Rugby World Cup: Wales' 10 most memorable moments

BBC
 
Rugby World Cup: Wales' 10 most memorable moments

From the joys of hosting the tournament and famous wins, to the despair of shock defeats or scratching of heads at self-inflicted controversies.

All fans have their memories of the good, bad and downright ugly incidents since the inaugural event in 1987.

So we countdown 10 of the most memorable - if not always best - moments for Wales as they prepare for the 10th tournament at France 2023.

10 - Wales end Australia hoodoo

Possibly Wales' best 80-minute performance at a World Cup.

The Grand Slam champions had topped the world rankings before the tournament in Japan in 2019 and oozed confidence with a stunning first-half display against Australia in Tokyo.

Tries from Hadleigh Parks and Gareth Davies and the boot of Dan Biggar put Warren Gatland's side 23-8 ahead at half-time.

Australia hit back but Rhys Patchell steered Wales home for a first World Cup win over the Wallabies in 32 years.

9 - Wales deny Lomu

Wales' only significant achievement of a doomed 1995 campaign was stopping the emerging superstar of world rugby.

Jonah Lomu burst onto the scene in South Africa but only the hosts and Wales could find a way to stop the thundering wing.

Lomu would face Wales three times in his career - including the last of 63 appearances for the All Blacks - but curiously would never score.

For Wales, it marked a minor claim to fame in South Africa having sacked Alan Davies just two months before the tournament and appointed the first non-Welshman to coach the national team, Australian Alex Evans.

8 - Howley sent home

Coaches have been sacked before a World Cup, but never during one. Then came the Rob Howley bombshell.

Warren Gatland's number two had been instrumental in four Six Nations titles and a British and Irish Lions Test series win in Australia.

But he was sent home from the 2019 World Cup in Japan before Wales had even kicked off after being accused of betting breaches.

Howley would later be banned from the sport by World Rugby for 18 months while Wales would reach the semi-finals without him.

7 - Welsh lambs become dragons

Steve Hansen was accused of waving the white flag when he made 10 changes for the final pool game of the 2003 World Cup against New Zealand.

However, these 'lambs to the slaughter', as one newspaper headline described, produced a thrilling display that lit up Sydney and stunned the tournament.

Mark Taylor, Sonny Parker, Colin Charvis and Shane Williams all scored as Wales led the All Blacks 37-33 in the second half.

They would eventually lose 53-37, but many players pointed to that match as the turning point for Wales and the springboard to the 2005 Grand Slam.

6 - Wales welcomes the world

The Millennium Stadium was built to host the first World Cup of the professional era and would symbolise a revival in Welsh national confidence.

Cool Cymru was in full swing with the likes of likes of Manic Street Preachers, Stereophonics and Catatonia topping the charts and Rhys Ifans taking Hollywood by storm.

The National Assembly was established in a new-look Cardiff Bay to house the country's first parliament in 600 years, while a shrine to the national sport was under construction in the city centre.

There were very real concerns the £121m Millennium Stadium, now called the Principality Stadium, would not be ready in time but the last electrics were hooked up with just days to go and Wales staged an opening ceremony unprecedented in scale and ambition for a Rugby World Cup.

5 - Sacked in the morning

Gareth Jenkins' brief and troubled reign was finally brought to an ignominious end when he was sacked in a French hotel car park.

In 2007, Jenkins had become the first Welshman to lead Wales to the World Cup for 16 years having narrowly managed to hold onto his job by avoiding a Six Nations whitewash with victory over England.

But the cracks were evident and a lack of cohesion in both tactics and selection were brutally exposed by Fiji in a nevertheless thrilling encounter in Nantes.

It would be one of the great World Cup matches but marked the final straw for Jenkins - who remains the last Welshman to take charge of Wales at a World Cup.

4 - Humbled by Samoa (the first time)

Of course Fiji in 2007 was far from the first time Wales had lost to Pacific Island opponents.

Most famously, Wales were beaten in Cardiff by, as they were then called, Western Samoa in what was one of the biggest shocks in rugby history.

It was only four years since Wales finished third but head coach Ron Waldron left his post weeks before the World Cup because of ill health - and disastrous results - throwing Alan Davies into the hot seat.

Samoa were stacked with talent such as future All Blacks Frank Bunce, Stephen Bachop and Pat Lam and following the 16-13 loss, a Welsh fan provided one of the classic rugby quotes: "We're lucky we didn't play the whole of Samoa."

Wales would lose again to Samoa in Cardiff eight years later.

3 - Wales' Twickenham triumph

Wins against England are always sweet for Welsh fans, but to do so at Twickenham in your rivals' own World Cup was beyond all hope.

Hosts England were in control, leading 22-12 with half an hour to play in 2015, but had not counted on Wales' resolve.

Warren Gatland's side overcame seemingly endless injuries to pull off a sensational 28-25 success.

Replacement scrum-half Lloyd Williams filled in on the wing but his cross-field kick set up a try for Gareth Davies while Dan Biggar kicked 23 points, including a match-winning penalty from long range.

England captain Chris Robshaw fatefully opted to kick a late penalty to touch, in search of a win, rather than take the draw and England would become the first host nation to fail to qualify for the knock-out stage.

2 - Thorburn's kick

David Codey became the first Australian player sent off in a Test match just minutes into the third-place play-off but it still took a last-gasp conversion for Wales to win.

Gareth Roberts and Paul Moriarty scored before Adrian Hadley's late try set up Paul Thorburn's tricky conversion from the touchline to snatch a dramatic 22-21 victory.

It capped a colourful if chaotic first experience of a World Cup for Wales, from gambling at pool and sleeping in cold motel rooms to boozing with England football star Bryan Robson.

However, 36 years on, that inaugural and slightly ramshackle tournament in 1987 remains Wales' most successful.

1 - Warburton's red

Most close-fought contests have their fair share of almosts and nearlys but the 9-8 loss to France in the 2011 semi-final had all of those, and enough whys, if onlys and what ifs to drive a nation mad.

A young and vibrant side took the tournament by storm but Wales' glorious World Cup odyssey would ultimately be decided in the 19th minute, with a flash of referee Alain Rolland's red card.

Sam Warburton, the youngest captain in World Cup history, tipped wing Vincent Clerc upside down and Wales' world went with it.

The tournament would pave the way for Six Nations success in 2012 and 2013 - but only after a prolonged period of national mourning.