Shanghai Daily

6-try Samoa exploits tired Russians as 3 see yellow

- RUGBY UNION

SAMOA survived being reduced to 13 men for almost 10 minutes in the first half and struggled to overcome a limited and exhausted Russia team to open its Pool A campaign with a bonus-point 34-9 victory in Kumagaya yesterday.

The Pacific islanders scored six tries but did themselves no favors in a scrappy game that saw Rey Lee-Lo and Motu Matu’u shown yellow cards for high tackles within two minutes of each other, while Russia’s Kirill Gotovtsev was also sinbinned for a similar offense.

“It was a tough game, we knew the Russians were going to come in the first 20-40 minutes, we just had to stick it out and I’m really proud of the way the boys came back in the second half. We’re here to create a legacy,” captain Chris Vui said in a pitchside interview.

They will have to be a lot more accurate to stand any chance of matching the trailblazi­ng Samoan quarterfin­als of the 1990s with Scotland, Japan and Ireland to come, even after some impressive­ly worked tries for Lee-Lo, Afaesetiti Amosa and two each for wingers Alapati Leiua and Ed Fidow.

After going at Japan hard in the tournament’s opening game and giving the hosts a scare in the process, the Russians set out with the same gameplan and again found themselves in the lead early on in front of a crowd packed with enthusiast­ic local fans.

The noticeably fresher Samoans struck first though after a fine skip pass from Tim Nanai-Williams found Leiua and the Bristol man, who shifted to the wing in a late injury-enforced change, jinked his way over in the corner.

But the Russian setpiece and kicking game that concerned Samoa coach Steve Jackson before kickoff tested his side’s discipline and as the penalty count ticked up, Russia flyhalf Yury Kushnarev knocked two over for a 6-5 lead.

With World Rugby publicly criticizin­g the officiatin­g over the first weekend of the World Cup shortly before kick off, Romain Poite had a decision to make on 28 minutes when center Lee-Lo went in high on Russia captain Vasily Artemyev.

Poite and his television match official deemed that Artemyev had dipped slightly into the tackle and made the same call two minutes later when a near identical tackle sent hooker Matu’u to the bin.

Their opponents were unable to make anything from the two-man advantage.

Amosa put the Samoans back in front with a try just after the break and Gotvotsev’s yellow card for catching him high just as he was about to score ended Amosa’s night, too, after his knee buckled in the collision.

(Reuters)

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China