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Rugby in the Rising Sun : Japan beats Samoa to keep quarterfinal hopes alive

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Japan beats Samoa to keep quarterfinal hopes alive


ed0aa0bf806bbdc59a19dd25b26a581a.jpg




Japan kept alive its chances of reaching the Rugby World Cup quarterfinals with a comprehensive 26-5 win against Samoa in their Pool B match on Saturday.
Fullback Ayumu Goromaru’s clinical kicking kept Japan in complete control, as he took his tournament-leading points tally to 45.

The only sour note was an apparent head injury to right winger Akihito Yamada, the scorer of Japan’s second try. He went off early in the second half after taking a knee to the head when making a brave wraparound tackle on center Paul Perez as he surged down the left.

He looked to be knocked out cold, lying motionless on the ground for several minutes, as he was treated by medical staff and then taken away on a stretcher.

It took Samoa 63 minutes to score. Following a turnover inside Samoa’s 22, a fine sweeping move was finished emphatically by Perez in the left corner.

Japan came into this tournament with only one win in Cup history. Now it has two in this Cup.

Following the stunning 34-32 win against South Africa on the opening weekend, Japan is eyeing a first quarterfinal berth.

The Brave Blossoms led Samoa 20-0 at halftime, which was good news for most of the 29,000 fans setting a stadium record at Milton Keynes.

They roared when Yamada dived into right corner on the first-half buzzer, and Goromaru nailed a difficult conversion from wide right.

Japan’s talisman against the Springboks had already converted an earlier penalty try, and added two penalties to punish Samoa’s indiscipline. He was on his game, bouncing back from a poor kicking performance in a 45-10 loss to Scotland last week.

It was a totally one-sided affair for Japan this time, and at one stage it was 15 vs. 13 with two Samoans sin-binned.

No. 8 Faifili Levave was penalized for a late shoulder charge in the 16th minute, and referee Craig Joubert sent prop Sakaria Taulafo to the sin-bin in the 19th after Samoa conceded two defensive penalties in two minutes.

It could have been a heavier defeat.

Goromaru had an early try ruled out after a forward pass from center Male Sau.

It didn’t matter in the end, and Japan heads into its final match against the United States next Sunday in Gloucester with spirits sky-high.


Reference: Yomiuri Shimbun
 
. . .
Japan beats Samoa to keep quarterfinal hopes alive


ed0aa0bf806bbdc59a19dd25b26a581a.jpg




Japan kept alive its chances of reaching the Rugby World Cup quarterfinals with a comprehensive 26-5 win against Samoa in their Pool B match on Saturday.
Fullback Ayumu Goromaru’s clinical kicking kept Japan in complete control, as he took his tournament-leading points tally to 45.

The only sour note was an apparent head injury to right winger Akihito Yamada, the scorer of Japan’s second try. He went off early in the second half after taking a knee to the head when making a brave wraparound tackle on center Paul Perez as he surged down the left.

He looked to be knocked out cold, lying motionless on the ground for several minutes, as he was treated by medical staff and then taken away on a stretcher.

It took Samoa 63 minutes to score. Following a turnover inside Samoa’s 22, a fine sweeping move was finished emphatically by Perez in the left corner.

Japan came into this tournament with only one win in Cup history. Now it has two in this Cup.

Following the stunning 34-32 win against South Africa on the opening weekend, Japan is eyeing a first quarterfinal berth.

The Brave Blossoms led Samoa 20-0 at halftime, which was good news for most of the 29,000 fans setting a stadium record at Milton Keynes.

They roared when Yamada dived into right corner on the first-half buzzer, and Goromaru nailed a difficult conversion from wide right.

Japan’s talisman against the Springboks had already converted an earlier penalty try, and added two penalties to punish Samoa’s indiscipline. He was on his game, bouncing back from a poor kicking performance in a 45-10 loss to Scotland last week.

It was a totally one-sided affair for Japan this time, and at one stage it was 15 vs. 13 with two Samoans sin-binned.

No. 8 Faifili Levave was penalized for a late shoulder charge in the 16th minute, and referee Craig Joubert sent prop Sakaria Taulafo to the sin-bin in the 19th after Samoa conceded two defensive penalties in two minutes.

It could have been a heavier defeat.

Goromaru had an early try ruled out after a forward pass from center Male Sau.

It didn’t matter in the end, and Japan heads into its final match against the United States next Sunday in Gloucester with spirits sky-high.


Reference: Yomiuri Shimbun
:D
 
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@Nihonjin1051
Congratulations to Japan!

The host nation England was knocked out by my country, Australia. This is the first time the host nation didn't make it to the second round.

[cricket] the second most popular game after Football (1.4 billion ppl's game) :D

In terms of population, cricket may be the second most popular after soccer. In terms of countries participating, cricket is definitely not the second most popular.
 
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@Nihonjin1051
Congratulations to Japan!

The host nation England was knocked out by my country, Australia. This is the first time the host nation didn't make it to the second round.



In terms of population, cricket may be the second most popular after soccer. In terms of countries participating, cricket is definitely not the second most popular.
105 countries play this game though professional teams are about 15 lol
 
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Great show by the Japanese, those Samoans are no push over. :cheers:

They're huge guys!!! Big boned and brawny guys indeed !!! Glad we pounded them into submission tho ;)

@Nihonjin1051
Congratulations to Japan!

The host nation England was knocked out by my country, Australia. This is the first time the host nation didn't make it to the second round.



In terms of population, cricket may be the second most popular after soccer. In terms of countries participating, cricket is definitely not the second most popular.



Thanks @ahojunk ! You guys did a great job too! Go Team Aussieland!! ;)
 
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