The final
leg of the Welsh Autumn Attrition Series saw Wales take on South Africa in the
Principality Stadium. Both teams needed a win but neither were at anything like
full strength with long injury lists and shorn of the gold diggers plying their
trade in the rich feeding grounds of England and France.
Wales
started brilliantly and had registered two converted tries before the
Springboks had wiped the sleep out of their eyes. Two great kicks by Biggar led
to tries for Williams and new cap Parkes. Wow! The spectators from both
persuasions were completely stunned. This can’t be slow-starting Wales can it?
It got
even better when Parkes scored his second try after a charged down kick to make
Wales runaway leaders at 21-3. Wales had managed to keep the ball away from the
bigger and stronger Springbok forwards and that surely couldn’t last could it? The
answer, of course, was no it couldn’t. As we had feared before the match, the
Welsh scrum was an Achilles heel. Wales seemed to give a penalty away at every
scrum and of course their possession and territory statistics plummeted.
The period
either side of half time saw the South Africans dominate proceedings and the Welsh
lead shrink alarmingly. Tries by Gelant and Pollard left Wales looking very
vulnerable as the Springbok forwards took control. Worse was to come when the
Springboks deservedly took the lead at 21-22 after a converted try from Kriel.
The Welsh midfield
general Biggar had left the field with an injury and it looked like the home
side were heading for defeat as they seemed to lack direction. Wales were
fortunate to be able to call upon the experienced Rhys Web from the bench and
he together with the last vestiges of gas left in the Wyn Jones’ tank helped Wales
to regroup. They worked their way down field and gleefully accepted a Halfpenny
penalty which saw them regain the lead at 24-22.
The last
minutes of the game were pure agony as the South Africans marched inexorably
towards the Welsh line. Somehow Wales managed to turn the ball over in the nick
of time but it still meant another trial for their creaking scrum. This time it
just about held and an excellent relieving kick from Webb and a great kick
chase saw Wales home. We must find a way to keep Webb in the fold!
If the
quality of the match was patchy, the excitement level was high. A win was very important
however it came and the Welsh fans went away happy. At the time it certainly
didn’t matter that this Springboks team is a shadow of the powerhouses of
yesteryear – a win is a win.
Gatland
and his cohort will have plenty to think about before the Six Nations. First
concern will be the injury list which will, of course, cut down the options
available. With a clean bill of health there looks to be a highly competitive
team in the making. Sadly the Lions’ tour and the taxing autumn programme are a
big drain on resources. The bright spots in the autumn were the re-emergence of
Hallam Amos, the ball handling of Rob Evans, the industry of Josh Navidi and the
nous of Hadleigh Parkes and Owain Williams. First up in the Six Nations will be
the visit of resurgent Scotland – sure to be a stern test. The second half in
Murrayfield in last season’s match still gives me nightmares.
Pontypool
get back down to business next weekend - thank goodness. Trebanos, the visitors
to Pontypool Park, have made a great impression on the Championship after
promotion last season. They certainly gave Pooler plenty to think about in the
away fixture. On Friday, Pontypool were denied the opportunity of a run out
against Talywain by the weather. Nevertheless they should be raring to go after
the lay-off.
Come on
Pooler!
No comments:
Post a Comment