No. | Name | |
---|---|---|
15Liam Williams, - | ||
14Alex Cuthbert, - | ||
13Cory Allen, - 3 | ||
12Scott Williams, - | ||
11Hallam Amos, - | ||
10Rhys Priestland, - 7 | ||
9Gareth Davies, - 2 | ||
1Paul James, - | ||
2Scott Baldwin, - | ||
3Samson Lee, - | ||
4Jake Ball, - | ||
5Luke Charteris, - | ||
6Sam Warburton, - | ||
7Justin Tipuric, - | ||
8James King, - | ||
Replacements | ||
16Ken Owens, - | ||
17Aaron Jarvis, - | ||
18Tomas Francis, - | ||
19Dominic Day, - | ||
20Dan Lydiate, - | ||
21Ross Moriarty, - | ||
22Lloyd Williams, - | ||
23Matthew Morgan, - |
*Players currently on the pitch are shown in bold
Match Commentary
"Wales avoided going the way of South Africa by comfortably seeing off the minnows, but the mostly-amateur Uruguay came to the Millennium Stadium far better organised than most Welsh fans could have expected. True, they failed to score in the second half, but they kept the energy levels up to prevent a complete rout at the hands of the professionals. The real worry for Wales will be the sight of Liam Williams, Corey Allen, Paul James, Samson Lee, and Dan Lydiate all taken off with what appeared to be varying levels of discomfort. Lee could well have been precautionary, but the likes of Allen and Lydiate did not look in such great shape. After the nightmare of losing Leigh Halfpenny and Rhys Webb in the warm-up against Italy, Warren Gatland will be praying his remaining men can shake off any knocks from today's clash."
A comfortable win for Wales but they now have more wounded to add to their already extensive injury list.
After a shaky start for Gatland's men, it took a brief spell for them to gain their footing. But, as soon as the first try went over courtesy of Samson Lee, it was plain sailing from then on. But, despite their dominance, the game just lacked something about it from Wales. Should they have made more of it?
They have even more injury concerns than before and it isn't looking all too pleasant for Wales despite their victory here today.
In similar style to Tipuric's try, Davies scores his second after erupting from a procession of bodies with the ball. A solid and necessary performance from the scrum half. Wales have crossed the half century mark.
Gatland's men are clearly in full control and while they have absentees and injuries, they should've probably made more of it here.
A lineout and rolling maul enables the Ospreys Flanker to ground the ball - will points make a difference in this year's pool of death?
The Teros fumbled the ball well into the Wales half and Gareth Davies receives, sidestep pasts an incoming wasit-high tackle before sprinting 20 yards and offloading to Lloyd Williams for the try.
However, the initial pass to Davies from Amos was seen as forward and it was disallowed.
Uruguay gain another scrum in their own half.
However, penalty is given to Wales and it's not long before Gatland's men power back to half way.
He deserves that try after his important involvement in their others. This should give him a lot of confidence.
Subs incoming for Wales.
"Wales are where they should be, in front, but it would be hard to say they've cruised through the opening half against minnows Uruguay. Perhaps inspired by the heroics of Japan against South Africa on Saturday, the South Americans took the lead through a couple of Felipe Berchesi penalties. That had more than a few Welsh fans sucking their teeth, but order was restored soon after thanks to a Samson Lee try. From there, Wales have put over a further three, with more sure to come as the Uruguayans tire. The real worry, however, is fullback Liam Williams, who was taken off shortly after the half-hour mark with what looked like a dead-leg. He was replaced by Matt Morgan, and Wales could be down to their third-choice fullback for the crucial clash with England next weekend."
There we have it. After an uneventful end to the first 40, the Welsh re-enter the dressing room in full control.
The first-half saw the Teros start the stronger side coming straight out the blocks, but the Welsh's know-how and just greater talent overawed their South American opponents towards the end and you can only really see one winner from here on. Bereschi has kicked a few nice penalties for Uruguay, but in terms of gaining a try, they have even come close.