Six Nations: Wales 38-14 Italy

Media caption,

Six Nations 2018: Wales 38-14 Italy highlights

2018 Six Nations: Wales v Italy

Wales (17) 38

Tries: Parkes, North 2, Hill, Tipuric Cons: Anscombe 3, Halfpenny 2 Pens: Anscombe

Italy (7) 14

Tries: Minozzi, Bellini Cons: Allan, Canna Pens:

Wales ran in five tries to hand Italy their 16th straight Six Nations defeat and jump up to second in the table.

George North, one of 10 changes made by coach Warren Gatland, scored twice, while Hadleigh Parkes, Justin Tipuric and Cory Hill sealed a bonus-point win.

Matteo Minozzi scored an early try for Italy with Mattia Bellini adding a consolation late on.

Wales will finish second behind champions Ireland if they defeat France with a bonus point next Saturday.

Image source, BBC Sport

Williams yellow carded and then replaced

Wales had Liam Williams and Gareth Davies both sent to the sin-bin - Williams' yellow card being a major talking point. He was penalised for a high tackle on opposite number Minozzi just before half-time.

Former Wales captain Martyn Williams, part of the BBC commentary team, believed it could have been a red card by the letter of the law, with one replay showing Williams' swinging arm making contact with the Italian's head.

The challenge appeared to have no malice, but could be deemed as over exuberant at best and reckless at worst.

South African television match official Marius Jonker guided French referee Jerome Garces through the decision.

Their conclusion was 10 minutes on the sidelines for Williams rather than a permanent exclusion although Wales chose not to return the British and Irish Lions back to the field.

North star shines for Wales

Media caption,

George North extends the lead for Wales

North had endured a week in which he found himself at the centre of controversy after being accused of not wanting to play for Northampton last weekend.

The 25-year-old will return to Wales next season on a national dual contract and could come back even sooner - after the Six Nations - if his club relations have broken down.

In Cardiff he returned to what he knows best in his first Six Nations start in almost a year, scoring tries.

Italy have seen enough of North over the years and he has now crossed for his eighth try in eight matches against the Azzurri.

Much changed - but plenty of respect

The build-up had been dominated by talk of 'disrespect' by Wales' selection following defeat against Ireland.

The only Welsh survivors were Williams, Parkes, Steff Evans, Gareth Davies and Hill.

Scarlets flanker James Davies, brother of Wales and Lions centre Jonathan, was the headline act making his Welsh debut.

Image source, Huw Evans Agency
Image caption,

Hadleigh Parkes celebrates as he goes over to score Wales' opening try

Davies made an early impression with a turnover as Wales turned down a penalty kick at goal after three minutes.

The decision was vindicated when Parkes took advantage of some weak Italian defence to power over with opposite number Tommaso Castello forced off with a head injury.

Another Welsh try followed when centre Owen Watkin intercepted an Italian attack and sprinted 70 metres before delivering the scoring pass to North.

Outside-half Anscombe, starting his first Six Nations match in his preferred position, converted both tries as Wales led 14-0 inside seven minutes.

Well beaten but no collapse by Italy

However, fears of an Italy collapse evaporated - there was no repeat of the 2016 fixture when Wales celebrated a record Six Nations 67-14 victory.

The Italians frustrated Wales as they chipped away for the rest of the first half while the hosts lacked fluidity following their storming start.

The visitors took advantage of some poor defence down the narrow side with Minozzi expertly wriggling through tackles from Williams and Gareth Davies. Tommaso Allen converted from the touchline.

Taulupe Faletau, captaining Wales for the first time in the absence of the rested Alun Wyn Jones, imposed himself on Italian outside-half Allen with a crunching tackle that sent reverberations around the Principality Stadium.

The second quarter was littered with errors with an Italian mistake allowing Anscombe to slot over a penalty.

Tempers frayed when Williams was yellow-carded for that challenge on opposite number Minozzi.

It ended a half to forget for Williams who did not return to the field as Leigh Halfpenny replaced him when the 10 minutes was up in the second half.

Numbers not counting

Image source, Huw Evans Agency
Image caption,

Cory Hill celebrates his try against Italy

Despite being down to 14 men, Wales started the second half in similar stunning fashion with Dragons lock Hill crashing over for his first Test try.

Wales made life hard for themselves when they were briefly reduced to 13 men as scrum-half Davies was sin-binned for a deliberate knock-on.

But North crossed for his double and the tireless Tipuric was also rewarded before Italy wing Mattia Bellini grabbed a late consolation.

What next?

Wales face France on the last day match with only second in the Six Nations on the line while Ireland will bid for the Grand Slam against England at Twickenham.

The rivals in Cardiff could finish as high as second or as low as fifth with Wales looking for a third home victory of the campaign.

Man of the match

Hadleigh Parkes. The New Zealand born centre has become a steady fixture in the Welsh midfield since making his debut against South Africa in December 2017 and his early try set the tone for Wales. Involved in everything good that Wales produced.

Match stats

Wales

Italy

62%

Possession

38%

63%

Territory

37%

11 (1)

Scrums won (lost)

4 (0)

12 (2)

Line-outs won (lost)

10 (4)

9

Pens conceded

10

151 (5)

Rucks/mauls won (lost)

93 (5)

35

Kicks from hand

25

135 (17)

Tackles made (missed)

190 (22)

601

Metres made

415

4

Offloads

13

8

Line breaks

4

Wales: L Williams; North, Watkin, Parkes, S Evans; Anscombe, G Davies; Smith, Dee, Francis, Hill, B Davies, Tipuric, J Davies, Faletau.

Replacements: Halfpenny for L Williams (50), Patchell for Anscombe (60), A Davies for G Davies (60), R Evans for Smith (61), Owens for Dee (61), S Davies for Hill (66), Jenkins for J Davies (66), Jones for Francis (67).

Italy: Minozzi; Benvenuti, Bisegni, Castello, Bellini; Allan, Violi; Lovotti, Ghiraldini, Ferrari, Zanni, Budd, Negri, Mbanda, Parisse.

Replacements: Hayward for Castello (4), Licata for Mbanda (14), Quaglio for Lovotti (60), Palazzani for Violi (63), Pasquali for Ferrari (63), Ruzza for Negri (67), Canna for Allan (68), Fabiani for Ghiraldini (68).

Sin bin: Benvenuti (77).

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