Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Wales beat Australia in thriller to take control of Pool ‘D’

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Six Nations champions Wales took a massive step towards topping Pool ‘D’ with a thrilling 29-25 victory over valiant Australia in the Rugby World Cup yesterday.

The Welsh were 23-8 ahead at half-time but they had to withstand a furious second-half onslaught when Australia fought back to within a point late in the game.

Wales, 43-14 winners over Georgia in their opener, will now be confident of finishing their pool unbeaten, with their next opponents Fiji in Oita on October 9 before taking on Uruguay in Kumamoto four days later.

An electric game full of enterprisi­ng, interlinki­ng play from both sides on a balmy late afternoon in the Japanese capital made for a marvelous spectacle of running rugby. The 47,885-strong crowd had barely taken their seats after the anthems when Wales were on the scoreboard.

The ubiquitous Aaron Wainwright turned over esteemed Wallaby jackler Michael Hooper from the kick-off, Gareth Davies finding Dan Biggar in the box for a straightfo­rward drop-goal with just 37 seconds on the clock.

Biggar went wide on his first penalty attempt minutes later as Wales continued to attack with fluidity, George North being brought down with the line begging.

The largely red and yellow crowd at Tokyo Stadium traded respective ballads,‘hymns and Arias’ for ‘Waltzing Matilda’ with mutual applause for both renditions.a hearty round of collective boos, however, rang out when an image of England coach Eddie Jones was shown on the big screen.

Biggar spurned a second shot at goal as Wales looked to build on their momentum.the ball was quickly recycled from the attacking line-out, Biggar putting in an inchperfec­t crosskick that Hadleigh Parkes gathered, the Kiwi-born centre outleaping Marika Koroibete and spinning past Dane Haylett-petty to dot down in the corner.the Welsh flyhalf hit the extras but saw a second, long-range drop-goal go wide.

Hooper escaped punishment for a late, high hit on Biggar, French referee Romain Poite deciding a penalty was sufficient.

Wales lost their throw-in from the kick, handing Australia the chance to fire back down the pitch, a Parkes tackle on opposite number Samu Kerevi preventing a sure try. The Wallaby forwards arrived en masse, and with the Welsh defence scrambling, Bernard Foley crosskicke­d perfectly to veteran Adam Ashley-cooper, the winger stepping inside Josh Adams with aplomb to scramble over for a deserved try. -AFP

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Action from the match

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