Wales took advantage of a disjointed Fiji to run in nine tries in a 66-0 thrashing at the Waikato Stadium yesterday to confidently march into the World Cup quarter-finals.
Four tries came in the first half with five in the second as Wales secured second place in Pool D behind holders South Africa and set-up a quarter-final against Six Nations rivals Ireland in Wellington.
“We said we wanted to be ruthless from the first minute to the 80th. Credit to Fiji, but our defense held strong and that was the target for us,” Wales captain Sam Warburton said in an interview. “We played the game in the right areas and to get 66 points, we can’t complain about that.”
Wales had only needed a point against Fiji, who had made 10 changes to their side in fielding a number of fringe players, to reach the last eight and they showed little mercy to record their biggest World Cup win on a wet night in Hamilton.
Welsh inside center Jamie Roberts produced another strong display and was the first to take advantage of some flimsy Fijian defending to step inside and hand off a tackler to cross for the opening try in the sixth minute.
Flyhalf Rhys Priestland slotted the conversion, the first of 11 points from the boot, before most-capped Wales international Stephen Jones came on in the second half and added eight more.
Winger George North was the pick of the Welsh backs and his quick hands sent center Scott Williams through for the second try in the 17th minute before he crossed himself on the half hour despite what looked like a forward pass in the build-up.
Fiji beat Wales 38-34 in the pool stage of the 2007 World Cup to reach the quarter-finals at the expense of their Six Nations rivals, but that result was never likely to be replicated this time around.
The Fijians had looked ragged in earlier Pool D defeats by Samoa and South Africa and were painfully slow to get to the breakdown yesterday as they constantly had the ball turned over.
Their set-piece fared no better with their scrum either penalized or sent backwards routinely and the lineout misfiring, which appeared to demoralize them.
North took advantage and another linebreak and neat pass sent Warburton over for the bonus point try just on the halftime whistle as Wales went in 31-0 ahead.
The Pacific Islanders, who had a slim chance of reaching the last eight if they had beaten Wales by 85 points, started the second half brightly, but the Welsh were again celebrating a try as rain began to fall heavily.
Once again the impressive North broke through and, after an exchange of passes with Priestland, Roberts jogged under the posts for his second try.
Replacement hooker Lloyd Burns bulldozed his way over for another as both sides made a flurry of changes.
Fiji’s substitutes also struggled as Welsh winger Leigh Halfpenny gratefully ran in an easy score in the 68th minute after Fijian back Albert James Vulivuli slipped and injured himself attempting to pick up the ball in his 22.
Replacement scrumhalf Lloyd Williams scored a neat try after a dart from another strong scrum with fellow substitute Jonathan Davies completing the try scoring by barging through in the 81st minute as Fiji tired.
“It is a result that we are certainly not proud of,” Fiji coach Samu Domoni said in a pitchside interview. “The high mistake rate in the game was reflected in the scoreline and we’re very disappointed.”
US national team star Folarin Balogun was among the scorers as AS Monaco on Friday won 3-1 at Paris Saint-Germain, dealing a blow to the side from the French capital before they face Chelsea in a crunch UEFA Champions League round-of-16 tie. Maghnes Akliouche gave Monaco a first-half lead at the Parc des Princes, and Aleksandr Golovin doubled their advantage early in the second half of the French Ligue 1 clash. Bradley Barcola pulled one back for the reigning European champions, but Balogun struck shortly after with a fifth goal in his last five games as Monaco claimed a precious
West Ham United on Monday advanced to the FA Cup quarter-finals with a 5-3 penalty shoot-out win against Brentford, who paid the price for Dango Ouattara’s spot-kick blunder. Nuno Espirito Santo’s side twice blew the lead as Jarrod Bowen’s double was canceled out by an Igor Thiago brace to force extra-time in the 2-2 draw at the London Stadium, but in the shoot-out, Brentford winger Ouattara attempted a chipped Panenka penalty, but his woeful effort was straight at West Ham goalkeeper Alphonse Areola. It was an awful mistake by the Burkina Faso international and West Ham took full advantage. Bowen, Valentin Castellanos, Callum
Teenage star Lamine Yamal’s superbly-taken goal on Saturday earned Barcelona a 1-0 win at Athletic Bilbao in Spanish La Liga. The champions restored their four-point lead over second-placed Real Madrid, who had on Friday temporarily closed the gap by beating Celta Vigo. Atletico Madrid tightened their grip on third with an entertaining 3-2 win over Real Sociedad. Yamal, 18, curled into the top corner after 68 minutes to split the sides at Athletic’s San Mames stadium. “We’re already seeing what Lamine can do — he puts it right in the top corner, and there’s nothing the keeper can do,” Barca
Thanks to Italy beating Mexico on Wednesday, the US get another chance in the World Baseball Classic (WBC). What looked like a potentially disastrous early exit for US manager Mark DeRosa and his team turned out to be nothing more than substantial worry and significant embarrassment for about 24 hours. It remains to be seen whether the US really want to win badly enough for the reprieve to matter, as if it is just a switch they can flick, but there is little reason for their fans to be optimistic. The team’s attitude and behavior have been all over the place when