brain after a poor pass from scrum-half Peter Stringer left him no option but to go for the posts.

With a strong wind swirling around the ground, both sides initially struggled to put phases of play together before France sprung to life with a series of rolling mauls deep in Ireland's 22.

But a knock-on from hooker Raphael Ibanez with the line at his mercy cost them dear.

Another period of sustained French pressure was relieved where Malcolm O'Kelly intercepted Dimitri Yachvili's pass and sprinted 50 metres upfield to clear the danger.

Humphreys -- winning his 50th cap -- put Ireland further ahead on 10 minutes with a well-judged penalty, but Gelez's 15th-minute reply cut the lead to three points.

Ireland, kicking away possession needlessly, were grateful for Gelez's missed penalty in the 25th minute.

Humphreys extended his side's lead with another penalty after half an hour.

Kevin Maggs' powerful running and Brian O'Driscoll's dancing feet in the Irish midfield started to give the home side the advantage as the half developed.

Gelez spurned an opportunity to cut the defecit with another miss as half time approached.

And Humphreys quickly showed his opposite number how to do it with an excellent three-pointer from halfway.

Deep into first-half injury time Ireland survived a scare with Gelez's drop-goal attempt causing havoc after rebounding off the post, and it took an outstanding tackle from O'Driscoll on the line to deny Olivier Magne.

France started the second half with real attacking intent and Stringer's brave tackle on the rampaging Imanol Harinordoquy was vital.

With the rain starting to fall, Gelez punished Ireland for going offside with a penalty on 46 minutes

Five minutes later, Humphreys surprisingly missed in front of the posts as the conditions continued to deteriorate.

A superb break from Magne put Ireland under severe pressure and they were only saved by Keith Gleeson's tackle.

With the tension clearly getting to the players, both sides increasingly relied on bombarding the full-backs with high balls -- but both Murphy and Clement Poitrenaud dealt with the threat well.

After coming through a difficult ten-minute spell of sustained defending, Ireland began to exert some pressure of their own and Humphreys held his nerve with another penalty on 69 minutes.

Two minutes later though, Gelez's penalty again cut the lead to just three points.

After Ireland went desperately close to scoring a match-winning try, Humphreys left the crowd gasping when his penalty struck the post.

From the rebound, France nearly went the length of the pitch but last-ditch defending from Stringer and Hickie saved the day for Ireland.

The scorers:

Ireland 15:
Pens:  Humphreys 4
Drop goal:  Murphy

France 12:
Pens:  Gelez 4

Ireland:  Murphy, Kelly, O'Driscoll, Maggs, Hickie, Humphreys, Stringer, Horan, S. Byrne, Hayes, Longwell, O'Kelly, Costello, Gleeson, Foley
Replacements:  Sheahan, Fitzpatrick, Cullen, A Quinlan, G Easterby, O'Gara, Henderson

France:  Poitrenaud, Rougerie, Garbajosa, Traille, Clerc, Gelez, Yachvili, Crenca, Ibanez, Marconnet, Pelous, Brouzet, Betsen, Magne, Harinordoqui
Replacements:  Rue, Califano, Auradou, Chabal, Barrau, Merceron, Castaignede.

Referee:  Andre Watson (South Africa)

Sunday, 23 February 2003

France cruise past Scotland

France bounced back from their defeat by England in the opening round of the Six Nations with an emphatic victory against Scotland.

The French were always in control and although they only produced their best in bursts it was enough for them to run in tries through Fabien Pelous, Clement Poitrenaud, Damien Traille and Aurelien Rougerie.

Fly-half Francois Gelez, who missed two penalties that would have given France victory against New Zealand in November, was in much better form as he kicked the rest of France's points.

Scotland tried to keep going for the 80 minutes but they were out-gunned from one to 15 and all they had to show for their efforts was a solitary Chris Paterson penalty, leaving them rock bottom of the Six Nations table.

Gelez and Paterson swapped penalties in the early stages before France put together the first threatening attack of the match.

A flowing move gave 20-year-old full-back Poitrenaud room to move down the Scottish left and his pass saw Vincent Clerc flying for the corner.

It took a great cover tackle from Kenny Logan to prevent the try, but the Scots were then harshly penalised to give the French great field position.

They kicked for the corner and then drove from the lineout, with Pelous burrowing over for the try.

Gelez missed the conversion but he then added two penalties to take the French into a 14-3 lead after half an hour.

Scotland were struggling to put their opponents under pressure, and apart from two excellent breaks by Logan and replacement scrum-half Mike Blair, they rarely cut through the French defence.

Despite over-elaborating at times the French were well in control and Gelez slotted his fourth penalty right on half-time to give them a 17-3 lead.

Within two minutes France were out of sight.

Once again the speedster Clerc sliced down the Scottish left and when he was tackled Poitrenaud was on hand to cross out wide.

Gelez' conversion made it 24-3 but Scotland came to life and two Paterson kicks ahead had the French scrambling to prevent the visitors from scoring.

The Scots mounted a period of sustained pressure but they could not score and France suddenly erupted on to the attack.

Betsen's take and drive from a lineout set them on their way and they finished off in exquisite style, with Traille taking Gelez's chip on the full before diving over under the posts.

Gelez' conversion took the French over the 30-point mark.

Scotland nearly scored their first try in the 2003 Six Nations after Gregor Townsend kicked through, but Kevin Utterson knocked on with the line at his mercy.

It was the hosts who had the last word, with giant wing Rougerie soaring high to claim a Dimitri Yachvili cross-kick in injury time.

Gelez added the conversion as France confirmed that they are in a different league to the struggling Scots.

The scorers:

France 38
Tries:  Pelous, Poitrenaud, Traille, Rougerie
Cons:  Gelez 3
Pens:  Gelez 4

Scotland 3
Pen:  Paterson

France:  Poitrenaud, Rougerie, Garbajosa, Traille, Clerc, Gelez, Galthie, Crenca, Ibanez, Marconnet, Pelous, Brouzet, Betsen, Magne, Harinordoqui.
Replacements:  Rue, Califano, Auradou, Chabal, Yachvili, Merceron, Castaignede.

Scotland:  G. Metcalfe, Paterson, Townsend, Utterson, Logan, Laney, Redpath, T. Smith, Bulloch, Douglas, Murray, Grimes, Leslie, Mower, Taylor.
Replacements:  Scott, G. Kerr, White, Petrie, Blair, G. Ross, Craig.

Referee:  Peter Marshall (Australia)

Saturday, 22 February 2003

England ease past battling Welsh

For 40 minutes they looked anything but the best side in the world, but England finally came good in the second half as they cruised to victory in Cardiff.

In the first half a combination of English mediocrity and Welsh fervour meant it was the hosts who left the field more upbeat, despite trailing 9-6.

