• Hadleigh Parkes celebrates scoring Wales' first try against Australia. Reuters
    Hadleigh Parkes celebrates scoring Wales' first try against Australia. Reuters
  • Wales lock Alun Wyn Jones is tackled by Australia's Rory Arnold at the Tokyo Stadium on Sunday. AFP
    Wales lock Alun Wyn Jones is tackled by Australia's Rory Arnold at the Tokyo Stadium on Sunday. AFP
  • A Wales fan at the Tokyo Stadium. Reuters
    A Wales fan at the Tokyo Stadium. Reuters
  • Australia's Matt To'omua is tackled by Wales flanker Justin Tipuric at the Tokyo Stadium. AFP
    Australia's Matt To'omua is tackled by Wales flanker Justin Tipuric at the Tokyo Stadium. AFP
  • Wales scrum-half Gareth Davies scores a try against Australia at the Tokyo Stadium. AFP
    Wales scrum-half Gareth Davies scores a try against Australia at the Tokyo Stadium. AFP
  • Gareth Davies of Wales goes over to score his team's second try. Getty
    Gareth Davies of Wales goes over to score his team's second try. Getty
  • Australia's full-back Dane Haylett-Petty scores a try against Wales. AFP
    Australia's full-back Dane Haylett-Petty scores a try against Wales. AFP
  • Wales' fly-half Dan Biggar kicks for goal. AFP
    Wales' fly-half Dan Biggar kicks for goal. AFP
  • Australia's Rory Arnold wins a lineout at the Tokyo Stadium. PA
    Australia's Rory Arnold wins a lineout at the Tokyo Stadium. PA
  • Australia centre Samu Kerevi attempts to catch the ball. AFP
    Australia centre Samu Kerevi attempts to catch the ball. AFP
  • Samu Kerevi of Australia charges past Wales' Jonathan Davies. EPA
    Samu Kerevi of Australia charges past Wales' Jonathan Davies. EPA
  • George North, left, of Wales and Australia's Kurtley Beale compete for a high ball at the Tokyo Stadium. EPA
    George North, left, of Wales and Australia's Kurtley Beale compete for a high ball at the Tokyo Stadium. EPA
  • Allan Alaalatoa, left, of Australia is challenged by Wales' players Nicky Smith and Justin Tipuric at the Tokyo Stadium. EPA
    Allan Alaalatoa, left, of Australia is challenged by Wales' players Nicky Smith and Justin Tipuric at the Tokyo Stadium. EPA
  • Australia's Dane Haylett-Petty in possession with Rhys Patchel of Wales about to tackle. Reuters
    Australia's Dane Haylett-Petty in possession with Rhys Patchel of Wales about to tackle. Reuters
  • Georgia's Giorgi Kveseladze is tackled by Uruguay wing Nicolas Freitas at the Kumagaya Rugby Stadium on Sunday. AFP
    Georgia's Giorgi Kveseladze is tackled by Uruguay wing Nicolas Freitas at the Kumagaya Rugby Stadium on Sunday. AFP
  • Action from the 2019 Rugby World Cup Pool D match between Georgia and Uruguay at the Kumagaya Rugby Stadium. AFP
    Action from the 2019 Rugby World Cup Pool D match between Georgia and Uruguay at the Kumagaya Rugby Stadium. AFP
  • Georgia supporters celebrate after their team beat Uruguay at the Kumagaya Rugby Stadium on Sunday. AFP
    Georgia supporters celebrate after their team beat Uruguay at the Kumagaya Rugby Stadium on Sunday. AFP
  • Georgia's Shalva Sutiashvili wins a lineout on Sunday against Uruguay. AP Photo
    Georgia's Shalva Sutiashvili wins a lineout on Sunday against Uruguay. AP Photo
  • Uruguay's Nicolás Freitas, left, is challenged by Georgia's Giorgi Kveseladze at Kumagaya Rugby Stadium on Sunday. AP
    Uruguay's Nicolás Freitas, left, is challenged by Georgia's Giorgi Kveseladze at Kumagaya Rugby Stadium on Sunday. AP
  • Jaba Bregvadze, hidden in pack, scores a try for Georgia against Uruguay. EPA
    Jaba Bregvadze, hidden in pack, scores a try for Georgia against Uruguay. EPA
  • Georgia's hooker Jaba Bregvadze celebrates with teammates after scoring a try against Uruguay. AFP
    Georgia's hooker Jaba Bregvadze celebrates with teammates after scoring a try against Uruguay. AFP
  • Georgia No 8 Otari Giorgadze scores a tryagainst Uruguay. Getty
    Georgia No 8 Otari Giorgadze scores a tryagainst Uruguay. Getty
  • Uruguay wing Rodrigo Silva is tackled by the Georgia defence. Getty
    Uruguay wing Rodrigo Silva is tackled by the Georgia defence. Getty
  • Georgia players celebrate after beating Uruguay. AP
    Georgia players celebrate after beating Uruguay. AP

