2019 Rugby World Cup about to start

Blackleaf

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The Duke of Sussex will attend Saturday's Rugby World Cup final between England and South Africa in Yokohama, Buckingham Palace has said.

Prince Harry, who recently returned from a visit to southern Africa, is patron of England's Rugby Football Union.

He watched England win the 2003 World Cup in Sydney and presented the trophy to New Zealand captain Richie McCaw at the last final at Twickenham in 2015.

His brother the Duke of Cambridge is a patron of the Welsh Rugby Union.

Wales missed out on a first World Cup final appearance with an agonising 19-16 semi-final defeat by South Africa.

England qualified for their first final since 2007 with an emphatic 19-7 win over defending champions New Zealand.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/50215006
 

NZDoug

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Jul 18, 2017
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Big Bay, Awhitu, New Zealand
ALL BLACKS lose to ENGLAND
Ya can't win them all, mate.
Nek morning the temps went from 16 to 23 C. with blue Skys, shaking winter, and NZ admitted its only a game.
We don't know how lucky we are.
So life goes on.
As always, there will be
Screaming for Vengeance
here in NZ.
Warren Gatlund is coming home to coach the Waikato Chiefs.
Theres a few Kiwi blokes in the Wales team as you can play from your country of birth and your relies
with Kiwis in the majority of teams.
Like Canada when the NHL expanded from 6 to 12.
Its quite astounding but that's another thread.
Speaking of cricket, I missed the boat being a Canuck as its too long.
I have never liked American base ball so don't get me wrong.
What I realise now that I'm a Kiwi bloke, is that its important to beat the Mother Country, God Save the Queen.
So I don't like Jamaica, I love it it
Dreadlock Holiday etc.
when its cricket.
Sonny Bill, our Muslim Super All Black, has been offered a 6MILL U.S FOR 2 YEARS to be the David Beckam to introduce rugby to Toronto, my home town.
I'm digging it.
As a Kiwi bloke , the worst thing is to lose to Auzzie, so go, England.
 

Blackleaf

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England have been fined £2,500 for standing up to the haka.

So, basically, any team playing New Zealand has to just stand there and take the humiliation as the NZ players perform a war dance to intimidate you and give them an unfair advantage.

Stand up to the haka like England did on Saturday - and it worked - and you get punished!

It's a joke, and shows why nobody likes the All Blacks and love to beat them.



Still, £2,500 is small change for the richest rugby nation on Earth - and we'll make a lot more money should we win the World Cup for the second time on Saturday.
 

NZDoug

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Jul 18, 2017
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Big Bay, Awhitu, New Zealand
You're a 10CC fan.
I'm not in love, so don't forget it, but still,
tis a wonderful thing to see the sons of the Marroons defeat the son's of The House of Lords.
Thats why it,s cool, the guys like Bangladesh and Pakistan get a fair shake.
Re: England being fined, even the All Blacks don't get it.
Personally, I don't like the V formation Haka, especially when lead by honkeys.
Onward!
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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I'm not in love, so don't forget it, but still,
tis a wonderful thing to see the sons of the Marroons defeat the son's of The House of Lords.
Thats why it,s cool, the guys like Bangladesh and Pakistan get a fair shake.
Re: England being fined, even the All Blacks don't get it.
Personally, I don't like the V formation Haka, especially when lead by honkeys.
Onward!

Yep. Definitely a 10CC fan.

And you're right - the All Blacks themselves had no problems with England's actions during the haka. After all, why should teams just stand there and meekly take it?
 

Blackleaf

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Oct 9, 2004
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And I'm looking forward to hopefully seeing England win the World Cup for the second time on Saturday morning - in what will be merely the first several hours of my two weeks holiday off work.

What a nice start to my holiday that would be.
 

Curious Cdn

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Feb 22, 2015
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And I'm looking forward to hopefully seeing England win the World Cup for the second time on Saturday morning - in what will be merely the first several hours of my two weeks holiday off work.
What a nice start to my holiday that would be.
Going to the continent where it's sunny?
 

Blackleaf

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Going to the continent where it's sunny?

I'm planning on visiting Jodrell Bank in Cheshire on Monday to see the mighty Lovell Telescope, look around the museum and maybe buy some Moon rock or meteorite.

I haven't been since 1991 when I was a kid.

 
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Blackleaf

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Third/fourth place play-off

Wales 17-40 New Zealand



Warren Gatland's 12-year reign in charge of Wales ended with a 40-17 defeat against New Zealand in the World Cup bronze match in Tokyo.

Steve Hansen ensured he left the All Blacks on a winning note as his side clinched third place in Japan with a six-try display.

Wing Ben Smith scored two tries and Joe Moody, Beauden Barrett, Ryan Crotty and Richie Mo'unga also crossed.

Hallam Amos and Josh Adams scored tries for Wales.

New Zealand demonstrated a more ruthless edge, with Wales not capitalising on territory and possession superiority.

Defence coach Shaun Edwards will also be unhappy at Wales missing more than 30 tackles.

Wales' defeat ensured a second fourth-place World Cup overall finish to emulate their position in 2011, with their third place in 1987 remaining the finest effort.