However, in the second half England stopped relying on the boot of Jonny Wilkinson for their points, got some structure in their game and ran in tries through Will Greenwood and Joe Worsley.

Debutant fly-half Ceri Sweeney kicked nine points for Wales, and although it was never likely to be enough once the English machine eventually clicked into gear, Wales at least saved face after last weekend's humiliation by Italy.

England struggled to get their hands on the ball in the opening stages and Wales took the lead through a 40m penalty from Sweeney.

A penalty and marvellous drop goal from Wilkinson nudged England into the lead before English indiscipline handed Sweeney the chance to level the match at 6-6 after 24 minutes.

At this point Wales were more than proving a match for the much-vaunted visitors, and although another excellent Wilkinson drop goal nudged England back into the lead, Wales should have been ahead at the break.

Mark Taylor brushed aside Charlie Hodgson's feeble tackle and raced clear with two men outside him, but with a try looking a formality Taylor held on and the chance was lost.

Sweeney then missed a kickable penalty on the half-time whistle which would have levelled the scores after Phil Christophers, only just on as a replacement for Jason Robinson, was sin-binned for an early tackle.

Despite their late frustration Wales would have been far happier than England, who had failed to produce anything like the fluidity they showed in the November internationals.

With Wales buzzing around them like flies England's discipline was poor and they trooped off at half-time to the sound of cheers from a disbelieving Welsh crowd.

The half-time talk must have done the job because England came out playing a much more structured and controlled game.

Will Greenwood powered through a couple of tissue paper tackles for the first try after a multi-phase move, with Wilkinson converting, and England were on their way at 16-6.

Wales then lost Steve Williams to the bin as their defence began to fray around the edges and replacement Joe Worsley powered over under the posts for a converted try.

After the English flurry the scoring tailed off again, with Sweeney and Wilkinson trading penalties as the game went off the boil.

Although England will be happy enough with the victory, Wales ended the match the stronger and will be delighted to have avoided more yet embarrassment.

The scorers:

Wales 9:
Pens:  Sweeney 3

England 26:
Tries:  Greenwood, J Worsley
Cons:  Wilkinson 2
Pens:  Wilkinson 2
Drop goals:  Wilkinson 2

Wales:  K. Morgan, R. Williams, Taylor, Shanklin, G. Thomas, Sweeney, G. Cooper, I. Thomas, Humphreys, Evans, S. Williams, Sidoli, D. Jones, M. Williams, G. Thomas.
Replacements:  G. Williams, Jenkins, Llewellyn, Charvis, Peel, Harris, Watkins.

England:  Robinson, Luger, Greenwood, Hodgson, Cohen, Wilkinson, Bracken, Rowntree, Thompson, Morris, Johnson, Kay, Hill, Back, Dallaglio.
Replacements:  Regan, M. Worsley, Grewcock, J. Worsley, Gomarsall, Christophers, Simpson-Daniel.

Referee:  Steve Walsh (New Zealand)

Ireland cruise past Italy

Ireland managed what had proved beyond Wales last week when they secured a comfortable victory over Italy in Rome to keep their Grand Slam bid on target.

The Italians confirmed their progress with some bright moments but Ireland always looked a class above the hosts.

Captain Brian O'Driscoll scooted over for his 18th international try to break Brendan Mullin's long-standing try record as the Irish ran in five tries in total.

Italy's solitary try came from Dennis Dallan, but they showed enough to confirm that the victory over Wales was no fluke.

Italy started in adventurous mood but they lacked penetration and Ireland forced the first real chance after 15 minutes.

They kicked a penalty into the corner and when Victor Costello was held up just short from the line out, Peter Stringer burrowed over from the base of the ruck.

David Humphreys had struggled with his kicking from hand but he slotted the conversion and added a penalty 10 minutes later to take Ireland into a 10-0 lead.

The Irish pack impressed against the Scots last week and they again looked a solid unit as they began to put the squeeze on the hosts.

A rumbling maul set up great field position and the Irish scored their second try of the match when Keith Gleeson sent John Kelly over in the corner.

The Italians hit back almost immediately when Diego Dominguez slotted a simple penalty after O'Driscoll made a rare error.

O'Driscoll nearly atoned with a brilliant run down the touchline, and although the Irish could not get up in support of their captain, a Humphreys penalty gave them an 18-3 lead.

Dominguez missed an easy penalty either side of the half-time whistle and the Italians fell further behind when Humphreys hit the line at pace and raced over untouched from the hosts' 22.

The fly-half could not add the conversion and, after Italy had replaced the out-of-sorts Dominguez with Ramiro Pez, the Italians scored their first try of the game through powerful wing Dallan.

Pez converted and at 23-10 it looked as though Italy might come back, but Ireland reasserted their superiority.

O'Driscoll knifed over for a converted try to break Mullins' record and although Pez slotted a penalty for Italy, Ireland had the final word as Humphreys converted Geordan Murphy's sparkling try.

The scorers:

Italy 13
Tries:  Dallan
Pens:  Dominguez, Pez

Ireland 37
Tries:  Stringer, Kelly, Humphreys, O'Driscoll, Murphy
Cons:  Humphreys 3
Pens:  Humphreys 2

Italy:  Vaccari, Ma Bergamasco, Stoica, Raineri, Dallan, Dominguez, Troncon, De Carli, Festuccia, Martinez, Bezzi, Bortolami, De Rossi, Persico, Phillips.
Replacements:  Moretti, Castrogiovanni, Giacheri, Palmer, Queirolo, Pez, Mi Bergamasco.

Ireland:  Murphy, Kelly, O'Driscoll, Maggs, Hickie, Humphreys, Stringer, Corrigan, S. Byrne, Hayes, Longwell, O'Kelly, Costello, Gleeson, Foley.
Replacements:  Sheahan, Horan, Cullen, A. Quinlan, G. Easterby, Burke, Henderson.

Referee:  Tony Spreadbury (England)

Saturday, 15 February 2003

Italy defeat woeful Wales

Italy won only their second Six Nations game ever when they defeated a dismal Wales side in the Rome sun on Saturday.

The Italians, led by playmaker Diego Dominguez, destroyed the Welsh pack and starved Steve Hansen's men of any possession.

Tries from Giampiero De Carli, Carlo Festuccia and Matthew Phillips proved too much for a side who always looked second best.

Tom Shanklin, Steve Williams and Dwayne Peel touched over for the visitors.

But it was never going to be enough against an Italian team who last tasted Six Nations success against Scotland in 2000.

With Wales struggling to get their hands on the ball, John Kirwan's side were unlucky not to surge ahead in only the second minute, thanks to a powerful run by Christian Stoica.

A last ditch Rhys Williams tackle instead forced a five metre scrum, but Italy were not denied a second time when De Carli charged over for the game's opening score.

Dominguez's kick pushed his side into an early and deserved 7-0 lead.

