Late try: Shane Williams
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Despite scoring a late try in his final game for Wales, Shane Williams was handed a losing send-off in Cardiff as Australia prevailed 24-18 on Saturday.
The result made it four wins in a row for Australia over Wales, as they backed up their victory when the teams last met in the RWC bronze final, and extended the hosts' poor record against the Tri-Nations to just one success in sixteen Tests.
But the 34-year-old Williams, to the delight of a crowd of more than 61,000, had the last word when, with his final act in a Wales jersey, he scored a typically jinking try in the corner just before full-time to extend his record to 58 tries.
The clash, played under a closed roof, changed when, with Wales 6-3 up early in the second half, home full-back Leigh Halfpenny was sent to the sin-bin and Australia scored 21 unanswered points while he was off the field.
Wales took a sixth minute lead when Rhys Priestland kicked a 40 metre penalty.
Shane Williams had to wait thirteen minutes to get his first touch but, soon afterwards, he came across from the left wing to the right to help keep an attack alive. But a promising move ended when centre Scott Williams dropped the ball short of the line.
Australia's James O'Connor, playing his first Test at fly-half, then missed a straightforward penalty chance that would have levelled the game before Australia went close to scoring a try on the half hour.
After a surging run by full-back Adam Ashley-Cooper, Berrick Barnes's clever cross kick was gathered close to Wales's line by Wallaby right wing Lachie Turner.
But Shane Williams, once again showing his defensive worth, just did enough to force Turner into touch before he grounded the ball. Although it needed several minutes' study by video referee Geoff Warren before Australia were denied a try.
Priestland and O'Connor then exchanged penalties, both awarded for offside, to leave Wales three points in front at half-time.
Australia emerged for the second period without openside flanker David Pocock, replaced by Radike Samo, and soon went close after a fine handling move saw O'Connor launch a counter-attack involving Barnes and Ashley-Cooper.
But after Barnes, involved for a second time, kicked ahead, O'Connor was tackled without the ball in sight of the line by Halfpenny and Jonathan Kaplan sent him to the sin-bin.
It was an expensive error, with Australia scrum-half Will Genia forcing his way over for a close range try which O'Connor converted. O'Connor then missed a simple penalty, the ball hitting the post, minutes later but it hardly mattered.
It was O'Connor's excellent cut-out pass that sent Turner in for a try at the corner and he then made no mistake with the tricky conversion.
Wales were still a man down when Samo's pass found Barnes for Australia's third try.
The home side did staunch the flow of Australia points with their first try in the 66th minute after Priestland followed up after good work out wide by replacement forward Ryan Jones.
But Priestland's conversion attempt hit the post and Australia were still 24-11 in front before Shane Williams scored the try the crowd wanted. An ideal way for him to cap his Test career.
The scorers:
For Wales:
Tries: Priestland, Williams
Con: Biggar
Pen: Priestland 2
For Australia:
Tries: Genia, Turner, Barnes
Con: O'Connor
Pen: O'Connor 3
Wales: 15 Leigh Halfpenny, 14 George North, 13 Scott Williams, 12 Jamie Roberts, 11 Shane Williams, 10 Rhys Priestland, 9 Lloyd Williams, 8 Toby Faletau, 7 Sam Warburton (c), 6 Dan Lydiate, 5 Ian Evans, 4 Bradley Davies, 3 Scott Andrews, 2 Huw Bennett, 1 Gethin Jenkins.
Replacements: 16 Matthew Rees, 17 Ryan Bevington, 18 Ryan Jones, 19 Justin Tipuric, 20 Tavis Knoyle, 21 Dan Biggar, 22 Alex Cuthbert.
Australia: 15 Adam Ashley-Cooper, 14 Lachie Turner, 13 Anthony Fainga'a, 12 Berrick Barnes, 11 Digby Ioane, 10 James O'Connor, 9 Will Genia, 8 Ben McCalman, 7 David Pocock, 6 Scott Higginbotham, 5 Rob Simmons, 4 James Horwill, 3 Salesi Ma'afu, 2 Tatafu Polota-Nau, 1 James Slipper.
Replacements: 16 Stephen Moore, 17 Ben Alexander, 18 Nathan Sharpe, 19 Radike Samo, 20 Ben Lucas, 21 Ben Tapuai, 22 Nick Phipps.
Referee: Jonathan Kaplan
Assistant referees: Dave Pearson, Jérôme Garces
TMO: Geoff Warren






Comments
makemehappy says...
Some on here appear to miss that Wales are very much work in progress. A very young team, and there is little in the UK to compare with them. Strength in depth is coming through at last, though god did we miss Adam. At least we can all forget about the redundant Hook now!
Posted 21:10 05th December 2011
APV1 says...
So long, Shane! You'll be missed. (Except, as Jediboy rightly mentions, when you were playing against us!)
@ markpat - that would be the Aus team I would pick too. But, as an Englishman, not one I'd want to face!
Posted 13:54 05th December 2011
markpat says...
O'Connor at #10 also frees up O'Connor's wing spot to play Ioane and Drew Mitchell which should be an extremely impressive backline.
Genia, O'Connor halfbacks; Barnes & AAC in the centres; Mitchell, Ioane & Beale back 3.
Cooper on the bench if you need a player to come on and try and pull something out of nothing.
Posted 11:30 05th December 2011
runnrugby says...
@startledwombat
Agreed. James O'Connor is such a talented player. Plays just about every backline position isnt scared to take the ball into contact and doesnt need to be hidden at fullback on defence. If he is the last man he wont give up on making the tackle like that try saver against ireland. He makes Cooper look pretty pathetic.
