Charlie Hodgson is wrapped up.
Wales 9 England 26
By Andrew Baldock, PA Sport Rugby Union Correspondent
The Welsh fans indisputably won the singing and their team responded by
restoring a measure of honour to a proud rugby nation.
By contrast England won the match as expected, comfortably in the end, but not
in a manner which would have given coach Clive Woodward a warm glow as he
contemplates a potential Grand Slam as a stepping stone to his World Cup
dreams.
Tries from Will Greenwood and Joe Worsley were the highlights of a scrappy,
fragmented match which must have made the travelling fans wonder whether it was
worth braving the train problems and traffic jams.
That goal-kicking metronome Jonny Wilkinson also weighed in with another 16
points, including two precision drop goals, before limping off towards the end
of the match.
But on this form England can forget winning the World Cup later this year.
They were too timid and uncertain, uninspiring in attack and at times suspect
in defence even though they did not concede a try.
The Welsh fans, however, even in defeat had much to cheer.
They had made eight changes from the side which lost so abjectly to Italy last
weekend. They had been written off by the bookies as nothing more than
cannon-fodder for the mighty English.
If last week had been the death throe of Welsh rugby then this match, many
experts decreed, was little more than its funeral.
It didn't turn out that way - and much of that was due to the passion of the
home fans and the determination of the Welsh brilliantly led by Jonathan
Humphreys and wonderfully inspired by man-of-the-match second-row Robert
Sidoli.
Before the match the Welsh sang Delilah and Bread of Heaven with almost
demonic fervour. They sure know how to sing in Wales. They used to know how to
play rugby.
The big screens, as usual, were alive with the dancing days of Phil Bennett,
Gerald Davies and Merve the Swerve. The talk was of legendary fullback JPR
Williams, the incomparable Gareth Edwards and rugby's answer to George Best,
Barry John.
The fans treasure those halcyon memories. They have to, because these days
Welsh rugby supporters have precious little else.
So desperate is their plight that tomorrow at Port Talbot there is an
emergency general meeting of the Welsh Rugby Union to try to settle the hopeless
political in-fighting, financial turmoil and threats of litigation which engulf
the sport.
As it was Wales took a 10th minute lead after a spirited opening when fly-half
Ceri Sweeney slotted the first penalty following a late tackle by Steve Thompson
on Gareth Thomas.
The prolific Wilkinson inevitably replied with a penalty of his own six
minutes later but there was much to admire in the big hits and the ferocious
rucking of the Welsh pack.
England's concern at that point was epitomised by the 35-metres drop goal for
which Wilkinson settled to extend the lead to ensure that the white shirts at
least cashed in on their increasing pressure.
And England's respect for the opposition was again in evidence, following
Sweeney's second penalty, when Wilkinson preferred to drop another goal on the
half hour mark rather than trust the ball to his threequarters.
There was an uncharacteristic fragility about England and also a pettiness in
captain Martin Johnson's verbal battle with referee Steve Walsh and a gratuitous
stamp by Thompson on Welsh captain Humphreys.
Such indiscipline should have seen Wales go in with a half-time lead,
especially when Mark Taylor thrust through Hodgson's weak tackle to race 50
metres for what should have been a superb touchdown if the Welsh centre had not
greedily spurned the support outside him.
A miserable half for the English came to a close even more disappointingly
when fullback Jason Robinson was forced to leave the field with a leg injury.
Within a minute his replacement Phil Christophers was following him after
receiving the yellow card for a premature tackle on Gareth Thomas when the Welsh
wing looked certain to catch Sweeney's high kick and race in for the touchdown.
A 9-6 interval lead was more than England deserved and down to 14 men the
atmosphere in the half-time dressing room must have been full of recrimination.
When they came out wing James Simpson-Daniel had also replaced blood-victim
flanker Richard Hill but, despite the problems, there was more resolve about the
English.
And it finally paid off with their first concerted attacking burst - Will
Greenwood receiving the ball in midfield and jinking past two Welsh defenders
before crashing over the line with two more hanging on for the 22nd England try
of his career.
At last England had found a modicum of rhythm in a fractured game which saw
Neil Back limp off in the 57th minute to be replaced by Joe Worsley.
Within 30 seconds Worsley was wearing the widest grin in Wales after becoming
one of its fastest try-scorers, scything his way round the back of a scrum for
an opportunist try.
Sweeney and Wilkinson swapped further penalties but at the end it was the
Welsh finishing stronger - and that will have set a few warning bells ringing
for Woodward.
The Slam is still on - but the room for improvement is immense.
Teams Wales: K. Morgan, R. Williams, Taylor, Shanklin, G. Thomas,
Sweeney, G. Cooper, I. Thomas, Humphreys, Evans, S. Williams,
Sidoli, D. Jones, M. Williams, G. Thomas.
Replacements: Harris for R. Williams (67),
Watkins for Shanklin (66), G. Williams for Humphreys (59),
Jenkins for Evans (59), Llewellyn for S. Williams (74),
Charvis for G. Thomas (59).
Not Used: Peel.
Sin Bin: S. Williams (56).
Pens: Sweeney 3.
England: Robinson, Luger, Greenwood, Hodgson, Cohen, Wilkinson,
Bracken, Rowntree, Thompson, Morris, Johnson, Kay, Hill, Back,
Dallaglio.
Replacements: Christophers for Robinson (39),
Simpson-Daniel for Wilkinson (77), Grewcock for Kay (64),
J. Worsley for Hill (41), Gomarsall for Back (77).
Not Used: Regan, M. Worsley.
Sin Bin: Christophers (40).
Tries: Greenwood, J. Worsley. Cons: Wilkinson 2.
Pens: Wilkinson 2. Drop Goals: Wilkinson 2.
Att: 72,500
Ref: Steve Walsh (New Zealand).
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