Stay up to date with notifications from The Independent

Notifications can be managed in browser preferences.

Liveupdated

Wales vs Australia LIVE: Rugby result, final score and Autumn Nations Series 2021 reaction

The hosts prevailed on a dramatic night at the Principality Stadium thanks to Rhys Priestland’s late penalty

Jamie Braidwood
Sunday 21 November 2021 04:08 EST
Comments
Wales v Australia: Dan Biggar press conference

Wales‘ Rhys Priestland kicked a penalty after the hooter as the hosts poured more misery on Australia with a 29-28 victory at the Principality Stadium on Saturday following an early red card for visiting number eight Rob Valetini.

Valetini became the fifth player to see red against Wales in the last 12 months but could have few complaints after his dangerous tackle on lock Adam Beard after 14 minutes resulted in a clash of heads.

Hooker Ryan Elias and centre Nick Tompkins scored tries for the home side, who failed to drive home their numerical advantage and were seconds away from losing before they were awarded an offside penalty in the last play of the game.

Australia, who have lost all three matches on their tour after defeats by Scotland and England, scored tries through wings Andrew Kellaway and Filipo Daugunu, plus scrumhalf Nic White but, having highlighted the need to improve their discipline in the week, let themselves down again.

Scotland 0-0 Japan, 1 minute

Ryohei Yamanaka misjudges the first clearance from Scotland towards him but atones with a lovely shimmy beyond Darcy Graham, allowing Japan to attack near halfway. They play wide straightaway, full-back Yamanaka gathering a slightly risky pass well to keep the movement going. Good tempo from Japan.

Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 13:03

KICK OFF!

Rikiya Matsuda has the ball in his hands, ready for the starting gun in the form of the long blast on the whistle from Brendon Pickerill, the referee at Murrayfield. Pickerill peeps, Matsuda hoists high, and the game is underway.

Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 13:02

Scotland vs Japan - Here we go...

Two normally adventurous sides and a dry enough day in Edinburgh - this could be a lot of fun.

Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 13:01

Scottish national anthem

A bag-piper on the roof leads Murrayfield in the singing of “Flower of Scotland” - it must be awfully airy up there. The Scottish squad are also in fine voice, supported well, as ever, by what looks a capacity Scottish crowd. Plenty of smiles from the home side - their captain Stuart Hogg has barely stopped grinning since he stepped out.

Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 12:59

"Kimigayo"

Japan’s players stand proudly for their national anthem, most singing. Kotaro Matushima’s more slender frame is buried beneath a big training parka, but most are bare-armed.

Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 12:57

Scotland emerge

Stuart Hogg charges out of the Murrayfield tunnel, smiling as his teammates follow along behind. Finn Russell shakes the morning crick out of his neck, a big yawn as he settles in beneath the dissipating smoke left by the now ubiquitous greeting flamethrowers.

Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 12:56

Out of the tunnel

Out come the players, Japan first, led by Pieter “Lappies” Labuschagne. This Japan unit hasn’t quite fired yet this autumn, and were scratchier than they would have liked against a weaker Portugal side last week, but we, and Scotland, know what they can do on their day.

Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 12:55

Ready for kick-off

Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 12:53

Player to watch – Shogo Nakano

The dextrous Timothy Lafaele has filled the Japanese thirteen jersey superbly in the last few years, but Jamie Joseph has found a viable alternative in Shogo Nakano. Long regarded as one of the brighter prospects coming through the at-times inhibitive domestic system in Japan, Nakano showed his ability with a try on debut last week, a shimmy and shrug out of a tackle after taking a short line 25 metres out and showing plenty of toe to get over.

Regarded as a similarly audacious off-loader in the thirteen channel, he’ll provide a handful for Chris Harris, much as the Scotland 13 is a fine defender. Japan are rarely afraid to be creative in attack (fly-half Rikiya Matsuda produced one particularly lovely dinky kick to help set up a try for Siosaia Fifita last week) so it will be intriguing to see what they throw at this Scotland side.

(Getty Images)
Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 12:28

Player to watch - Sam Johnson

The international career of Sam Johnson is becoming something of a curiosity. Scotland seldom look a worse team with the inside centre playing, an effective carrier with sharp linking hands, but there is always a sense that Johnson is never quite settled within the side. He was left out last week in favour of a more abrasive midfield pairing of Matt Scott and Chris Harris – and a possible concern over a head knock suffered a week prior - but returns to combine in creative partnership with Finn Russell.

When Cameron Redpath is back fit you would suspect he will re-take the 12 jumper, but Johnson has plenty of good qualities. Harris has talked up his centre partner’s role in making him feel comfortable in a crucial defensive combination in Scotland’s much-improved defence under Steve Tandy.

Harry Latham-Coyle20 November 2021 12:24

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in