Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Eddie Jones' Japan survive red card scare against Uruguay

Japan's Australian head coach Eddie Jones looks on as he walks on the pitch prior to the Autumn Nations Series International rugby union test match between France and Japan at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, suburb of Paris, on November 9, 2024. (Photo by Anne-Christine POUJOULAT / AFP) (Photo by ANNE-CHRISTINE POUJOULAT/AFP via Getty Images)

Japan overcame a second-half red card to secure a 36-20 victory over Uruguay at Chambéry Savoie Stadium on Saturday.

ADVERTISEMENT

The Brave Blossoms displayed resilience to kept the lid on the South Americans despite ill-discipline letting the side down.

Uruguay opened the scoring in the 6th minute with a try from number eight Manuel Diana, converted by fly-half Felipe Álvarez, giving them an early 7-0 lead. Japan responded swiftly through captain Kazuki Himeno who powered over the line in the ninth minute [though the conversion was missed], narrowing the gap to 7-5.

Video Spacer

Felipe Contepomi on the passion of Argentina | RPTV

Leinster and Argentina legend Felipe Contepomi chats to former teammate Brian O’Driscoll about coaching Argentina. Watch the full clip on RugbyPass TV

Watch now

Video Spacer

Felipe Contepomi on the passion of Argentina | RPTV

Leinster and Argentina legend Felipe Contepomi chats to former teammate Brian O’Driscoll about coaching Argentina. Watch the full clip on RugbyPass TV

Watch now

Álvarez extended Uruguay’s lead to 10-5 with a penalty in the 19th minute but it was Japan who then took control.

A penalty from fly-half Takuro Matsunaga, which was followed by unconverted tries from winger Junta Hamano in the 31st minute and centre Kanji Shimokawa in the 35th minute.

Fixture
Internationals
Japan
36 - 20
Full-time
Uruguay
All Stats and Data

Japan’s ill-discipline let Uruguay get a foothold back in the match however, when scrum-half Naoto Saito was sin-binned in the 38th minute; an indiscretion that was immediately punished by Uruguay through the boot of Alvarez. His penalty kick made it 18-13 going into the break.

The second half began with Uruguay levelling the score at 18-18, courtesy of a try from flanker Lucas Bianchi, before Álvarez pushed Uruguay two points in front with a successful conversion.

ADVERTISEMENT

Japan hit back through winger Jone Naikabula, who crossed the line in the 51st minute to put Japan back in front. Saito failed to convert, although a penalty from Matsunaga would follow ten minutes later, bringing the score to 26-20 t0 Japan.

It was in the 65th minute that Japan again faced a major setback when lock Warner Dearns received a red card for a high tackle, reducing the team to 14 men.

Despite the numerical disadvantage, Japan were again the next to score, care of a penalty from Saito, which extended the lead to 29-20. Highly rated centre Dylan Riley sealed the victory with a try in the 77th minute, converted by Saito, finalizing the score at 36-20.

Japan
1. Takato Okabe, 2. Mamoru Harada, 3. Keijiro Tamefusa, 4. Epineri Uluiviti, 5. Warner Dearns, 6. Amato Fakatava, 7. Kanji Shimokawa, 8. Kazuki Himeno (captain), 9. Naoto Saito, 10. Takuro Matsunaga, 11. Junta Hamano, 12. Siosaia Fifita, 13. Dylan Riley, 14. Jone Naikabula, 15. Malo Tuitama
Replacements: 16. Kenta Matsuoka, 17. Yukio Morikawa, 18. Opeti Helu, 19. Sanaila Waqa, 20. Isaiah Mapusua, 21. Shinobu Fujiwara, 22. Nik McCurran, 23. Yusuke Kajimura

ADVERTISEMENT

Uruguay
1. Mateo Sanguinetti, 2. Guillermo Pujadas, 3. Diego Arbelo, 4. Ignacio Dotti, 5. Manuel Leindekar, 6. Santiago Civetta, 7. Lucas Bianchi, 8. Manuel Diana, 9. Santiago Álvarez, 10. Ícaro Amarillo, 11. Ignacio Facciolo, 12. Juan Manuel Alonso, 13. Felipe Arcos Pérez, 14. Bautista Basso, 15. Juan González.
Replacements: 16. Joaquín Myszka, 17. Mateo Perillo, 18. Ignacio Peculo, 19. Felipe Aliaga, 20. Carlos Deus, 21. Joaquín Suárez, 22. Ignacio Álvarez, 23. Gastón Mieres

Related

 

ADVERTISEMENT
LIVE

{{item.title}}

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

f
fl 11 minutes ago
‘Props are awesome…so why don’t they win prizes?’

“The reason most props don’t last the whole game is that they expend proportionally more effort than players outside the front row. Should they be penalised for that?”

No, they don’t last the whole game because they are less fit than players outside the front row. I’d be interested to know if you’d apply this logic to other positions; do PSDT and Itoje regularly last longer than other players in their positions because they put in less effort?

None of this is about “penalising” props, its about being realistic about their impact on a game.


“While scrums are a small part of the game in terms of time spent in them, they have disproportionate impact. Dominant scrums win games; feeble ones lose them.”

Strength at the breakdown wins games. Good kicking wins games. Good handling wins games. Strong defence wins games. Good lineouts win games. Ultimately, I think that of all these things, the scrum is probably the least important, because it demonstrably doesn’t correlate very well with winning games. I don’t think Rugbypass will allow me to link articles, but if you google “HG Rugby Crowning the Best Scrum in Club Rugby” you’ll get a pretty convincing analysis that ranks Toulouse and Bordeaux outside of the 10 best club sides in the scrum - and ranks Leinster outside of the top 30.


“Or there’s Joe Marler’s epic performance in the Bristol v Quins 2021 Premiership Semi-Final, in which he finally left the pitch 15 minutes into extra time having signed off with a try saving tackle.”

Yeah - that’s a good example actually, but it kind of disproves your point. Marler played 95 minutes, which is unheard of for a prop.


“Maybe we need a dedicated Hall of Fame with entry only for props, and voted for only by props.”

Well we have the World Rugby XV of the year. Its only been going for a few years, but in time it’ll be a pretty good record of who are perceived as best props - although the lack of interest most people have in scrums means that perception of who the best props are doesn’t always match reality (e.g. Tadgh Furlong was great in 2018 - but was he really the best tighthead in the world in 2021, 2022, & 2023?).

7 Go to comments
LONG READ
LONG READ 'Don’t cry for the Lions over Argentina... it should be their touchstone now' 'Don’t cry for the Lions over Argentina... it should be their touchstone now'
Search