Wales 23-15 Italy
Wales survive Italy scare in Six Nations opener
ESPN Staff
February 1, 2014
Date/Time: Feb 1, 2014, 14:30 local, 14:30 GMT
Venue: Millennium Stadium, Cardiff
Wales 23 - 15 Italy
Attendance: 66974  Half-time: 17 - 3
Tries: Cuthbert, MS Williams
Cons: Halfpenny 2
Pens: Halfpenny 3
Tries: Campagnaro 2
Cons: Allan
Pens: Allan
Scott Williams crosses the whitewash to put Wales in command at the break, Wales v Italy, Six Nations, Millennium Stadium, Cardiff, February 1
Scott Williams scored Wales' second try
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Match Analysis

  • Man of the Match: Michele Campagnaro was fantastic for Italy. He scored both of their tries and was a constant threat with ball in hand.
  • Key moment: Leigh Halfpenny's 73rd minute penalty killed off any threat of a shock Italy win.
  • Hero: Italy's half-backs Edoardo Gori and Tommaso Allan worked well in tandem alongside each other - could they finally have some stability there?
  • Villain: See below...
  • Talking point: Wales kicked off their title defence with a win but they were far from their ruthless best. At times they were sluggish and lacked the intensity in the final 20 minutes that we witnessed last year. They will need to improve this week ahead of Ireland.
  • Play of the game: Italy's first try was a delight. Campagnaro ran the ball from near his own 22, passed it to Luke McLean who kicked it forward. Campagnaro half-volleyed it on and then managed to dot it down.
  • Tom Hamilton

Wales opened their 2014 Six Nations campaign with a hard-fought 23-15 win over Italy at the Millenium Stadium on Saturday.

First-half tries by wing Alex Cuthbert and Scott Williams underpinned a healthy 17-3 interval advantage, but Italy - inspired by their brilliant captain Sergio Parisse - refused to go quietly. Wales full-back Leigh Halfpenny kicked both conversions and three penalties, passing 350 Test points in the process, yet Italy arguably deserved more than centre Michele Campagnaro's second-half try double, plus a Tommaso Allan conversion and penalty.

Wales' triumph will not set alarm bells ringing in the Ireland camp ahead of next Saturday's eagerly-awaited Dublin clash. It was a scrappy disjointed effort by the reigning Six Nations champions after they failed to increase the tempo at any point against battling opponents.

Campagnaro proved the game's dominant attacking force, and if Italy had shown a little more composure at key times then they could have left Cardiff with a famous victory. It was Wales' seventh successive win against the Azzurri, but that statistic should not be allowed to cover up a performance that never moved out of third gear and meant they failed abysmally to make the opening weekend statement they would have wanted.

Ospreys lock Alun-Wyn Jones replaced Sam Warburton as Wales skipper, with Warburton beginning his comeback after a shoulder injury on the bench, while Rhys Priestland reclaimed fly-half duties from Dan Biggar and Luke Charteris started instead of suspended second-row forward Ian Evans. Italy saw lock Marco Bortolami win his 100th cap, but an inexperienced, injury-hit back division featured four players with just seven Test appearances between them.

And the Azzurri were rocked by a fourth-minute Wales try following some nightmarish defending by debutant wing Angelo Esposito. Priestland's kick into the Italian 22 should have been collected, but Esposito made a hash of it and Cuthbert pounced for his 10th try in 20 Tests before Halfpenny successfully landed the touchline conversion.

Wales had been determined to make a flying start after a first-half no-show against opening Six Nations opponents Ireland last season, and they almost scored again when George North was narrowly denied following a kick and chase from inside his own half. Italy needed a settling score, and it arrived through Allan's 13th-minute penalty from close range after Wales flanker Dan Lydiate infringed, yet the home side looked dangerous every time they shipped possession side.

TMO farce

  • The referral to the TMO of Italy's try shortly after half-time highlights why the system has become in need of an overhaul. The referee went upstairs to ask if a pass in the build-up was forward - it looked as if it might have been but that's not the point. The touch judge was about five metres away, level with the pass and showed no inclination to query it. Nor did the referee, who was also well placed, until the try was scored.
  • The TMO then studied replays and despite there being enough to suggest it was forward, allowed the try to stand. Too often on-field officials ask for reviews for minor incidents in the lead-up to tries, almost as a safeguard in case they got it wrong. That's not what the system was brought in for. It is aimed at clearing up genuine doubt in the referee's mind to avoid howlers - not as a catch-all.
  • It wastes time and too often robs the game of that special moment when a try is scored as everyone waits for the outcome of the almost inevitable trial by replay.
  • Martin Williamson

An angled Halfpenny penalty 12 minutes before half-time took his team into double figures, but Italy kept plugging away and they went close to a 35th-minute try when Parisse tangled with North, but the Stade Francais number eight knocked on before crossing Wales' line. And the Welsh response was emphatic, as centre Jamie Roberts carved open Italy's defence before his inside pass was collected by midfield partner Williams for a high-class try that Halfpenny converted to post a 14-point interval lead.

Italy stunned Wales at the start of the second period when they scored a breakaway try after stealing possession just outside their own 22. Campagnaro and wing Leonardo Sarto combined confidently, before Treviso prospect Campagnaro showed a blistering turn of pace by winning the race following his kick ahead to haul Italy back in contention.

Allan missed the conversion before Halfpenny registered an uncharacteristic penalty miss, meaning Wales could not relax in a game they might have thought was wrapped up after 40 minutes. A second Halfpenny penalty extended Wales' lead after 67 minutes, by which time Warburton had taken the field as replacement for Lydiate, but yet again the visitors hit back.

And it was Campagnaro who again breached Wales' defence, intercepting Halfpenny's pass to Roberts before sprinting away for a try that Allan converted. Italy were back in the hunt at 20-15 adrift, and Wales needed to finish strongly following a second-half performance that will have frustrated head coach Warren Gatland.

Halfpenny's third successful penalty sealed the deal, but they will require a vast improvement next weekend.

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