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Wales comeback against France falls short

Article Published: Saturday 27 February 2010

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Wales almost staged another of their comebacks but left this one too late and France won 20-26.

Wales had possibly their worst first half in a number of years and trailed France 0-20 nil at half time.

Leigh Halfpenny scored a try in the 67th minute which when converted by Stephen Jones got Wales right back in the match and they further helped as referee Jonathan Kaplan sent Morgan Parra to the sin-bin for 20 minutes for an intentional knock down.
 
France weathered the Wales storm for the last 10 minutes but another upset and the unthinkable sprang to mind as Shane Williams (celebrating his 33rd birthday) scored his 50th try almost on full time and Stephen Jones converted.
 
Unlike Scotland from the re-start France played intellingently and made sure the ball did not go to Welsh hands and that prevented Wales from snatching another last second victory.
 

France left themselves with a 'home run' to a Six Nations Grand Slam by beating Wales.

Victory appeared all but assured at half-time with France 20-0 in front following two interception tries.

But Wales, just as they did in their dramatic come-from-behind 31-24 win over Scotland last time out, rallied and cut France's lead to 20-13 heading into the final quarter under the Millennium's closed retractable roof.

However, against a team of France's all-round quality they left themselves with just too much of a mountain to climb on this occasion.

Replacement fly-half Frederic Michalak scored a penalty nine minutes from time that, importantly, put France two scores in front.

And with just two minutes left, scrum-half Morgan Parra kicked his third penalty after Wales were caught offside in front of their posts.

There was still time for wing Shane Williams, on his 33rd birthday, to become the first Wales player to score 50 tries after a typical jinking run.

Fly-half Stephen Jones converted and Wales, who had been 14-24 behind against Scotland with minutes remaining, had hopes of another great escape.

But France, unlike Scotland, booted the ensuing kick-off 'dead' through Michalak, belying his reputation for recklessness, and with that South African referee Jonathan Kaplan blew for full-time.

"We conceded a couple of stupid penalties but I'm really proud of the guys, they dug deep and put on a really good display in the second half," said Wales coach Warren Gatland.

"We've just got to stop pushing the self-destruct button."

France, who have now won three games in a row for the first time under coach Marc Lievremont, can look forward to wrapping up the Championship with matches in Paris against Italy and England on March 13 and 20 respectively.

"We lost all coherence, you could feel that at half-time even," Lievremont said.

It was like watching the ghost of the Wales-Scotland match appear before us," the former France forward added.

"I'm very happy to win three in a row but my emotions are divided between happiness and relief."

It was from a home attack that France opened the scoring in the seventh minute when left wing Alexis Palisson intercepted Wales centre James Hook's pass and sprinted in from 40 metres for a try under the posts.

Parra added the easy conversion and France were 7-0 ahead.

France's strong pack, as they've done to other teams in this tournament, shoved Wales backwards at the scrum while their solid defence was exemplified when powerful centre Mathieu Bastareaud forced Stephen Jones to knock-on in the tackle.

Parra, who sliced an 11th-minute drop-goal attempt, made no mistake in the 19th minute when, after Wales flanker Martyn Williams infringed by going in off his feet after Bastareaud had been tackled, he kicked a 40-metre penalty to extend France's lead to 10-0.

Another 40-metre Parra penalty then took France to 13-0 in the 26th minute.

And on the stroke of half-time, France went 20-0 ahead with their second interception try as Shane Williams gifted the visitors a present.

The left wing made a half-break but was well-tackled by Yannick Jauzion and then Williams tried to force a pass only to see it collected by France outside-half Francois Trinh-Duc, who ran in unopposed for a try that Parra converted.

Wales badly needed a score early in the second half but, after Hook had sliced open the French defence following a Shane Williams grubber kick, replacement lock Luke Charteris, on for Deiniol Jones, knocked on.

They did, though, manage the game's next two scores when Stephen Jones punished French offsides with a pair of penalties.

Wales's desperate need for points had the effect, as against Scotland, of making them play with much greater dynamism than they'd managed early on.

And they put the match back in the balance just after the hour mark.

Scrum-half Richie Rees's quickly taken tap penalty put France on their heels and Shane Williams's well-flighted cut-out pass was taken at full tilt by fellow wing Leigh Halfpenny, who crossed for a try in the left corner.

Stephen Jones converted and France, who had been cruising, were now a mere seven points in front and to make matters worse were also a man down after Parra was yellow carded for being deliberately offside.

Wales, who've now lost two and won one of their matches in this Six Nations, will look to bounce back away to defending champions Ireland, who play England at Twickenham on Saturday, on March 13.

Final score Wales 20 (0) France 26 (20) 

Scorers

Wales
Tries - Halfpenny, Williams
Pen - S. Jones 2
Con - S. Jones
Drop -

France
Tries - A Palisson, Francois Trinh-Duc
Pen - M Parra 3, Michalak
Con - M Parra 2
Drop -
Cards - Yellow M. Parra
 
Man of the match: Julien Bonnaire

Referee: Jonathan Kaplan (RSA)

Teams

Wales Lee Byrne; Leigh Halfpenny, James Hook, Jamie Roberts, Shane Williams; Stephen Jones, Richard Rees; Ryan Jones (capt), Martyn Williams, Jonathan Thomas; Deiniol Jones, Bradley Davies; Adam Jones, Huw Bennett, Paul James

Replacements: Ken Owens, Rhys Gill, Luke Charteris, Sam Warburton, Mike Phillips, Andrew Bishop, Tom Shanklin

France Clement Poitrenaud; Julien Malzieu, Mathieu Bastareaud, Yannick Jauzion, Alexis Palisson; Francois Trinh-Duc, Morgan Parra; Imanol Harinordoquy, Julien Bonnaire, Thierry Dusautoir (capt); Julien Pierre, Lionel Nallet; Nicolas Mas, William Servat, Thomas Domingo

Replacements: Dimitri Szarzewski, Jean-Baptiste Poux, Sebastien Chabal, Alexandre Lapandry, Frederic Michalak, David Marty, Marc Andreu

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