The New Zealand Herald

Quarters opponent still in doubt

- Patrick McKendry in Tokyo

The All Blacks have officially qualified for the quarter-finals of the Rugby World Cup following the cancellati­on yesterday of their final pool match against Italy in Toyota City tomorrow, a move prompted by the danger of the approachin­g Typhoon Hagibis, a violent weather condition which could turn this tournament upside down.

With the match declared a 0-0 draw, Steve Hansen’s men take two points and will finish on top of Pool B ahead of South Africa. The England v France match in Yokohama tomorrow has also been cancelled, but, like the All Blacks, both nations qualify regardless, with England topping Pool C above France. Tickets will be refunded, according to the organisers.

At this stage all other matches will proceed as normal, including Ireland v Samoa in Fukuoka tomorrow and Japan v Scotland in Yokohama on Sunday, which means the All Blacks’ quarter-final opponents are yet to be establishe­d.

The highly-anticipate­d fixture involving the unbeaten hosts is crucial for the knockout phase ambitions of Scotland, in particular, because if that game is also cancelled the Scots are going home.

The All Blacks needed only a losing bonus point to qualify but will be adversely affected, as will the tournament, because the step-up in difficulty against the Italians, poorlyperf­orming members of the Six Nations but members neverthele­ss, will have been factored into their quarter-final preparatio­ns.

They must now swiftly change their conditioni­ng plans as well as their accommodat­ion requiremen­ts, because they were due to travel to Nagoya, 300km south of Tokyo, today and return on Sunday. They will now remain in Tokyo and presumably thrash themselves on the training pitch tomorrow.

According to the Japan Times, the approachin­g typhoon, due to hit the eastern side of the country tomorrow night, has been gathering strength in the Pacific and has been rated as equivalent in force to a Category 5 hurricane.

The newspaper quoted meteorolog­ist Robert Speta, a typhoon expert who works for the US Navy in Florida, as saying the storm had gone through an “explosive intensific­ation”. Torrential rain and winds of well over 140km/h are expected.

“The storm went from a tropical storm to a violent typhoon in the matter of hours. In fact it was an historic amount of intensific­ation in such a short time,” Speta said. “This only happens when all the right ingredient­s are in place. Like if you had a fire and instead of throwing gasoline on it to make it bigger you also grabbed some lighter fluid, a bit of oil and a couple of aerosol cans for good measure.”

The two games are the first to be called off in Rugby World Cup history, although there was a precedent of sorts in 2011 when the World Cup games in Christchur­ch were scheduled elsewhere following the earthquake­s.

Should the All Blacks, England or France win the final on November 2 their victory may be forever tainted by their playing only six matches rather than seven.

The cancellati­ons are also likely to distress the tournament hosts and their supporters who have been unfailingl­y gracious and polite so far.

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