Relief came quickly for Wales, however, when good work from Gareth Thomas and Shanklin allowed the Northampton second row to run in for his second international try.

With seven minutes on the clock, both sides had scored a point a minute, before Shanklin and Thomas combined again.

A half break by the Bridgend centre gave the Saracens favourite the opportunity to show his considerable pace - and he did not disappoint with a blistering 50 metre run.

Harris slotted the extras, before the home side hit back immediately through a short-range try from Festuccia, again converted by Dominguez.

Both fly-halves then swapped penalties before the Stade Francais veteran pushed his side into a slender but ominous half-time lead with a well taken drop goal from in front of the posts.

Wales were dealt a double blow in the second-half as Mefin Davies and lock Williams both left the field.

Italy again started brightly and it was no surprise when they grabbed their third try of the match.

Allesandro Troncon made the most of a loose ball from a Welsh scrum and New Zealand-born Phillips strode over to secure a straightforward seven pointer.

At 27-17 up, the Azzurri began to dictate the game and when Dominguez slotted his second drop goal with just minutes remaining, it dealt a hammer blow to Wales's chances.

A late try from Dwayne Peel cut the deficit to just eight points.

But coach Steve Hansen will have to perform a miracle to avoid anything but embarrassment when they line up against favourites England in Cardiff next week.

The scorers:

Italy 30
Tries:  De Carli, Festuccia, Phillips
Conv:  Dominguez 3
Pens:  Dominguez 2
Drops:  Dominguez 1

Wales 22
Tries:  Williams, Shanklin, Peel
Conv:  Harris 2
Pens:  Harris 1

Italy:  P Vaccari (Calvisano), Mauro Bergamasco (Treviso), C Stoica (Castres/Fra), G Ranieri (Calvisano), D Dallan (Treviso), D Dominguez (Stade Francais/Fra), A Troncon (Treviso, capt), G De Carli (Calvisano), C Festuccia (Gran Parma), R Martinez (Treviso), C Bezzi (Viadana), M Bortolami (Padova), A De Rossi (Calvisano), A Persico (Viadana), M Phillips (Viadana).
Reps:  A Moretti (Calvisano), S Perugini (Calvisano), M Giacheri (Rotherham/Eng), S Palmer (Treviso), J Manuel Queirolo (Dax/Fra), R Pez (Rotherham/Eng), Mirco Bergamasco (Padova).

Wales:  R Williams (Cardiff), M Jones (Llanelli), T Shanklin (Saracens), L Davies (Llanelli), G Thomas (Bridgend), I Harris (Cardiff), D Peel (Llanelli), I Thomas (Llanelli), M Davies (Pontypridd), B Evans (Swansea), R Sidoli (Pontypridd), S Williams (Northampton), M Owen (Pontypridd), M Williams (Cardiff), C Charvis (Swansea, capt).
Reps:  G Williams (Bridgend), G Jenkins (Pontypridd), D Jones (Llanelli), G Thomas (Bath), G Cooper (Bath), C Sweeney (Pontypridd), M Watkins (Llanelli).

Ref:  Joel Jutge (France)

Wilkinson makes France pay

England gained revenge for last year's Paris nightmare as they launched their Six Nations campaign with a surprisingly comfortable victory over France at Twickenham.

A sparkling try from the dynamic Jason Robinson and a 20-point haul from the impeccable boot of Jonny Wilkinson fully vindicated their billing as odds-on favourites.

Reigning champions France did outscore their hosts on the try count with flanker Olivier Magne, full-back Clement Poitrenaud and centre Damien Traille all breaching the red rose defence.

But a dominant performance from the England pack laid the foundations for the first step on another probable Grand Slam crusade.

Whether England can go that elusive extra step this year remains to be seen, but they maintained the momentum of autumn victories over the southern hemisphere's big three.

Two French tries in the final quarter sparked a few late nerves, but the home side held out with few alarms.

England started in confident fashion, Robinson taking a line-out to himself in the first minute before dancing past three French tacklers on a mazy run.

Then Dan Luger brought the capacity crowd to its feet when he pierced the French defensive line, only to be penalised for holding on to the ball in the tackle.

France proceeded to dominate possession but it was England who opened the scoring after 13 minutes when Wilkinson punished some French pushing at the line-out with a long-range penalty.

His kick landed on top of the crossbar and dropped apologetically over, but if that was a touch of good fortune, England's luck swiftly turned.

Charlie Hodgson, taking the ball at first receiver, saw his clearing kick charged down by the alert Magne and the flanker beat Wilkinson to the loose ball to dive over.

Gerald Merceron converted to put France 7-3 up, but England were back in front by the 28th minute courtesy of two more superbly-struck penalties from Wilkinson.

Merceron badly miscued a shot at goal that should have regained the lead for the visitors, and England lost centurion prop Jason Leonard to injury in the 33rd minute.

But sparked by the irrepressible Robinson, England laid siege to the French line before the interval.

Hodgson almost redeemed his earlier error with a neat break only to spurn a try-scoring chance when he failed to spot Will Greenwood on his shoulder.

But the pressure finally told when the French defence fell offside in midfield and Wilkinson dispatched his fourth penalty for a 12-7 interval lead.

Lawrence Dallaglio came off the bench just three minutes into the second half to replace Lewis Moody, and hooker Mark Regan appeared as a temporary prop when Graham Rowntree suffered a head cut.

But the changes failed to disrupt England's rhythm and after concerted pressure on the French line, Greenwood's well-timed pass sent Robinson in under the posts after 48 minutes.

Wilkinson's fifth penalty of the afternoon extended the lead to 22-7 just before the hour, and the stand-off nonchantly dropped a goal minutes later to seemingly leave England cruising.

But France finally found their attacking spark 14 minutes from time, profiting from quick ruck ball to send Poitrenaud over in the right corner.

But Merceron missed the conversion and a subsequent penalty attempt, and despite Traille crossing in the right corner, England held out in a full 12 minutes of injury time.

The scorers:

England 25
Try:  Robinson
Conv:  Wilkinson 1
Pens:  Wilkinson 5
Drop:  Wilkinson 1

France 17
Try:  Magne, Poitrenaud, Traille
Conv:  Merceron

England:  J Robinson, D Luger, W Greenwood, C Hodgson, B Cohen, J Wilkinson, A Gomarsall, J Leonard, S Thompson, J White, M Johnson (capt), B Kay, L Moody, N Back, R Hill.
Replacements:  M Regan, G Rowntree, D Grewcock, L Dallaglio, N Walshe, P Christophers, J Simpson-Daniel.

France:  C Poitrenaud, A Rougerie, X Garbajosa, D Traille, V Clerc, G Merceron, F Galthie (capt), J-J Crenca, R Ibanez, C Califano, F Pelous, O Roumat, S Betsen, O Magne, I Harinordoquy.
Replacements:  J-B Rue, S Marconnet, D Auradou, S Chabal, D Yachvilli, F Gelez, T Castaignede.

