The Six
Nations Championship moved on to “le crunch” for Wales as the French would have
it. A trip to HQ at Twickenham is never easy but with the rain coming down it
was going to be doubly difficult for Wales to derail the English chariot.
I took my
place on the couch and was soon squirming as England’s kicking game combined
with some ferocious forward drives made it look like they were going to
dispatch the Welsh quite comfortably. How we missed Halfpenny’s defensive nous
as a brilliant kick from Farrell found acres of space and allowed May to cross
virtually unopposed. I had turned the sound down and was heading behind the
couch as May scored his second after a powerful set of phases from the English
pack. It was 12-0 and, even though I am not a lip reader, I could tell that “Swing
Low” was blaring out. Oh dear, oh dear. To make matters worse Wales were making
Mike Brown look a world beater with their ineffective kicking.
It had to
get better for Wales and it did. A few kickable (for a Halfpenny) penalty
chances went begging and then Wales seemed to have scored a try when Anscombe
won the race to touch down a loose ball over the English line. Sadly the TMO
was the only person who thought it wasn’t a try and his was the opinion that
counted – bah! Wales did however gather three points from the original penalty.
Wales kept England out for the rest of the half and at 12-3 were still in touch
at the interval.
Wales did
play much better in the second half and as they exerted pressure England began
to look more and more fallible. Wales did everything they could to close the
gap. Scott Williams was stopped in the act of scoring by a brilliant tackle by
Underhill and the support did not quite arrive in time to turn Shingler’s
stunning break into a try. As it turned out, the only points scored in the
second half were from an Anscombe penalty which made the final score 12-6 to
England. Sadly for the Welsh there had been no Wembley moment. The combined
English sigh of relief could be heard in Pontypool.
I thought
the Welsh pack went very well looking comfortable in the set piece and even
managing to snaffle the ball in an English lineout or two. The English forwards
did look powerful in their driving play but the Welsh defended stoutly. A
couple of dropped balls apart, the Welsh pack carried strongly particularly in
the second half as the English began to wilt. The Welsh half backs were put
under a lot of pressure and found it tough going especially in the first half. Maybe
those nasty comments from Uncle Eddie did have an effect. When Anscombe moved
to outside half things improved and he had his most influential spell for Wales.
In the backs, defences were on top with few opportunities created by either side
as the conditions were far from ideal for attacking rugby. Farrell looked the
class act on the field with his tactical awareness shining out in the gloom.
Wales did look vulnerable under the high ball and missed the expertise of
Halfpenny, Liam Williams and Biggar in this crucial area. They can expect many
more high balls from Murray and Sexton in Dublin in a couple of weeks’ time.
If this
had been a Champions Cup match, Wales would have been delighted to come away
from Twickenham with a losing bonus point. They would have felt that they would
be able to catch up in the corresponding home fixture. It is, however, one of
the quirks of the Six Nations that the teams only play once and the split of
home and away fixtures often determines the champions. Perhaps they should tot
up the points after two seasons.
The Irish
were far too strong for the Italians in Dublin and looked far more like their
formidable selves than they had in Paris last weekend. Wales can expect another
torrid encounter when they cross the Irish Sea.
Sadly
Pontypool’s friendly against Maesteg Celtic had to be called off yesterday due
to the weather but hopefully they will be in action next weekend when they are
due to visit Beddau. This has always proved to be a tough fixture and Pooler
will have to be on their mettle.
Hard luck
Wales and come on Pooler!
No comments:
Post a Comment