Their losing streak against the All Blacks remains at 66 years, with New Zealand celebrating a 31st successive win in this fixture.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/50232481
 

Blackleaf

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F*cking shit. I've not bothered watching the last five minutes. I turned it off. F*ck it.
 

Blackleaf

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England weren't helped by Sinckler being taken off after just three minutes with a head injury and concussion.

England rugby star Kyle Sinckler's World Cup final is over after just three minutes as England prop is brutally KNOCKED OUT



England suffered an early blow in the Rugby World Cup final after prop Kyle Sinckler was subbed off after being knocked out following a clash with Makazole Mapimpi. The prop went down after suffering a blow to the head after trying to tackle the South Africa winger. Sinckler rose to his feet again eventually after receiving medical attention, but Eddie Jones did not risk the prop and brought on Dan Cole for the remaining 77 minutes of the final.
 

Blackleaf

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Springboks win World Cup for record-equalling third time



By Tom Fordyce
Chief sports writer in Yokohama
BBC Sport

Final

England 12-32 South Africa


South Africa added to their World Cup wins in 1995 and 2007

South Africa broke English hearts with a ruthless display of power rugby to seize their third Rugby World Cup in devastating fashion.

Twenty two points from the boot of nerveless fly-half Handre Pollard and second-half tries from wingers Makazole Mapimpi and Cheslin Kolbe ground England into the Yokohama dirt on a horrible night for Eddie Jones's men.

England had trailed 12-6 at the interval after taking a hammering in the scrum and making a series of handling errors.

And despite four penalties from captain Owen Farrell they never looked like closing that gap as the Springboks produced an outstanding display to match those of 1995 in Johannesburg and 2007 in Paris.

Those were iconic moments for a nation besotted with rugby and when Siya Kolisi lifted the William Webb Ellis trophy aloft as the first black man to captain the Springboks they will have the final part of a triptych that will endure forever in the country's collective memory.

South Africa find their width as England stumble



England, so quick out of the blocks in their semi-final win over the All Blacks, were rocked in the opening exchanges as prop Kyle Sinckler was knocked out in an accidental collision and forced to leave the field before touching the ball.

South Africa took that momentum and through a Pollard Garryowen-and-gather went deep into the English 22 before Willie le Roux knocked on as he carved an outside line down the right.

England were rattled, throwing loose passes, Farrell isolated as he tried to mop up one from Billy Vunipola and Pollard banging over the resulting penalty for 3-0.

The huge Springbok pack was making a mess of the English scrum and disrupting their line-out, but when the men in white made their first series of forays they won a breakdown penalty and Farrell levelled things up.

Now it was the Springboks forced into changes, hooker Mbongeni Mbonambi off with concussion and lock Lood de Jager appearing to dislocate a shoulder.

Yet England knocked on at the restart, had their scrum splintered and were behind again as Pollard slotted the penalty from the angle.

Back they came. The forwards hammered away at the South African line after driving a line-out on the 22, Courtney Lawes and replacement Dan Cole both going close until Duane Vermeulen infringed and Farrell kicked the penalty for 6-6.

The vast English support in the stands found their voice but the mistakes kept coming.

Billy Vunipola was penalised for holding on and Pollard landed a beauty from 40m, and then Elliot Daly knocked on from Lukhanyo Am's kick ahead, the scrum was mangled again and Pollard struck again from in front of the posts.

It was a horrible half from Eddie Jones' men, that 12-6 half-time deficit the biggest they had faced in the entire tournament.

Springboks pummel England before cutting loose


Cheslin Kolbe crossed six minutes from time for South Africa's second try

South Africa coach Rassie Erasmus threw replacement props Steven Kitshoff and Vincent Koch on just after the break and at their very first scrum they mangled England again.

Pollard drilled over a beauty from just over halfway and at 15-6 England were staring into the abyss.

The South African power was stopping their big runners dead and killing England at the breakdown and Jones rolled the dice, throwing Joe Marler into the front row and Henry Slade in at outside centre as Farrell took Ford's place at fly-half.

It initially appeared to work. England blew the Springbok scrum apart, Farrell lined up the penalty and it was a six-point game.

Now Curry got to work, snaffling a breakdown penalty to give Farrell another shot, this time from 45m out wide, only for the kick to drift just wide of the right-hand post.

What could have been 15-12 was suddenly 18-9 as South Africa set up a maul in midfield and England were caught offside for a penalty that Pollard was never going to miss.

England had 22 minutes to save their World Cup and grabbed a lifeline from Farrell's fourth penalty after Vermeulen held on from the restart.

Luke Cowan-Dickie and Mark Wilson came on for Jamie George and Sam Underhill but with 14 minutes to go the killer blow came.

South Africa went left down the blindside, Mapimpi kicked on and Am gathered before finding the winger on his outside shoulder for the first try the Springboks had scored in three World Cup finals.

Pollard's conversion from in front made it 25-12 and the stands were alive with green-shirted noise.

And when the diminutive Kolbe stepped and accelerated through an exhausted rearguard in the final moments the Springboks could kick-start a Japanese party that will sweep through their homeland.







https://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/rugby-union/50273291