Referee:  Paul Honiss (New Zealand)

Ireland rout sorry Scots

Ireland sealed a historic victory against Scotland on Sunday, winning at Murrayfield for the first time since 1985.

The Irish rarely looked troubled by a Scottish side devoid of creativity in their back division, as they raced to their most emphatic win at the home of Scottish rugby.

David Humphreys rattled off 26 points for the visitors but it was Brian O'Driscoll who was the chief tormentor for the Scots.

The Irish captain regularly picked gaps in the opposition defence and, although he failed to get on the score sheet, his telling run produced Denis Hickie's opening try.  Geordan Murphy and Humphreys scored the game's other tries.

Ireland were the more assured throughout the game, except for a nearly disastrous hiccup with the first move of the match.

A Hickie defensive kick was charged down but Andrew Mower knocked the ball forward in the resulting melee over the try line.

After surviving the scare, the Irish found themselves in front after eight minutes against the run of play courtesy of a Humphreys penalty, his first of two in the half.

Despite Ireland's lead, Scotland came closest to crossing the line first but were halted by the faintest of tap tackles by Peter Stringer on Glenn Metcalfe.

The opening try finally came in some style after an intelligent break by O'Driscoll in the 27th minute.

The Irish captain found the pace to outfox the Scots before being brought down just short of the line with his side's first real attacking opportunity.

Stringer was on hand to recycle the ball to Hickie who forced his way over.  Humphreys added the conversion.

A Gordon Ross penalty straight after the restart, cancelled out by a similar Humphreys effort, seemed to give Scotland the wake-up call required.

From looking sluggish, they produced 10 minutes of telling attacks which were continually fended off.  In the end, the Scots had to settle for a second penalty.

With the Scottish risking all in attack, Ireland were biding their time to launch a counter offensive, which came from replacement Murphy in the 65th minute.

Against the run of play, the Leicester wing hacked the ball forward and sprinted 70 yards for the game's second try.

With that the Scots completely capitulated, Hickie producing the overlap to send Humphreys through for his score five minutes later.

By then, the game had long finished as a contest.

The scorers:

Scotland 6
Pens:  Ross 2

Ireland 36
Try:  Hickie, Murphy, Humphreys
Conv:  Humphreys 3
Pens:  Humphreys 5

Scotland:  G. Metcalfe, Logan, Craig, Laney, Paterson, G. Ross, Redpath, T. Smith, Bulloch, Douglas, Murray, Grimes, Leslie, Mower, Taylor.
Replacements:  Scott, G. Kerr, Hines, Beattie, Blair, Townsend, Utterson.

Ireland:  Dempsey, S. Horgan, O'Driscoll, Maggs, Hickie, Humphreys, Stringer, Corrigan, S. Byrne, Hayes, Longwell, O'Kelly, Costello, Gleeson, Foley.
Replacements:  Sheahan, Horan, Cullen, A. Quinlan, G. Easterby, Burke, Murphy.

Referee:  Andrew Cole (Australia)

Sunday, 24 November 2002

Scotland 36 Fiji 22

Scotland followed up their record and historic win over South Africa a week ago, by beating Fiji 36-22 at Murrayfield in Edinburgh.  Centre Andy Craig sealed the win for his country by scoring three tries in a somewhat disappointing game.

The match, although not particularly spiteful, still produced three yellow cards for illegal play.

The first was dished out to Fijian flanker Sisa Koyamaibole, who plays his club rugby for Toyota-Shokki in Japan, when he was sin-binned by South African referee Mark Lawrence for repeated infringements at the rucks and mauls.

Then four minutes from time Fijian captain and hooker Greg Smith, as well as Scottish flank Martin Leslie were given 10 minutes in the sin bin each for their part in a punch-up.

Although the game at times showed promise of developing into a highly entertaining affair, all too often play seemed to break down -- either through a combination of solid defence and poor handling, or some cynical tactics.

But the Scottish hat-trick hero, Craig, probably summed the game up best when trying to explain why Scotland disappointed.  "After (the 21-6 win over) South Africa it was always going to be difficult to get up to that level again," he said.

However, he expressed satisfaction of having scored his first hat-trick for his country.

Scotland had a somewhat fortunate 18-12 lead after a first half in which neither side truly stamped their authority on proceedings.

Craig opened the scoring the eighth minute for Scotland, with Brendan Laney adding the conversion for a 7-0 lead.  This was followed by two Joseph Narruhn penalties, in the 14th and 19th minutes, before two Laney penalties restored the seven point lead after 24 minutes.

Craig picked up his second try in the 29th minute, after some patient build-up work by Scotland, before the ball eventually went wide.

Narruhn added two more penalties to close the gap to 18-12 at the break.

Scotland were given a rude awakening in the 50th minute when Api Naevo went over, after the Fijians countered from a Scottish mistake.  At 18-17 a surprise seemed on the cards.

Then in the 57th minute followed one of those weird and rare occurrences.  Fiji was penalised for having 16 men on the field -- with a substitute having come on before the injured player, who was being treated on the field, had left the playing area.

The Laney penalty kick made it 21-17 to Scotland.

Laney scored a try four minutes later from a great move, but the try was only awarded after consultation with the video referee.  He missed the conversion, but the gap had by then opened to 26-17.

Craig scored his third try in the 73rd minute, when he came up in support after Moffat was caught just before the Fijian line.  Another failed conversion, but Scotland was looking comfortable at 31-17.

Norman Ligairi restored some pride with a late try, after substitute Weisale Serevi cut through the Scottish backs but lock Stuart Grimes added the final nail with a try four minutes into injury time for a 36-21 win.

Man of the match:  It has to go to the hat-trick hero Andy Craig.  He did what most good backline players are supposed to do, finish off promising moves.

Moment of the match:  Probably Norman Ligairi's try, even though it had no affect on the outcome of the match.  It was the try of the match, scored in typical Fijian fashion.

Villain(s) of the match:  The three yellow card offenders -- Sisa Koyamaibole, Greg Smith and Martin Leslie.  Repeated offences and punch-ups spoil the game for all.

