Minnows Uruguay Stun Fiji In Historic Rugby World Cup Victory
25th September 2019
The South Americans had only ever won two games at the World Cup and are ranked nine places below the more celebrated Pacific islanders, whom they had never beaten

- Underdogs Uruguay pulled off the greatest win in their history to beat Fiji 30-27 Wednesday, the first upset at the Rugby World Cup in Japan after a pulsating game at the Kamaishi Recovery Stadium
- The thrilling game had a much deeper significance as it was played in Kamaishi, one of the towns hardest-hit by the 2011 earthquake and tsunami that devastated north-eastern Japan
- The stadium, the only purpose-built venue at the Rugby World Cup, was built on the site of a school destroyed by the waves and hosting the match was seen as a powerful sign of recovery
KAMAISHI, Japan- Underdogs
Uruguay pulled off the greatest win in their history to beat Fiji 30-27
Wednesday, the first upset at the Rugby World Cup in Japan after a pulsating
game at the Kamaishi Recovery Stadium.
The South Americans had only ever won two games at the World
Cup and are ranked nine places below the more celebrated Pacific islanders,
whom they had never beaten.
But they capitalised on an error-strewn performance by Fiji,
whose hopes of qualifying for the knock-out stages now hang by a thread.
The thrilling game had a much deeper significance as it was
played in Kamaishi, one of the towns hardest-hit by the 2011 earthquake and
tsunami that devastated north-eastern Japan.
The stadium, the only purpose-built venue at the Rugby World
Cup, was built on the site of a school destroyed by the waves and hosting the
match was seen as a powerful sign of recovery.
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As Japan's Crown Prince Akishino looked on, the crowd
observed a moment's silence to remember the more than 1,000 people killed in
the tsunami, several children in the crowd removing their caps and bowing their
heads in prayer.
With emotions running high, Fiji were first on the
scoresheet in the seventh minute, Mesulame Dolokoto dotting down to complete a
slick line-out move that came after a delightful chip and catch by fullback
Alivereti Veitokani.
But Uruguay hit back via a mazy run from scrum-half Santiago
Arata, one of the smallest players on the pitch, who evaded several tackles
before touching down under the posts for an easy conversion.
Fiji's huge forward superiority eventually told as prop
Eroni Mawi bundled over from close range. But Uruguay, ranked nine places below
Fiji, refused to go away and again took the lead as No 8 Manuel Diana barged
over for a converted try.
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And the minnows leapt further ahead with 26 minutes on the
clock, Juan Manuel Cat finishing off a flowing move down the left. A penalty
just before half-time gave battling Uruguay a deserved 24-12 lead at the break.
Fiji had taken a shock lead of their own into the second
half of their defeat by Australia, but this time they found themselves needing
a dramatic comeback.
After Josh Matavesi missed a relatively simple penalty that
would have steadied the nerves, lock Api Ratuniyarawa finished off a move that
featured a sensational off-load.
And replacement scrum-half Nikola Matawalu dived over
following an outrageous dummy to closed the gap to 22-27 and set up a
nail-biting last 10 minutes.
Fiji threw everything at Uruguay, but a Felipe Berchesi
penalty took them out of sight and they clung on for dear life in the final
stages, Matawalu's last-minute try not enough to prevent victory.