Well done Shane Williams on great career. Im glad you were able to have the last say in your last game
Posted 21:41 04th December 2011
coronach says...
jonesy2 says... dominant display all over the field and set pieces. never in doubt
- well that may apply to parts of the second half, especially the 10min burst when Oz scored 3 tries . . . but I'd hardly rate them as dominant that first half, it was Aimless v Clueless at times - it took them 40 min to even get on the board and down 3-6 at the break. Clear winners, and a good way to end the season, but hardly a match to remember.
No comments on the yellow card offence. I expected a penalty try - seen them awarded for less. Though as it turned out the try-saving 'tackle' cost a lot more then 5 (or 7).
Posted 13:39 04th December 2011
jonesy2 says...
dominant display all over the field and set pieces. never in doubt, scoreline flatters wales, great effort with pocock going off hope his ankle is ok.
again, well done williams you little legend.
Posted 10:11 04th December 2011
Jediboy says...
As an Englishman I'm glad to see Shane Williams retire - he's caused me some pain over the years.
But on the other hand I'm sorry he won't play for the Lions. I liked having him in 'my' team then.
Great player, great career, well done.
Now Wales, stop producing more good wingers because I don't like it any more. (except when its a Lions tour).
Posted 08:14 04th December 2011
gingergenius says...
so this new Wales side that are "the third or fourth best side in the world" have now played 5 top class opposition since the start of the RWC (SA, Ireland, France, Australia twice) and won just once. They've got some wonderful players and always play good football, but they're more overhyped than England, and that's saying something.
Posted 06:17 04th December 2011
startledwombat says...
The message went out: "if those guys can score three tries in ten minutes, we can score two tries in fifteen..."
I notice that James O'Connor is unafraid and:
- reliably makes tackles - rather than needing back-up cover
- reliably runs straight - rather than crowding the players outside
- reliably distributes the ball - so the backline is on the front foot
- reliably takes hits - rather than fleeing the hit
- reliably catches the ball in the air and kicks off both feet - when deep in cover.
Keep him as #10.
Posted 00:21 04th December 2011
isthatrightref says...
Well that's it then... no more SH footy 'til February... no withdrwal symptoms yet, I expect they'll start when I take my "I support 2 teams: the AB's & anyone playing Australia (unless it's South Africa)" t-shirt off the line, fold it carefully (it's starting to fray at some of the seams) & put it in the drawer with my Crusaders & AB jerseys, caps & flags...
Posted 22:54 03rd December 2011
rico says...
I Loves shaney williams, I do butt! Legend going out with a try - did berrick barnes really really try to tackle him - who cares, absolute legend of the game appreciated throughout world rugby. happy retirement with ur family and Thank You.
Posted 22:46 03rd December 2011
J_HDK says...
Was this result ever in doubt? Wakes missing (basically) one first choice player scrape a close loss a few weeks ago.... now missing five or six first choice players at least. No chance. Not sure what the point of this fixture was. All it achieved was give the Welsh provinces a hard time in the Pro12 this weekend and loss of preparation for the Heineken cup games next week. Not very smart WRU
Posted 22:35 03rd December 2011
sirjona says...
Swift did you notice that yet again Pocock killed the ball and yet again Aus had lazy runners playing the dirty thieving aussies inside. Who the do they think they are Ritchie or mccaw . Wales were the better team its just that Australia cheat better.
Posted 22:03 03rd December 2011
NHsaints says...
As usual an outstandind performance from shane and he will be sorely missed by wales, he's set so much in motion for wales as a side though that his legacy will live on.
Posted 21:56 03rd December 2011
ruggafella says...
Disappointing on the whole. Same old story and I agree the scoreline was flattering. Australia had our number and could have held us at arms length (or two scores) for as long as needed, just as in the play-off game. Australia showed that extra bit of class - the control, composure and nous of an experienced test side that can threaten any side in the world. We don't have that yet.
I'm glad Shane got that try in the dying moments. It was a very emotional day for the lad and every rugby supporter with an ounce of respect for what he has brought to Wales and the world of rugby. Just a shame it couldn't have been more of a celebration.
Posted 21:42 03rd December 2011
isthatrightref says...
Wobblies up 24 - 11 when the clock hit 80 was about right... nice of them to let Williams get the final try - as with their last outing it allowed Wails to get closer on the board than they ever did on the field.
Posted 21:37 03rd December 2011
jontheref says...
Swifty, if the ref had allowed Lloyd Williams try, as he should have, the whole game would have had a different complexion.
iRB direct from a few weeks ago, if the ball is ripped by a defender, it is not a knock on, so play on.
Maybe Kaplan doesn't keep up to date with the directives!
Wales put everybody on, so if anything, they lost their shape more.
better team won, just.
Posted 21:33 03rd December 2011
zambokke says...
Williams was a great player - fast off the mark, read the lines well, good side step and swerve, low centre of gravity, high power to weight ratio etc etc. Shame that he couldn't have played for a better team. I'm getting bored now of listening to how great Wales are and lots of 'if only' , 'could have', 'should have' etc. They were flattered by the scoreline as they were versus Australia in the 3rd / 4th playoffs. 4 losses now in a few months and ranked 8th in the world rankings (below the other pommie teams). Putting up a galant fight isn't good enough; you are not up at the top yet so stop giving all the spiel.
Posted 20:46 03rd December 2011
puftersGAME says...
great player williams,,you will be missed,,thanks for ur contribution in making the game more entertaining these last ten years,,wishing u all the best in the future
Posted 18:54 03rd December 2011
Leinsterstewy says...
Dissapointing Wales performance, but I am sure they will get better and will be strong contenders for the 2012 6 Nations. However, is anyone else tiring slightly of the "We should have ... " and "We could have..." from Wales?
Regarding Williams, a well deserved fairytale ending for a great player and servant to the game.
Posted 18:06 03rd December 2011