The Teams:

Scotland:  1 Bruce Douglas, 2 Gordon Bulloch, 3 Tom Smith, 4 Stuart Grimes, 5 Jason White, 6 Budge Pountney, 7 Simon Taylor, 8 Jon Petrie, 9 Bryan Redpath (c), 10 Gregor Townsend, 11 Chris Paterson, 12 Brendan Laney, 13 Andrew Craig, 14 Nikki Walker, 15 Ben Hinshelwood
Reserves:  Stuart Moffatt, Nathan Hines, Gordon Ross, Graeme Beveridge, Martin Leslie, Steve Scott
Unused:  Dave Hilton

Fiji:  1 Billy Cavubati, 2 Greg Smith (c), 3 Isaia Rasila, 4 Apisai Naevo, 5 Simon Raiwalui, 6 Sisa Koyamaibole, 7 Alfi Mocelutu Vuivau, 8 Seta Tawake Naivaluwaqa, 9 Jacob Rauluni, 10 Joseph Narruhn, 11 Fero Lasagavibau, 12 Seremaia Bai, 13 Epeli Ruivadra, 14 Norman Ligairi, 15 Atonio Nariva
Reserves:  Waisale Serevi, Bill Gadolo, Emori Katalau, Kele Leawere, Viliame Satala
Unused:  Paula Biu, Isaac Mow

Referee:  Lawrence m.

Points Scorers:

Scotland
Tries:  Laney B.J. 1, Craig A. 3, Grimes S.B. 1
Conv:  Laney B.J. 1
Pen K.:  Laney B.J. 3

Fiji
Tries:  Ligairi N. 1, Naevo A. 1
Pen K.:  Narruhn J. 4

Saturday, 23 November 2002

France 35 Canada 3

France's skipper and scrumhalf Fabien Galthié led his team to victory over Canada at the Stade de France in Paris, with right-wing Vincent Clerc running in two second-half tries to round off a record 35-3 victory.

After leading 13-0 at the break, the home team never looked like losing in a steady Paris drizzle.

However, the second-half belonged to greenhorn right-wing Vincent Clerc, who scored two of Les Bleus' four tries after the break.  David Bory and Damien Traille got the other two.

Left-wing Bory, who scored the first try of the match, and his Montferrand team-mate Gerald Merceron, who played at flyhalf and kicked 13 points, must have put a smile on the face of coach Bernard Laporte, who re-called the duo after France's 30-10 win and 20-20 draw against South Africa and New Zealand in the past fortnight respectively.

The visitors had their fair share of possession, but they failed to produce the goods with the ball in had as the French defence was just too strong.

The Canadians started the game well, enjoying territorial advantage in the first five minutes, but they could not break the sturdy French defence.

The French, however, showed that they can attack when flanker Olivier Magne made a good break deep into the Canadian half before offloading to centre Damien Traille for a converted try as the home team surged even further ahead at 22-0.

But the denouement of the game belonged to Clerc, surely one of the more exciting young prospects in the world today, as he scored twice to put the result beyond any doubt.

For his first try, the speedy winger left his opposite number Fred Asselin for dead as he raced away from 30 metres out.

Merceron missed the conversion, but Asselin's day turned even more sour when Irish referee David McHugh showed him a yellow card for a high tackle on French centre Thomas Castaignede.

With the Canadian winger out of the way, Clerc touched down for his second try after a superb move that saw skipper Fabien Galthié, Traille and Castaignède handle the ball before the 21-year-old sprinted through for a converted try.

Canada's only points came from the boot of flyhalf Bobby Ross, who kicked a late penalty in his 50th cap for the Canucks.

The Teams:

France:  1 Jean-Jacques Crenca, 2 Raphael Ibanez, 3 Pieter De Villiers, 4 Olivier Brouzet, 5 Fabien Pelous, 6 Serge Betsen Tchoua, 7 Olivier Magne, 8 Imanol Harinordoquy, 9 Fabien Galthie (c), 10 Gerald Merceron, 11 Vincent Clerc, 12 Thomas Castaignede, 13 Damien Traille, 14 David Bory, 15 Nicolas Brusque
Reserves:  David Auradou, Xavier Garbajosa, Jean-Baptiste Rue, Sebastien Chabal, Francois Gelez, Sylvain Marconnet, Dimitri Yachvili

Canada:  1 Rod Snow, 2 Pat Dunkley, 3 John Thiel, 4 Mike James, 5 John Tait, 6 Ryan Banks, 7 Alan Charron, 8 Phil Murphy, 9 Morgan Williams, 10 Bobby Ross, 11 Fred Asselin, 12 John Cannon, 13 Nik Witkowski, 14 Sean Fauth, 15 Winston Stanley
Reserves:  Jamie Cudmore, Marco Di Girolomo, Ed Fairhurst, Mark Lawson, Kevin Tkachuk, Adam Van Staveren
Unused:  Jared Barker

Referee:  Mchugh d.

Points Scorers:

France
Tries:  Clerc V. 2, Bory D. 1, Traille D. 1
Conv:  Merceron G. 2, Traille D. 1
Pen K.:  Merceron G. 3

Canada
Pen K.:  Ross R.P. 1

Argentina 7 Ireland 16

Ireland continued their fine November form when they beat Argentina 16-7 in a Lansdowne Road mud bath in Dublin, to retain their unbeaten run against the Southern Hemisphere opposition.

It was one try each, but flyhalf Ronan O'Gara kicked three decisive penalties -- two of them the only points in an otherwise austere second half.

The positives for the home team would be the great performance of their pack against the world class Puma forward pack -- particularly in the line-outs where they continuously harassed the visitors and stole numerous balls on the Argentina feed.

In the scrum they even had a turnover, although the Pumas had an edge in this department.

The big letdown for the Pumas was their discipline, with England referee Chris White constantly blowing them up for offences and O'Gara making the visitors pay.

Then there was the brilliant man-of-the-match performance by Irish fullback Girvan Dempsey, who not only scored his team's only try, but also stood firm in the face of numerous Puma high bombs in the wet weather.

Under the circumstances and in the conditions it was never going to be a free-flowing match, with both teams taking the kicking option rather than carrying the ball in hand.

From the outset parts of the field had been under water and the rain came down heavily during the match as well.

In the first quarter the Pumas certainly had the better of the exchanges, keeping the Irish pinned back in their own half with sound tactical kicking.

The first score came totally against the run of play, when Irish fullback Girvan Dempsey gathered the ball after is Puma counterpart Ignacio Corleto failed to control an up-and-under.  He slid over and O'Gara added the conversion for a 7-0 lead after 20 minutes.

But the Pumas hit back straight away when Dempsey failed to control a Puma kick and the ball slid into touch.

The Pumas took a quick throw -- so quick the referee did not even see -- and Rolando Martin scored.  But then the referee first consulted his touch judge, who ruled it a fair try, before the TV match official stepped in and said he would like to have another look at it.  He eventually also ruled a fair try.

With less than ten minutes to half time O'Gara added a penalty to give his team a three-point (10-7) lead at the break.

After the break the weather let up somewhat, but it was already far too wet and the mistake-riddled play of both teams continued.  The Pumas tried bravely towards the end, but having given away too many penalties they were never going to close the gap.

