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Sudden death try sees Spain relegate Fiji from World U20 Championship

Spain celebrate their sudden death relegation play-off win over Fiji in Athlone (Photo by EJ Langner/World Rugby)

2023 U20 Trophy winners Spain have safeguarded their World Rugby Championship status for 2025 after dramatically relegating Fiji with a 24-19 sudden death win in Athlone. The Fijians ultimately paid a heavy price for card trouble, suffering three yellows and one red over the course of an exhausting 93 minutes of play.

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Just when the match had been restored to a 15-vs-15 contest, they were unable to put a stop to a rampant Spanish maul that ended on 92:56 with the referee Federico Vedovelli awarding the golden try to replacement hooker David Gallego.

The outcome meant that Spain, promoted for the first time following their success in Kenya last July, will prolong their top-flight stay and the place of Fiji will now be taken in 2025 by Scotland, who were crowned 2024 Trophy champions after beating the USA in the Edinburgh final on Wednesday.

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Both Spain and Fiji came into the 11th/12th place play-off having lost all four matches so far at the Championship, the Spanish losing to France, Wales, New Zealand and Italy while the Fijians gave second best to South Africa, England, Argentina and Georgia.

In a brutally even contest played on a soft Athlone pitch, the first half was scoreless for 32 minutes. Spain thought they were going to get the breakthrough as pressure on the Fiji line resulted in the yellow carding of Moses Armstrong-Ravula.

However, that 28th-minute sin-binning instead revved up the Fijians who ‘won’ the 10 minutes a man short 14-0. A sweet pop pass from Malakai Masi had openside Ronald Sharma racing to the line from 30 metres out, and sub hooker Iowane Vakadrigi then powered his way in under the posts from five metres.

The irony, though, was that the Fijians conceded when restored to their full complement, Spain mauling their way forward off a lineout drive over to enable Diego Gonzalez Blanco to score the 39thminute unconverted try.

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Despite the weather deteriorating on the resumption, Fiji struck 12 minutes into the second half with an unconverted try when full-back Isikeli Basiyalo joined the line to create the overlap that Ratu Nemani Kurucake took advantage of by diving in at the corner.

Their 19-5 advantage was quickly reduced, though, as Spain enjoyed more maul dominance and it laid the platform for some resulting pick-and-go that ended with Jokin Zolezzi going in under the posts for the easily converted try.

With seven points now separating the teams, it started bucketing down and Spain upped the ante. Fiji went a man down again, Sharma going to the bin on 68 minutes, and the Spanish immediately thought they had a try in the corner from Julien Burguillos when play restarted.

However, TMO spotted a knock-on at the scrum from No8 Valentino Rizzo, which cancelled the score. A head contact tackle was also picked up against Fiji winger Waisake Salabiau, reducing them to 13 players. Salabiau’s yellow was quickly upgraded to red and the two-player difference was costly.

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Nicolas Moleti grabbed a 71st-minute pick-and-go try that was converted by Luciano Richardis to level the scores at 19-all, but Spain couldn’t grab the winner, normal time ending with them held up over the line after they kicked a penalty to the corner rather than shoot at the uprights.

Fiji soon lost Basiyalo to an extra time yellow card for a deliberate knock-on, but some poor Spanish handling kept the Islanders alive and they tried to grab the win with an ambitious 87th penalty kick from near the touchline just short of halfway.

Attack

176
Passes
203
175
Ball Carries
131
215m
Post Contact Metres
265m
6
Line Breaks
9

The attempt by Aisea Nawai never threatened the target and it left the door open for Spain to strike for glory three minutes into the second period of extra time following a wonderful touch finder from Richardis.

  • Click here to sign up to RugbyPass TV for free live coverage of matches from the 2024 World Rugby U20 Championship in countries that don’t have an exclusive local host broadcaster deal

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J
JW 2 hours ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

Like I've said before about your idea (actually it might have been something to do with mine, I can't remember), I like that teams will a small sustainable league focus can gain the reward of more consistent CC involvement. I'd really like the most consistent option available.


