Wales' brave campaign in the Centenary World
Cup was ultimately brought to an end by a
clinical England performance in the Old Trafford
semi final. The pride in the Welsh shirt,
typified by the outstanding Kelvin Skerrett,
continued in the vein of the rest of the
tournament, but on the day their opponents
deserved their place in the Wembley final.
The match began at a ferocious pace with
England twice coming close through Betts and
Clarke. However it was Jonathan Davies who
registered the first points of the day, slotting
home a penalty after a Clarke high tackle. Andy
Farrell replied soon after with a penalty for
England after Skerrett was penalised at the play
the ball.
Around a quarter of the way through the
match, Paul Newlove scored the try which set
England onto a roll of confidence. A break from
Phil Clarke saw his erratic pass skilfully
cleaned up by Andy Farrell who sent Newlove on a
typical powerhouse run through a couple of
tacklers to the line. Farrell missed the goal
and shortly after Davies' second penalty reduced
the deficit to 4-6.
However England struck two crucial blows
before half time. Firstly Bobbie Goulding
slipped home a drop goal and with a minute to go
before the hooter, some crafty work from Farrell
and the pacey Tony Smith created space for Denis
Betts to cross and give England a useful 11-4
lead.
Shortly after halftime the English struck
another key blow. Paul Moriarty was sent to the
sin bin and with the defence short on numbers,
Goulding hoisted an expertly placed cross field
kick for Martin Offiah to score unopposed
despite Welsh protests that he had been
offside.
The Goulding/Offiah duo repeated the trick
fifteen minutes later, this time uncertainty
surrounded the grounding but the try again stood
and England were 19-4 up.
Wales were on the racks, but typically in no
mood to surrender. Paul Moriarty brought the
Welsh crowd to voice with a powerful run and
soon after his introduction from the bench,
Rowland Phillips scored a magnificent
opportunist try. He had been tackled close to
the line by Nick Pinkney but with England
failing to put any men at marker, the Welsh back
rower deftly played the ball to himself and
crashed over. Davies added the goal, the scores
were 19-10 and it was game on again.
Buoyed on by the passionate crowd singing the
Welsh played out the last quarter of the game on
a wave of emotion. Kevin Ellis came close to
scoring, and with 3 minutes to go Anthony
Sullivan evaded Robinson and belted down the
line only for an outstanding tackle from
Radlinski to deny a Wales score.
Bobbie Goulding had been England's best
player throughout and he ended the contest when
his sliding run picked out Phil Clarke to cross
for the decisive score.
England were deserving winners, having held
the upper hand for all of the game bar the Wales
spirited opening and climax. However Wales were
far from disgraced, and their achievement in
reaching the World Cup semi final must not be
underestimated. Just a couple of years earlier
they were not considered worthy participants in
a global tournament; in the 1995 World Cup they
won not only the respect of their opponents but
the admiration of the Welsh public.
At the end of the game an emotional Jonathan
Davies sunk to his knees and cried. It brought
an end to his magnificent rugby league career,
and he later claimed that he never experienced a
form of comradeship and team spirit than that in
the 1995 Welsh World Cup squad.