Michael Cheika enraged after Australia lose Rugby World Cup classic to Wales


Paul Radley
  • English
  • Arabic

Wales and Australia might have offered up arguably the match of the tournament so far. But having a losing share in a Rugby World Cup classic did little to improve the furious mood of Michael Cheika.

If the Wallabies coach had been irritable in the build up, he seemed ready to implode by the end of the 29-25 defeat in Tokyo. He even acknowledged as much, as he cut short his awkward post-match TV interview.

“I will just keep them to myself,” Cheika said, when asked what positives he took from a second-half comeback by his side that fell just short of victory.

“I know you are expecting me to go, so I will just keep my powder dry and see where we end up.”

There has been a tinderbox atmosphere for all of this World Cup so far over the issue of officiating, particularly in relation to perceived dangerous play. Cheika, as might have been expected, has been the most combustible presence as a result.

“There is a part of it which is us versus everyone else,” Cheika said in the build up to the Wales game.

That siege mentality had been fostered in the fallout to Australia’s opening match against Fiji. They won that comfortably in the end, but subsequently lost wing Reece Hodge to a three-week suspension after a hearing into a dangerous tackle he had made.

Cheika vented at a variety of targets in between matches. He suggested John McKee, the Fiji coach, had played an underhand role in the process in which Hodge was cited.

The judicial hearing had been unfair, too, he intimated. Despite all that, “we are not going to let it derail us,” he had said.

“We will suck it up and get focused on what is important – the match on Sunday. We are not going to let them get to us.”

Whether that worked is debatable. A first-half onslaught led by their brilliant scrum-half Gareth Davies had given Wales a 23-8 lead by half time, and Australia’s players were on edge.

Cheika’s mood was transmitted to his players on the field, too.

When centre Samu Kerevi was penalised by referee Romain Poite for leading with his forearm into a tackle, and making contact with Rhys Patchell’s throat as a result, Australia’s captain Michael Hooper took issue.

“Can we not run into the tackle anymore?” Hooper asked of the official, with his words being broadcast via the referee’s microphone. Hooper then went on to question, in highly critical terms, Patchell’s tackling technique.

For his part, Kerevi appeared contrite. After listening to Poite’s assessment, he made a beeline for Patchell to offer his apologies.

Australia were emboldened by the perceived injustice, as tries by Dane Haylett-Petty and Hooper himself brought them to within striking distance of the Welsh.

They missed out in the end, though, which means they will likely be playing for second place in Pool B now.

Cheika was enraged. “As a rugby player, a former rugby player, I’m embarrassed about that,” he said in his press conference of the Kerevi incident, which he likened to that which saw Hodge banned.

“I don’t know the rules anymore. Honestly, I don’t know the rules anymore.”

Victory was well merited for the Welsh, though. They had the rare feat of two players landing drop goals, with Dan Biggar striking in the first minute of the game, and Patchell at the start of the second half.

Davies scored an intercept try to cap his sparkling display. Hadleigh Parkes scored a 13th minute try following a deft cross-kick by Biggar, who was forced off later in the first half by a head injury sustained in making a try saving tackle.

“It is massive,” Warren Gatland, the Wales coach, said of the win. “We are two from two, and we have to make sure we go and do a job. We have Fiji next, which will be tough.

“They will be hurting after their loss to Uruguay, so we have to be ready for a really tough encounter against them.”