Joji Nasova scored two tries and Fiji captured a second consecutive Pacific Nations Cup men’s rugby title yesterday by defeating Japan 33-27 at Salt Lake City, Utah.
Fiji seized a 33-10 lead on Nasova’s try early in the second half, then held off a furious Japan rally over the final minutes in a rematch of last year’s final.
“A dream come true,” Nasova said.
Photo: AP
The Fijians stretched their record Cup title total to seven and took the event’s first back-to-back crowns since they won four in a row from 2015 to 2018.
“We overcame a tough Japanese side that came back on us in the second half,” Fiji captain Tevita Ikanivere said. “Proud of the pace they had and the discipline they brought, proud of the boys just working hard for each other.”
Fiji, which routed host Japan 41-17 in last year’s final, kept the Japanese from hoisting the trophy for a fourth time.
“It’s a final. There are no positives when you don’t get the result you want,” Japan coach Eddie Jones said. “For our young team it’s a hard pill to swallow. We played well in the second half but let Fiji get away too far in the first half.”
Fiji coach Mick Byrne was excited about defending the trophy.
“It was tough today,” he said. “It feels great to have the opportunity to take the Cup back home.”
“[It was] just the fight we had at the end. We were down a couple cards. Things didn’t seem to be going our way out on the field but the boys dug deep, defended well under a bit of pressure and had some composure to come back at the end and control the game,” he added.
In the third-place match, Patrick Pellegrini scored three tries and kicked five conversions to lead Tonga over Canada 35-24 for their best showing in the event since 2018.
“It’s a massive step up,” Pellegrini said.
Canada’s Peter Nelson had a try, a penalty-kick and three conversions.
In the first leg of a 2027 Rugby World Cup qualifier, Chile and Samoa played to a 32-32 draw.
The two-leg aggregate series to determine the penultimate qualifier for the showdown in Australia is to be completed next weekend in Chile.
In the championship match, Japan seized the initiative when Hayate Era beat a defender down the sideline for a try in the fifth minute and Lee Seung-sin’s first conversion and a penalty in the 20th made it 10-0.
Fiji answered quickly with Mesake Vocevoce’s try in the 21st minute and a Caleb Muntz conversion.
Inia Tabuavou’s try in the 31st minute gave Fiji the lead for good and converted tries by Ikanivere in the 35th minute and Nasova in the 40th boosted the halftime lead to 26-10.
Nasova capped a spectacular Fiji breakaway run with a try early in the second half, but Ichigo Nakakusu answered with a try for Japan in the 47th minute.
Era scored his second try in the 60th minute with Fiji’s Viliame Mata in the sin bin and Lee converted to lift Japan within 33-24.
Eroni Mawi was sent off for Fiji in the 64th and Lee kicked a 40m penalty in the 65th to bring Japan within the final margin.
“A bit disappointed. We probably let them get too much ahead of us in the first half and we couldn’t bring it back in the second,” Japan captain Warner Dearns said. “But I thought the way our boys fought was unreal. Awesome effort.”
San Francisco Giants pitcher Teng Kai-wei impressed against the Arizona Diamondbacks on Monday despite an 8-1 loss in the opener of the team’s nine-game road trip. Teng, the only Taiwanese pitcher active in MLB, struck out five while allowing two hits and one walk over four innings at Chase Field to finish with a no decision, as the teams were tied 1-1 when he finished his outing. He surrendered the lone run of his outing in the bottom of the first, which began with a walk, a hit-by-pitch and two strikeouts. Diamondbacks leadoff hitter Geraldo Perdomo advanced to third on
New Zealand yesterday basked in “amazing” athletics glory after winning two gold medals in as many days at the World Athletics Championships in Tokyo. Geordie Beamish on Monday claimed New Zealand’s first track gold in history with a shock victory in the 3,000m steeplechase, while high jumper Hamish Kerr followed with gold on Tuesday to make it an unprecedented double success for a country much better known for rugby than its prowess in track and field. Before this week, the country had won only six golds in total at the championships. Yesterday morning New Zealand were in the giddy position of fourth on
After Shohei Ohtani on Tuesday pitched five hitless innings for the Los Angeles Dodgers, the Philadelphia Phillies’ Rafael Marchon hit a tiebreaking, three-run homer off Blake Treinen with two outs in the ninth inning for a 9-6 win. Brandon Marsh had a two-run homer and Max Kepler added a solo shot in a six-run sixth for Philadelphia. Ohtani’s 50th homer leading off the eighth helped the Dodgers tie the game 6-6. The Phillies erased a 4-0 deficit against Justin Wrobleski in another stunning collapse by the Dodgers bullpen. Philadelphia rallied for four runs in the seventh and eighth innings and another in the
PHOTO FINISH: The finish was closer than at the 2001 championships in Canada, when Ethiopian Gezahegne Abera edged Kenyan Simon Biwott by a single second Alphonce Felix Simbu yesterday snatched gold in the first photo finish at a major championship marathon, edging out German Amanal Petros in a dramatic race to the line to give Tanzania its maiden world title. The photo finish showed the 42.195km race was decided by three hundredths of a second as Simbu surged past the diving Petros at the line, closer than the 0.05-second gap between the gold and silver medalists in the men’s 100m final on Sunday. Simbu and Petros were given the same time of 2 hours, 9 minutes and 48 seconds, the German taking the silver despite