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Jones kicks Wales past Tonga
Wales scraped home 27-20 against ardent Tonga on a rainy Sunday evening in Canberra. The Sea Eagles from the South Pacific outscored Wales by three tries to two and ended the match on hectic attack. In the end, Stephen Jones kicking won it for the Welsh.
Tonga give Wales a huge fright
Wales scraped home 27-20 against ardent Tonga on a rainy Sunday evening in Canberra. The Sea Eagles from the South Pacific outscored Wales by three tries to two and ended the match on hectic attack. In the end, kicking won it for the Welsh.
The kicking was erratic - more so by Tonga than by Wales. Stephen Jones missed three in a row for Wales, but they were harder than the three Pierre Hola missed for Tonga.
Already in the first half it looked as if Tonga were about to set up an upset. Down 11-3 they had a period of determined attack which ended when Pierre Hola grubbered through, Rhys Williams could not hold onto the ball and Hola scored to make it 11-10.
Soon afterwards Hola had a kick from in front but sent it sailing left. A blow for the men from the Friendly Islands.
Tonga certainly gave as good as they got in the first half as they flung their shoulders into Welsh flesh, but penalties lashed them. In that first half the penalties flowed 9-3 against them. Things got better in that regard late in the second half as the Welsh strained for survival.
Stephen Jones scored from the second penalty when the Tongans were ruled off-side when they snagged Gareth Coopers hand after the Welsh scrum-half had picked up behind a ruck.
Five minutes later Hola levelled the scores when Dafydd Jones doubly deserved a penalty - slapping the ball as he lay on the ground at a tackle and slapping it into touch. With his left foot Hola goaled the difficult kick.
Wales attacked with vigour and Ben Hur Kivalu was penalised for not moving off a tackle and Stephen Jones made it 6-3.
The rugby was scrappy on the slippery evening, except for three incisions by the fullbacks - two by Sila Vaenuku of Tonga and one by Rhys Williams of Wales.
Then, from a scrum Cooper went scuttling away on an unmarked blindside for a try in the corner. That made it 11-3 after 26 minutes, and Wales looked set fare for comfortable victory. That is when their troubles started.
Outside centre Sukanaivalu Hufanga had an exciting dash down the Tonga right and footed ahead but the situation was saved for Wales when the wicked ball broke right into touch. Tom Shanklin came close to scoring just before half-time, but Wales had to be satisfied with a penalty to go into the break leading 14-10.
From the kick-off it became 17-10 as the Tongans knocked the kick-off and then played it in an off-side position.
There was a thrilling moment when big Gareth Llewellyn had a run but sparkling fullback Sila Vaenuku intercepted and raced down the Tongan right. But as for Hufanga in the first half, the ball did the wicked thing and broke into touch.
Wales nearly got their second try when they sent the ball left from a line-out and Rhys Williams, up from fullback, lunged at the line with Sione Fonua clinging to him with help from lively Sililo Martens. The Television Match Official examined the evidence several times before deciding on a five-metre scrum.
Wales kept up the attack and when the referee declared advantage, replacement flank Martyn Williams kicked a wobbly drop-goal from close-in - 20-10.
Then the Tongans scored a marvellous try of effort and cohesion. Replacement forward Milton Ngauamo won a line-out and the Tongans marched it on and on and on and over the goalline for a try credited to captain Kivalu. Hola missed again but the score was 20-15 with 16 minutes to play.
Wales extended their lead soon afterwards when Iestyn Harris, who was not meant to be starting in this game, floated a long pass over the heads to Martyn Williams who scored on the right. Stephen Jones converted - 27-15 with 13 minutes left.
This was a time of grievous anxiety for the Welsh as Viliami Vaki, athletic lock, broke down the middle and the Tongans flung themselves into the attack till eventually powerful prop Heamani Lavaka plunged over in the corner. It was 27-20 with two minutes left.
Oh, how the Tongans tried. But though they appeared filled with nervous agitation the Welsh managed to hang on and heaved a deep sigh of relief when the final whistle went.
Man of the match: The choice is entirely Tongan. Scrum-half Sililo Martens, surely the only Welsh-speaking Tongan in the world, was full of effort, skill, strength and determination, but really it cannot but go to Sila Vaenuku, the fullback who was originally chosen on the bench.
Moment of the match: That massive, marching maul that took the Tongans to Ben Hur Kivalus try. Even the halves joined in. The Sea Eagles enjoyed that.
Villain of the match: None, not even Stanley Afeaki who wobbled a ball towards a Welshman and incurred a talking to for Ipolito Fenukatau who looked nothing like Afeaki!
The scorers:
For Wales: Tries: Cooper, M Williams Con: S Jones Pens: S Jones 4 DG: M Williams
For Tonga: Tries: Hola, Kivalu, Lavaka Con: Hola Pen: Hola
The teams:
Wales: 15 Rhys Williams, 14 Mark Jones, 13 Mark Taylor, 12 Iestyn Harris, 11 Tom Shanklin, 10 Stephen Jones, 9 Gareth Cooper (Dwayne Peel, 53), 8 Alex Popham (Martyn Williams, 59), 7 Colin Charvis (captain), 6 Dafydd Jones, 5 Robert Sidoli, 4 Gareth Llewellyn (Chris Wyatt, 57), 3 Gethin Jenkins, 2 Mefin Davies (Huw Bennett, 71), 1 Iestyn Thomas (Adam Jones, 63). Unused replacements: 21 Shane Williams, 22 Garan Evans.
Tonga: 15 Sila Vaenuku, 14 Sione Fonua, 13 Sukanaivalu Hufanga, 12 John Payne, 11 Tevita Tuifua, 10 Pierre Hola, 9 Sililo Martens, 8 Benhur Kivalu (captain), 7 Stanley Afeaki (Milton Ngauamo, 63), 6 Ipolito Fenukatau (Nisifolo Naufahu, 72), 5 Viliami Vaki, 4 Usaia Latu, 3 Heamani Lavaka, 2 Viliami Maasi (Ephram Taukafa, 70), 1 Kisi Pulu (Tonga Leaaetoa, 71). Unused replacements: 20 David Palu, 21 Sateka Tuiipulotu, 22 Gus Leger.
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