Man of the match:  Who else but Irish fullback Girvan Dempsey?  He pounced to sore his team's only try at a crucial stage in the first half and then when it mattered most -- in the second half -- he stood firm on defence.  His most outstanding feat was his ability to collect and return all the high balls put on him … and there were many.

Moment of the match:  It may not have won them the match, but the Puma try came so quickly -- not to mention the inventiveness of it all -- that the match officials took several minutes to confirm it.  It shows they are not the stereotype team everybody thinks.

Villain of the match:  The television match official.  His actions to send one of the touch judges to tell the referee that he would like to have another look at the Pumas' try is not within his jurisdiction -- that law has not been changed and after the referee awarded the try it should have stood -- as it eventually did.

The Teams:

Argentina:  1 Omar Hasan Jalil, 2 Mario Ledesma Arocena, 3 Mauricio Reggiardo, 4 Rimas Alvarez Kairelis, 5 Ignacio Fernandez Lobbe, 6 Rolando Martin, 7 Santiago Phelan, 8 Gonzalo Longo Elia, 9 Agustin Pichot, 10 Felipe Contepomi, 11 Diego Albanese, 12 Lisandro Arbizu (c), 13 Jose Orengo, 14 Gonzalo Camardon, 15 Ignacio Corleto
Reserves:  Martin Durand, Juan Fernandez Miranda, Pedro Sporleder
Unused:  Nicolas Fernandez Miranda, Jose Nunez Piossek, Martin Scelzo, Juan Jose Villar

Ireland:  1 John Hayes, 2 Shane Byrne, 3 Reggie Corrigan, 4 Gary Longwell, 5 Malcolm O'Kelly, 6 Victor Costello, 7 Keith Gleeson, 8 Anthony Foley, 9 Peter Stringer, 10 Ronan O'Gara, 11 Shane Horgan, 12 Brian O'Driscoll (c), 13 Kevin Maggs, 14 Justin Bishop, 15 Girvan Dempsey
Reserves:  Leo Cullen, Marcus Horan, Alan Quinlan
Unused:  Guy Easterby, David Humphreys, Geordan Murphy, Frankie Sheahan

Attendance:  40000
Referee:  White c.

Points Scorers:

Argentina
Tries:  Martin R.A. 1
Conv:  Contepomi F. 1

Ireland
Tries:  Dempsey G.T. 1
Conv:  O'Gara R.J.R. 1
Pen K.:  O'Gara R.J.R. 3

South Africa 3 England 53

England completed their November 2002 hat-trick by inflicting the biggest Test defeat in South Africa's history, as they pummelled the 14-man Springboks by a massive 53-3 margin at Twickenham, the controversial early sending-off of Jannes Labuschagne turning this ruthless massacre into a complete non-spectacle.

To detract from such a massive England win and an all-round superb performance on a day when they regained top spot in the Zurich World Rankings may seem harsh, but it was New Zealand referee Paddy O'Brien's decision to show a red card to Lions lock Labuschagne for a late tackle on Jonny Wilkinson after only 23 minutes that took the shine off this resounding drubbing.

It was an unquestionably late hit on the Newcastle pivot, but with one of their most accomplished forwards banished from the field of play, the South African team simply imploded in an indisciplined and unaccomplished performance -- a fact which must surely ask questions as to the way forward for this once great rugby nation.

The English, for their part, were unbending in their attacking attitude to the game, Ben Cohen once again delivering a colossal performance on the wing with a first half try, while Harlequins centre Will Greenwood snatched vital tries each side of the break.

Late tries from back-row trio Lawrence Dallaglio, Neil Back and Richard Hill, as well as a penalty try, gave the scoreline a more emphatic look, while the departure through injury of Wilkinson was one of few down points for the rampant English.

In Wilkinson's absence, Matt Dawson, Andy Gomarsall and Tim Stimpson were all called upon to take conversions, all spectacularly nailing their efforts from the touchlines on a day when the home side could seemingly do no wrong.

The match however had a bizarre feel after the dismissal of Labuschagne, at times degenerating into a Sevens throwabout, which never really exploded, but always looked as if a 30-man brawl was about to come, with repeated late and high tackles from the Boks, especially from midfield duo Butch James and Robbie Fleck.

It was the Boks who started arguably the better, some shrewd lines of running from Werner Greeff and the occasional big hit in midfield keeping England on the back foot and struggling to get out of their own half, but it was ill-discipline that was to once again blight their play.

A foolish punch from hot-head centre Fleck on Cohen right in front of the eyes of referee O'Brien allowed Wilkinson to slot the first points of the day from under the posts, while Fleck did well to stay on the pitch when a yellow card could well have been dished out.

With the South Africans keen to at least get something for their efforts, missed drop-goal attempts from James and André Pretorius were all they had to show.

England's pack were gradually gaining ascendancy however, and it was from a scrum just inside their own half that they were to kickstart this match, Dawson breaking from the base on an angled run to feed Dallaglio down the right.

Dallaglio -- on for the injured Lewis Moody -- promptly played Phil Christophers in, with the Bristol flyer spotting Cohen's brilliantly-angled run for the Northampton man to continue his superb November campaign with another try to add to the two he scored against the Wallabies last week and his single effort against New Zealand the previous match.

With scrum-half Bolla Conradie off early with injury, Blue Bulls back-up Norman Jordaan was thrown in at the deep end, and just when the Boks thought it could not get any worse, came Labuschagne's red card.

While the lateness of the tackle was undebatable, whether or not the offence merited the straight red as opposed to a sin-binning was a major bone of contention, and with Pedrie Wannenburg having to shift to lock against a dominant England pack, any chance of parity upfront had been lost in one foul swoop.

While South Africa certainly did not lack effort, England turned the screw after that, Cohen having a try turned down by the video referee Jim Fleming, the Scot judging Cohen to have knocked on Wilkinson's crossfield punt under the attentions of Breyton Paulse in the left corner.

Only five minutes after however England chalked up their second try, Greenwood spinning through the tackle of Wessel Roux after a Dallaglio pick-up from the base of a close range scrum -- Wilkinson switching the direction of play to open the hole for Greenwood's run at the line.

There was a penalty apiece for Wilkinson and Pretorius before the break, with England going into the interval at 18-3.

Any impetus the Boks had hoped to gain from their teamtalk was wiped out only two minutes after the break when Greenwood again wriggled over the line for a try, a big right to left pass from Wilkinson creating the space for Greenwood to dummy and go from the 22, the attentions of the retreating Paulse not enough to prevent the silky Harlequin grounding the ball, although it took a video referee decision to rubber-stamp the call.

Wilkinson's swooping pass for that try proved to be his last act of the match however, as he went off injured for Austin Healey to come on, scrum-half Matt Dawson meanwhile nailing the conversion from way out on the left touchline.

England turned the screw upfront, and it was some superb desperattion defending in his own dead ball area from Wannenburg that prevented a fourth try as he defused a diagonal chip over the flat defensive line from Greenwood.

