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Hurting Wales highlight how they can beat a resurgent Australia

By PA
Wales/ PA

Gareth Anscombe says that Wales will be “hard on ourselves” as they pick through the wreckage left by a record-equalling 10th successive Test match defeat.

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Wales are arguably at the lowest ebb in their 143-year international rugby history following Fiji’s 24-19 victory in Cardiff.

Another demoralising result matched Wales’ run of losses in 2002 and 2003, although that sequence included two reversals against each of New Zealand, England and Ireland.

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The 20-min red card explained by referee Karl Dickson

Referee Karl Dickson explains the 20-min red card system that is in place during the Autumn Nations Series.

Video Spacer

The 20-min red card explained by referee Karl Dickson

Referee Karl Dickson explains the 20-min red card system that is in place during the Autumn Nations Series.

This time around, Italy and Fiji have triumphed at the Principality Stadium, and there appears no immediate end in sight, with Australia, world champions South Africa and France in Paris lurking as their next three opponents.

It is more than 400 days since Wales won a Test, beating Georgia in the 2023 World Cup, and a far cry from Warren Gatland’s first stint as head coach when he oversaw World Cup semi-final appearances, Six Nations title triumphs, Grand Slams and world number one status.

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Australia
All Stats and Data

There are mitigating factors, with players such as Alun Wyn Jones, Justin Tipuric, Dan Biggar, George North, Ken Owens and Gareth Davies all retiring from international rugby during the past 18 months, while Louis Rees-Zammit went to the NFL and injuries have severely hampered the likes of Taulupe Faletau and Josh Adams.

Gatland has also capped more than 20 players since returning ahead of the 2023 Six Nations, but Test results still stand out like a sore thumb – played 22, won six, lost 16.

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“We have to be better, and we need to be better,” Wales fly-half Anscombe said.

“We just need to tidy up a few areas and not make stuff hard for ourselves. We’ve got to be more accurate than what we were (against Fiji).

“We need to reflect and look at why it happened and how it happened, but ultimately, discipline hurt us. I think they kicked 12 points (from penalties) and you can’t give away freebies like that at this level.

“Only a win was good enough, and we didn’t get it. We will be hard on ourselves, but I do think we will be better for the run-out and know that we have got to improve and get better pretty quickly.

“This has got to hurt, and it should hurt. We are playing at home and we should back ourselves to win.

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“It is going to hurt, and it’s going to sting for a couple of days, but you can’t dwell on it for too long at this level. We’ve got to find a way to pick ourselves back up.”

Australia will arrive in Cardiff on the back of a spectacular 42-37 success against England, and they have won nine times from their last 11 visits to the Welsh capital.

Wales have little time to dust themselves down following only a second defeat in 15 games against Fiji, with their previous loss being at the 2007 World Cup.

Anscombe added: “We have to find a way to get over the line, and it has got to come. I thought we were pretty positive in camp over the last couple of weeks.

“I still think our best performance is good enough to beat Australia. I think we fully believe that.

“I think if we can grow another 10-20 per cent in some little areas then we have got a real chance.

“Without a doubt the Wallabies are growing in confidence, so it is going to be a great challenge, but we’ve had success against them in the past here.

“I know the Wallabies are really well coached under Joe (Schmidt), and we know what he has done with Ireland in the past.

“I can’t help but feel we probably lost a couple of key moments (against Fiji). The Fijians, to their credit, put us under a lot of pressure. We just gave away too many penalties.

“It is a frustrating one because I thought we could have been a lot better. Full credit to the Fijians, they stuck at it, applied a lot of pressure and we just weren’t accurate enough at key times to get the result.”

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H
Hellhound 3 hours ago
Does South Africa have a future in European competition?

All you can do is hate on SA. Jealousy makes you nasty and it's never a good look. Those who actually knows rugby is all talking about the depth and standards of the SA players. They don't wear blinders like you. The NH had many years to build the depth and players for multiple competition the SA teams didn't. There will be growing pains. Not least travel issues. The NH teams barely have to travel to play an opponent opposed to the SA teams. That is just one issue. There is many more issues, hence the "growing pains". The CC isn't yet a priority and this is what most people have a problem with. Saying SA is disrespecting that competition which isn't true. SA don't have the funds yet to go big and get the players needed for 3 competitions. It all costs a lot of money. It's over using players and get them injured or prioritising what they can deliver with what are available. To qualify for CC, they need to perform well in the URC, so that is where the main priorities is currently. In time that will change with sponsors coming in fast. They are at a distinct disadvantage currently compared to the rest. Be happy about that, because they already are the best international team. You would have hated it if they kept winning the club competitions like the URC and CC every year too. Don't be such a sourmouth loser. See the complete picture and judge accordingly. There is many factors you aren't even aware of at play that you completely ignore just to sound relevant. Instead of being an positive influence and spread the game and help it grow, we have to read nonsense like this from haters. Just grow up and stop hating on the game. Go watch soccer or something that loves people like you.

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