Thing is, I think rugby can do better than footballs version. I think for instance I wanted everyone in it to think they can win it, where you're talking about trying to make so the worst teams in it are not giving up when they are so far off the pace that we get really bad scorelines (when that and giving up to concentrate on the league is happening together). I know it's not realistic to think those same exact teams are going to be competitive with a different model but I am inclined to think more competitive teams make it in with another modem. It's a catch 22 of course, you want teams to fight to be there next year, but they don't want to be there next year when theres less interest in it because the results are less interesting than league ones. If you ensure the best 20 possible make it somehow (say currently) each year they quickly change focus when things aren't going well enough and again interest dies. Will you're approach gradually work overtime? With the approach of the French league were a top 6 mega rich Premier League type club system might develop, maybe it will? But what of a model like Englands were its fairly competitive top 8 but orders or performances can jump around quite easily one year to the next? If the England sides are strong comparatively to the rest do they still remain in EPCR despite not consistently dominating in their own league?


So I really like that you could have a way to remedy that, but personally I would want my model to not need that crutch. Some of this is the same problem that football has. I really like the landscape in both the URC and Prem, but Ireland with Leinster specifically, and France, are a problem IMO. In football this has turned CL pool stages in to simply cash cow fixtures for the also ran countries teams who just want to have a Real Madrid or ManC to lose to in their pool for that bumper revenue hit. It's always been a comp that had suffered for real interest until the knockouts as well (they might have changed it in recent years?).


You've got some great principles but I'm not sure it's going to deliver on that hard hitting impact right from the start without the best teams playing in it. I think you might need to think about the most minimal requirement/way/performance, a team needs to execute to stay in the Champions Cup as I was having some thougt about that earlier and had some theory I can't remember. First they could get entry by being a losing quarter finalist in the challenge, then putting all their eggs in the Champions pool play bucket in order to never finish last in their pool, all the while showing the same indifference to their league some show to EPCR rugby now, just to remain in champions. You extrapolate that out and is there ever likely to be more change to the champions cup that the bottom four sides rotate out each year for the 4 challenge teams? Are the leagues ever likely to have the sort of 'flux' required to see some variation? Even a good one like Englands.


I'd love to have a table at hand were you can see all the outcomes, and know how likely any of your top 12 teams are going break into Champions rubyg on th back it it are?

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f
fl 5 hours ago
‘The problem with this year’s Champions Cup? Too many English clubs’

"Right, so even if they were the 4 worst teams in Champions Cup, you'd still have them back by default?"

I think (i) this would literally never happen, (ii) it technically couldn't quite happen, given at least 1 team would qualify via the challenge cup, so if the actual worst team in the CC qualified it would have to be because they did really well after being knocked down to the challenge cup.

But the 13th-15th teams could qualify and to be fair I didn't think about this as a possibility. I don't think a team should be able to qualify via the Champions Cup if they finish last in their group.


Overall though I like my idea best because my thinking is, each league should get a few qualification spots, and then the rest of the spots should go to the next best teams who have proven an ability to be competitive in the champions cup. The elite French clubs generally make up the bulk of the semi-final spots, but that doesn't (necessarily) mean that the 5th-8th best French clubs would be competitive in a slimmed down champions cup. The CC is always going to be really great competition from the semis onwards, but the issue is that there are some pretty poor showings in the earlier rounds. Reducing the number of teams would help a little bit, but we could improve things further by (i) ensuring that the on-paper "worst" teams in the competition have a track record of performing well in the CC, and (ii) by incentivising teams to prioritise the competition. Teams that have a chance to win the whole thing will always be incentivised to do that, but my system would incentivise teams with no chance of making the final to at least try to win a few group stage matches.


"I'm afraid to say"

Its christmas time; there's no need to be afraid!

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