The injury-enforced departure of South Africa's Pretorius, and the substitution of hooker James Dalton for Adrian Jacobs and Lukas van Biljon respectively, as well as Andy Gomarsall coming on for Dawson in the England ranks, gave the game a disjointed feel, with long passages of open play.

Referee O'Brien again saw the spotlight fall on him when he saw fit to award England a penalty try after one such prolonged spell of open running, fullback Greeff delivering a shocking high hit on Christophers five metres out, although the presence of Joe van Niekerk perhaps suggested that a try would not have been scored.  More bizarre was how Greeff escaped a yellow card for the challenge, but with Gomarsall in as the next successful makeshift kicker for England, the 32-3 lead had a decidedly hollow feel about it.

The onslaught kept on coming, and after an unpleasant elbow from skipper Corné Krige on Martin Johnson at a ruck near the South African line, it was Back who rumbled over from the resulting in lineout in a move that has served Welford Road so well down the years, Gomarsall converting magnificently from the left touchline.

His back-row mate Hill was next minutes later, brilliantly snatching a Healey crossfield kick in the right corner, replacement fullback Tim Stimpson the next successful England kicker as he converted from way out.

A pushover try from Dallaglio in injury-time ended this unceremonious massacre, the Springbok bodies flying out of the scrum as England showed their undoubted Twickenham prowess.

Whether or not they can live up to the expectations away from their home fortress and take the next step up remains the big question now, although the ramifications of this record defeat in South Africa could well be drastic.

Man of the match:  Another masterful display of powerful wingplay from Ben Cohen sees him get our vote.  Moved to the right to accomodate Phil Christophers in the side, he scored an early try, had one chalked-off for a knock-on and crucially looked for work instead of merely hugging the touchline.  Other contenders for the victors include tighthead Phil Vickery, again colossal in the scrum, and No.8 Richard Hill, while contenders in green shirts were few and far between.  Werner Greeff showed the odd flash of his potential from fullback early on, but the travel-sick Boks, other than a marginally better show of heart -- cannot take a great deal from this outing.

Moment of the match:  Undoubtedly the sending-off of Jannes Labuschagne by New Zealand referee Paddy O'Brien after only 23 minutes.  With England only 8-0 up, and the Boks showing renewed spirit in the pack, his exit from the match effectively ended their hopes of victory against a rampaging England pack.  The shoulder charge on Jonny Wilkinson after he had punted the ball was well late, of that there is no doubt.  Had O'Brien opted for the yellow card rather than the red however, this match may at least have retained a competitive edge.

Villain of the match:  While Labuschange may seem the obvious candidate, our vote goes jointly to Springbok centre duo Butch James and Robbie Fleck, whose late and high tackles, as well as general petulance, left a sour taste in the mouth.  Fleck was a very lucky man not to be binned for a blatant punch on Ben Cohen, while James needs to urgently address his often-talked-about tackling style.

The Teams:

South Africa:  1 Deon Carstens, 2 James Dalton, 3 Wessel Roux, 4 Jannes Labuschagne, 5 A.J. Venter, 6 Corne Krige (c), 7 Pedrie Wannenburg, 8 Joe Van Niekerk, 9 Bolla Conradie, 10 Andre Pretorius, 11 Friedrich Lombard, 12 Butch James, 13 Robbie Fleck, 14 Breyton Paulse, 15 Werner Greeff
Reserves:  Adi Jacobs, Lukas Van Biljon, Norman Jordaan, Brent Russell, C.J. Van Der Linde
Unused:  Pierre Uys, Marco Wentzel

England:  1 Jason Leonard, 2 Steve Thompson, 3 Phil Vickery, 4 Ben Kay, 5 Martin Johnson (c), 6 Neil Back, 7 Lewis Moody, 8 Richard Hill, 9 Matt Dawson, 10 Jonny Wilkinson, 11 Phil Christophers, 12 Will Greenwood, 13 Mike Tindall, 14 Ben Cohen, 15 Jason Robinson
Reserves:  Lawrence Dallaglio, Andy Gomarsall, Danny Grewcock, Austin Healey, Tim Stimpson
Unused:  Mark Regan, Robbie Morris

Attendance:  72000
Referee:  O'brien p.

Points Scorers:

South Africa
Pen K.:  Pretorius A.S. 1

England
Tries:  Cohen B.C. 1, Greenwood W.J.H. 2, Hill R.A. 1, Back N.A. 1, Dallaglio L.B.N. 1, Penalty Try 1
Conv:  Wilkinson J.P. 1, Dawson M.J.S. 1, Gomarsall A.C.T. 2, Stimpson T.R.G. 2
Pen K.:  Wilkinson J.P. 2

New Zealand 43 Wales 17

Two tries from All Black wing Doug Howlett enabled New Zealand to finish off their 2002 tour of the UK with a thumping 43-17 win over a battling Wales side at Cardiff's Millennium Stadium.

It was a cruel final scoreline for a brave Welsh team who, though clearly outclassed from the very beginning, had fought with real guts and self-belief and had actually led the visitors right up until the opening minutes of the second half.

But really, given the huge advantage in terms of territory and possession that the All Blacks enjoyed throughout this encounter, a Welsh victory always looked unlikely against a slicker, classier New Zealand outfit.

The alarm bells were ringing for Wales as early as the second minute when a grubber kick from talented All Black debutant Regan King saw Doug Howlett nearly touching down in the left hand corner, the ball just running away from the wing's outstretched fingertips in the in-goal area.

New Zealand had another chance from a lineout just five metres out a few moments later, the All Black pack driving over the Welsh tryline in double quick time -- straight through the heart of the Welsh pack.  Luckily for Wales, video referee Joel Dume decided that the ball had gone forward off a New Zealand hand.

With New Zealand ever pushing forward through their back row and midfield strike runners, Wales survived another scare when the ball went wide from the ensuing scrum and their first-up defence held up well as they forced a penalty and relieved this early pressure.

Then, seemingly from nowhere, Wales stormed into the lead, laying siege to the All Black line with some fine continuity play, Jamie Robinson and Gareth Thomas making in-roads into the New Zealand defence before referee Tappe Henning signalled that the visitors had crept up offside during this protracted Welsh assault.

Fly-half Stephen Jones made no mistake with a simple penalty kick to put his side into a 3-0 lead.

That lead was shortlived, however, as Andrew Mehrtens brought his side level just two minutes later following another typical wide-ranging attacking movement by the All Blacks.

But then, completely against the run of play, a sensational try from nowhere shocked the All Blacks.

An ominous-looking All Black attack broke down as Mehrtens' kick was charged down by Welsh flanker Martyn Williams.  Jones hacked on and the ball went bobbling 50 metres downfield before stopping stock still over the mud-caked All Black tryline.  Robinson was out of blocks and hared off in search of the ball, beating the All Black cover to touch down.

