Tournament has had it all
England and South Africa square up to each other today to determine who will be crowned champions at Japan’s first Rugby World Cup. The Asian nation’s staging of the event, which kicked off on September 20, has been a huge success. Here are five of the more memorable moments.
The ‘V’
Some teams are already psychologically beaten by the time the All Blacks reach the end of their haka. Not Eddie Jones’ England, not this time. At the start of their semifinal the English players embraced the traditional Maori ceremonial challenge with a v-shape formation of their own before kick-off. Outgoing All Blacks coach Steve Hansen described England’s response as both brilliant and imaginative, but World Rugby bosses were less impressed, fining the Rugby Football Union £2 000 as some of their players had crossed the halfway line in breach of protocol. Incredible Japan
Japan’s group-stage victory over the Irish was another incredible win in the mould of their 2015 “Miracle of Brighton” felling of South Africa. But beating Scotland to reach the quarterfinals was the next level. On an emotional night at Yokohama Stadium, the Brave Blossoms scored four tries to beat a team they had lost against in all seven of their previous meetings, reaching the knockout stages for the first time. The victory was one for the ages, and lifted a nation still reeling from the deadly impact of Typhoon Hagibis.
David and Goliath
There have been few more stark mis-matches than the sight of diminutive scrumhalf Faf de Klerk squaring up to man-mountain Jake Ball in South Africa’s semifinal against Wales. A dire game sparked into life in the 45th minute when simmering tensions briefly boiled over leaving the
1.72m Springbok leaning up into his 1.97m opponent who grabbed De Klerk’s collar. The pair were quickly separated, but the image spawned dozens of memes, some set to romantic music.
Canadian gents
Canada left Japan without a win on the rugby field, but they won over an entire nation by helping to clean up flood-ravaged parts of Kamaishi following Typhoon Hagibis. The Canadians’ last game against Namibia was cancelled due to the typhoon with landslides and flooding affecting the area near the stadium. Instead the Canadian team visited places hit by the typhoon and helped sweep streets and clean out elderly residents’ flood-damaged homes.
Kabuki roar
The comically blood curdling Kabuki roar... imitated by many, mastered by few, the loud, prolonged shout was a firm favourite with fans inside the stadiums. The scream, heard at every restart, was accompanied by a cartoon head peeping up from the bottom of the scoreboard. The traditional Japanese taiko drumming at the beginning of each match also con- tributed to the very Japanese fla- vour of this tournament.