I had taken the precaution of moving the couch forward
on Saturday evening. I had to make sure there was room behind it if the going
in the England v Wales game got tough. Strong drink was also near at hand. Yes,
I feared that things could go badly for Wales. In the sweep I had Wales to lose
by ten points. Of course, we Welsh do tend towards pessimism – it is a national
pastime. It is only a two horse race and in sport anything can happen. If we can
but only stay in touch, we can sneak it at the end as we have done before. Here
was a welcome ripple of optimism from the room as I settled down.
From the first whistle, it was clear that England were
going to bring brutality to the game. Dan Biggar was public enemy number one
and the kick off was perfectly judged for him to receive the ball along with a
posse of fired-up large men in white. The video ref probably hadn’t had time to
take his seat and get the TV warmed up as it looked mightily like a few no
hands tackles were involved.
This set the tone for the first half with the fearsome
English defence rocking the Welsh players back at every opportunity. This
coupled with expert box kicking from Youngs which meant that the Welsh catchers
were receiving man and ball was making me wince. England got the early try they
wanted when Watson jinked his way over and I was all but heading for my haven
behind the couch. England’s try meister May had to leave the field with a head
injury. Rather cynically, England kept the clearly injured May on the field
while they got Slade ready to come on as a replacement.
Wales to their great credit stuck to their task
manfully and kicked a couple of penalties to stay in the game. England
continued to dominate the collisions though and it was no great surprise when
they scored their second try when Daly outflanked the Welsh defence. Fortunately
for Wales while England have a potent back division, they seem reluctant to use
it unless they have a penalty advantage.
A 40th minute penalty from Biggar meant
that at half time Wales were 20-9 behind but still in touch. It could have been
a lot worse! In fact, if North had held on to a ball on the English line it could
even have been better.
Wales needed a fast start after the interval and by
George they got it. Straight from the kick-off some lovely running from
Tompkins, scrum half Williams and Tipuric saw Tipuric score under the posts
within thirty seconds of the restart. 20-16 and Wales were flying.
Pragmatic England used their forward power to gain a
couple of penalties that were duly converted and soon Wales were back to square
one at 26-16 with a mountain to climb. Worse was to come as the substitutes’ benches
were emptied and England added fresh beef. A powerful surge from England saw
Tuilagi score unopposed and England were well clear at 33-16 with twenty
minutes to go.
From then on, it was mostly Wales on the offensive
with the England defence looking to negate their frenzied attacks. Time was
running out as England gave away a raft of penalties with Wales hammering away at
their line. The referee lost patience and a yellow card was shown to Genge.
Worse still for England, moments later, Tuilagi was shown a red card for a
dangerous tackle on North. England were down to thirteen men with five minutes
or so left. Too little time for a miraculous win but Wales seized the
opportunity to run in two tries from Biggar and Tipuric and gain the losing
bonus point with the final score 33-30.
In truth, England were the dominant force and, while Wales
played some great rugby at times, English power and pragmatism won the day. They
win the Triple Crown so congratulations to them. After a brutal encounter, Wales
will be battered and bruised and with the Scotland game only a week away there
will be some enforced changes that is for sure. The coaching team will have a
busy week but I must say there are some encouraging signs that their approach is
beginning to look effective.
The two main topics of conversation after the game
seemed to be the Marler “bag snatching” incident on Alun Wyn Jones and Eddie’s
rant about the red card. True to form, Marler and Eddie are never far from
controversy.
Well done to the Wales Under 20’s on their fine
victory over their English counterparts. Wales outside half Costelow certainly
looks a great prospect.
I was really sad to hear of the passing of Matthew J Watkins.
My condolences to his family and friends.
As for Pontypool, my withdrawal symptoms are getting
worse. The next match is not until the 21st March when we take on
Tata Steel. With the Six Nations over it will be back down to the important
stuff and the battle for promotion with Bargoed. Bargoed’s bonus point victory
at Neath in the week leaves then just five points behind Pooler with both
having played sixteen games. There is still a lot of rugby to be played with
ten games left including “le Crunch” -the Bargoed v Pontypool match. Hold on to
your hats it’s going to be some ride!
Come on Pooler!
Come on Wales!