Wales talk a good talk

The Springboks have taken note of the confident talk emanating from the Wales camp about their chances of winning Saturday's quarter-final. Photo: Andrew Couldridge

The Springboks have taken note of the confident talk emanating from the Wales camp about their chances of winning Saturday's quarter-final. Photo: Andrew Couldridge

Published Oct 13, 2015

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London - The Springboks have taken note of the confident talk emanating from the Wales camp about their chances of winning Saturday’s World Cup quarter-final and it clearly has added fuel to the Boks’ motivational fires.

Welsh captain Sam Warburton said his team knew how to beat the Boks, having won the last encounter between the teams in Cardiff and almost beating the Boks in Nelspruit last June.

“We hear that, but we are just as confident that we can beat them - it works both ways,” assistant coach John McFarland said tersely before adding:

“Next question...”

The fact is that over 100 years of Tests between the countries, the Boks have 27 times, Wales just twice, and there has been one draw. The average score is 27-14 to the Boks.

“If you analyse those three games we played against them last year, we scored 11 tries to their four and we were under-strength when we played them in Cardiff,” he said.

“We have conceded just one try in our last three World Cup games. We are in a really good space going into the quarter-finals.”

But McFarland gave credit where it is due, and said Wales played their part in a “brilliant” game of rugby against Australia at Twickenham at the weekend.

“That was sheer entertainment, really gripping stuff,” he said. “A lot has been said about Wales’ inability to score when they had the two-man advantage for close to 10 minutes but you have to appreciate they were close to the goal-line and those were ‘five-metre’ situations. So when you’re defending on the line you don’t have to have any sweepers, so you can put men in the line.

“Wales would probably have wanted to attack from a little deeper,” he observed.

The Star

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