Jones added the extras and Wales were ahead by 10-3 with 16 minutes of the match played -- the vast majority of it in the Welsh half.

Mehrtens came back with his second penalty in the 17th minute to bring New Zealand back to within four points of Wales.

Wales had a chance to further stretch their lead when New Zealand lock Ali Williams unwisely swung a punch at a breakdown, Jones attempting an ambitious massive penalty from the halfway line, his kick just going wide of the lefthand post.

New Zealand began to edge back inato the game, working themselves downfield with ball in hand and opening up the Welsh defence.  But each time they came within the striking range of the Welsh tryline, their precision eluded them, enabling the scrabbling Welsh defence to clear their lines.

One such instance saw a slick All Black backline move releasing Jonah Lomu down the left, the winger eventually dragged down by Gareth Thomas, but not before handing on to scrum-half Steve Devine.  Only a tremendous cover tackle from fullback Rhys Williams stopping the score.

Considering that they were blooding four new caps in their pack, the New Zealand forwards put immense pressure on their Welsh counterparts to cause some major problems for Welsh skipper Colin Charvis at the base of the scrum.  The No.8 did some invaluable work in this area to give scrum-half Dwayne Peel extra vital seconds to consider his options.

Then with just two minutes of normal time left in the first half, Mehrtens missed a penalty that would have put his side to within a point of their hosts after Gareth Llewellyn was adjudged to have interfered with an All Black jumper at a lineout.

But seconds later, the veteran second row charitably gave the visitors another bite at the cherry as he lost his footing at the breakdown to give Mehrtens another attempt at goal.

This time the No.10 was on target, leaving Wales clinging onto a bare one point lead.

Wales finished the half strongly, winning some quick ball during a thrilling series of attacks, but despite putting width on the ball, the Dragons did not seem to have the necessary muscle to cause a breakthrough in the All Black defensive line.

Despite this lack of penetration, Wales could have stretched their lead right at the end of the first-half, Jones hitting the right-hand post with the kick to let the All Blacks off the hook going into the break.

The early stages of the second-half saw Wales again pinned back into their own 22, Welsh hands on he floor giving Mehrtens the opportunity to kick another three points and put his side into the lead for the first time in the match.

Then, a moment of Welsh opportunism nearly saw another try for Wales, Gareth Thomas and Jamie Robinson hacking on a loose ball to create disarray in the All Black ranks.

But, alas for the home fans, as the ball bounced up to shoulder height, neither Welsh chaser could latch onto the ball and the chance to seize the lead once more was lost.

Injuries to All Black skipper Taine Randell and fullback Ben Blair forced a reorganisation in the New Zealand ranks, Marty Holah and Mark Robinson joining the throng.

This change in personnel seemed to do the trick for the visitors, as the All Blacks struck a killer blow from deep through their fleet-footed backline, Howlett finding acres of space down the lefthand touchline before floating a deft pass to Tana Umaga on his inside.

Umaga looked to be clear but was dragged back by the despairing tackle of Gareth Thomas just a couple of yards short, but was able to off-load to Howlett who streaked over for a well-worked try.

With the clock running down, Welsh replacement Iestyn Harris -- on for Jones at No.10 -- showed his value with two or three flourishes that offered his side some hope of overhauling their opponents.

After uncharacteristically holding onto the ball for multiple phases under the direction of Harris, an immense Welsh scrummage inched towards the New Zealand tryline with Charvis ready to pounce for the pushover.

But with the All Black pack disintegrating into a muddled heap, referee Henning adjudged that a New Zealand boot had illegally kicked the ball out of the scrummage and signalled for a penalty try.  With Harris converting, Wales now had a chance to save the match.

But then, with a minute of injury time already played, Umaga again combined with Howlett to give the winger his second try and end Welsh hopes of ending a 49-year losing streak against New Zealand.

As a lengthy period of injury time continued, New Zealand suddenly hit top gear, blitzing Wales with attacks from all angles in a period of ruthless attacking precision – King and replacement prop Kees Meuws both going over to give an overwhelming winning margin for John Mitchell's side.

After finishing off their tour in such style, this young New Zealand team will return home with an immense feeling of satisfaction and confidence ahead of what could be a momentous year for the All Blacks.

Man of the match:  Doug Howlett.  One man stood head and shoulders above the rest of his fellow players – wing Doug Howlett.  Every time he received the ball, Howlett created problems for the Welsh defence, his outright pace and mazy running ensuring that the opposition never quite knew how to deal with him.

Moment of the Match:  Regan King's try.  All Black outside centre Regan King's debut try resulted from a delightfully slick pass from his midfield partner Tana Umaga and all of New Zealand will be hoping that this will be just the first of many more appearances in the All Black jersey for the gifted Mooloo man.

Villain of the Match:  The Millennium Stadium pitch.  What is the point of having a gleaming, 21st century stadium if your actual playing surface looks like something out of the middle ages.  Full credit to the players for overcoming the limitations of the pitch to produce an absorbing contest, but the WRU must take immediate action to ensure that matters improve before the Six Nations.

The Teams:

New Zealand:  1 Carl Hayman, 2 Keven Mealamu, 3 Tony Woodcock, 4 Keith Robinson, 5 Ali Williams, 6 Daniel Braid, 7 Taine Randell (c), 8 Rodney So'oialo, 9 Steve Devine, 10 Andrew Mehrtens, 11 Doug Howlett, 12 Regan King, 13 Tana Umaga, 14 Jonah Lomu, 15 Ben Blair
Reserves:  Marty Holah, Paul Steinmetz, Kees Meeuws, Brad Mika, Mark Robinson
Unused:  Andrew Hore, Danny Lee

Wales:  1 Iestyn Thomas, 2 Robin McBryde, 3 Ben Evans, 4 Robert Sidoli, 5 Gareth Llewellyn, 6 Dafydd Jones, 7 Martyn Williams, 8 Colin Charvis (c), 9 Dwayne Peel, 10 Stephen Jones, 11 Mark Jones, 12 Sonny Parker, 13 Jamie Robinson, 14 Gareth Thomas, 15 Rhys Williams
Reserves:  Iestyn Harris, Michael Owen, Dafydd James, Garin Jenkins
Unused:  Mefin Davies, Richard Parks, Ryan Powell

Attendance:  72500
Referee:  Henning t.

Points Scorers:

New Zealand
Tries:  Howlett D.C. 2, King R. 1, Meeuws K.J. 1
Conv:  Mehrtens A.P. 4
Pen K.:  Mehrtens A.P. 5

Wales
Tries:  Robinson J.P. 1, Penalty Try 1
Conv:  Jones S.M. 1, Harris I.R. 1
Pen K.:  Jones S.M. 1