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1999 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina

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1999 Wales rugby union tour of Argentina
Summary
P W D L
Total
05 03 00 02
Test match
02 02 00 00
Opponent
P W D L
 Argentina
2 2 0 0
Tour chronology
Previous tour1998 Africa
Next tour2001 Japan

The Wales national rugby union team toured Argentina in May–June 1999. They played five matches, including two tests against the Argentina national team. The tour served as preparation for the 1999 Rugby World Cup, which Wales hosted in October and November that year.

Wales won the test series 2–0, winning the first test 36–26 and the second 23–16 to claim their first series victory in the Southern Hemisphere; however, they only won one of their three tour matches, beating Tucumán 69–44 but losing 31–29 to Buenos Aires and 47–34 to Argentina A.

Squad

[edit]

Wales coach Graham Henry named a squad of 37 for the tour of Argentina, including three uncapped players: scrum-half Rhodri Jones, and back-rowers Richard Arnold and Ian Boobyer. Fly-half Arwel Thomas and lock Andy Moore were recalled to the Wales team after missing the 1999 Five Nations Championship. Henry also named seven standby players, including lock Gareth Llewellyn and full-back Byron Hayward.[1] After injuries to Pontypridd's Ian Gough and Kevin Morgan, Llewellyn and Hayward were called up to the main tour squad.[2][3] Centre Scott Gibbs was also ruled out after breaking a hand;[3] he was replaced by Newport's Matthew Watkins.[4]

Name Position Club Notes
Jonathan Humphreys Hooker Cardiff
Garin Jenkins Hooker Swansea
Chris Anthony Prop Swansea
Ben Evans Prop Swansea
Andrew Lewis Prop/Hooker Cardiff
Darren Morris Prop Swansea
Peter Rogers Prop London Irish
Dai Young Prop Cardiff
Ian Gough Lock Pontypridd Withdrew due to injury
Andy Moore Lock Swansea
Craig Quinnell Lock Richmond
Mike Voyle Lock Llanelli
Chris Wyatt Lock Llanelli
Richard Arnold Back row Newcastle
Ian Boobyer Back row Llanelli
Colin Charvis Back row Swansea
Geraint Lewis Back row Pontypridd
Scott Quinnell Back row Llanelli
Brett Sinkinson Back row Neath
Martyn Williams Back row Pontypridd
Rob Howley Scrum-half Cardiff Captain
Rhodri Jones Scrum-half Swansea
David Llewellyn Scrum-half Ebbw Vale
Neil Jenkins Fly-half Pontypridd
Stephen Jones Fly-half Llanelli
Arwel Thomas Fly-half Swansea
Allan Bateman Centre Richmond
Neil Boobyer Centre Llanelli
Leigh Davies Centre Cardiff
Scott Gibbs Centre Swansea Withdrew due to injury
Mark Taylor Centre Swansea
Dafydd James Wing Pontypridd
Matthew Robinson Wing Swansea
Gareth Thomas Wing Cardiff
Nick Walne Wing Richmond
Shane Howarth Full-back Sale
Kevin Morgan Full-back Pontypridd Withdrew due to injury

Standby squad

Name Position Club Notes
Phil John Hooker Pontypridd
Barry Williams Hooker Richmond
John Davies Prop Llanelli
Gareth Llewellyn Lock Richmond Injury replacement for Ian Gough
Hywel Jenkins Back row Llanelli
Matthew Watkins Centre Newport Injury replacement for Scott Gibbs
Richard Rees Wing Swansea
Byron Hayward Full-back Llanelli Injury replacement for Kevin Morgan

Results

[edit]

Scores and results list Wales's points tally first.

Opponent For Against Date Venue Notes
Buenos Aires 29 31 29 May 1999 Buenos Aires Cricket & Rugby Club, Buenos Aires Tour match
Tucumán 69 44 1 June 1999 Estadio Monumental José Fierro, Tucumán Tour match
Argentina 36 26 5 June 1999 Ferro Carril Oeste, Buenos Aires Test match
Argentina A 34 47 8 June 1999 Jorge Newbery Municipal Stadium, Rosario Tour match
Argentina 23 16 12 June 1999 Ferro Carril Oeste, Buenos Aires Test match

Buenos Aires v Wales

[edit]

Wales named a strong team for the opening match of their tour, and took a 19–14 lead into half-time thanks to a late try from Allan Bateman, converted by Arwel Thomas, who also kicked four penalties in the opening quarter; however, Buenos Aires were still in the game thanks to a try from Rolando Martín and three José Cilley penalties, and they took the lead early in the second half when Octavio Bartolucci crossed for the home side and Cilley added the extras. Wales went back in front thanks to a converted try from Geraint Lewis, but Cilley added another penalty before converting Tomás Solari's try to give Buenos Aires a 31–26 lead as the game entered its final quarter. Thomas pulled the score back to 31–29 three minutes later, but there were no further scores and Wales suffered a shock defeat.[5]

29 May 1999
Buenos Aires31–29 Wales
Try: Martín 17' m
Bartolucci 42' c
Solari 60' c
Con: Cilley (2)
Pen: Cilley (4) 7', 23', 29', 53'
ReportTry: Bateman 40' c
Lewis 50' c
Con: A. Thomas (2)
Pen: A. Thomas (5) 4', 10', 15', 20', 63'
Buenos Aires Cricket & Rugby Club, San Fernando
Referee: Chris White (England)

Tucumán v Wales

[edit]

Wales won their first match of the tour in a nine-try performance against Tucumán. Wing Matthew Robinson scored four times, while Mark Taylor and Neil Boobyer claimed two apiece, and Geraint Lewis completed the scoring. Fly-half Arwel Thomas was almost perfect from the tee, converting all nine tries and kicking two out of three penalty attempts for a total of 24 out of Wales's 69 points. Tucumán scored 22 of their points in a 10-minute spell in which they took a 25–20 lead, but Wales were able to come back to win 69–44.[6]

First test: Argentina v Wales

[edit]

Following his four tries in the game against Tucumán four days earlier, Matthew Robinson was named on the wing for Wales's first test against Argentina, taking the place of Gareth Thomas. In the only other change from the team that beat England in the final game of the Five Nations, Allan Bateman partnered Mark Taylor in the centres in place of the injured Scott Gibbs.[7] Despite a strong team, Wales found themselves 23–0 down before the half-hour mark; fly-half Gonzalo Quesada scored 18 of those points, converting his own try as well as one from Octavio Bartolucci, in addition to three penalties. Wales got back into the game shortly before half-time as Neil Jenkins kicked a penalty before converting a Dafydd James try with the last play of the half, reducing the deficit to 23–10. Jenkins added another penalty before converting a Brett Sinkinson try in the first 10 minutes of the second period. He then levelled the scores as the game entered the final quarter, only for Quesada to restore a three-point lead for the hosts; however, Shane Howarth made it 26–26 with a drop goal in the 68th minute. Wales then pulled clear thanks to a try from Chris Wyatt, which Jenkins converted before kicking another penalty to give the tourists a 36–26 win.[8] Coach Graham Henry blamed Wales's slow start on having arrived late at the stadium; their police escort did not turn up and the team coach was blocked in at the hotel, which meant they arrived only 45 minutes before kick-off. Henry commended his team's determination to come back from 23–0 down, and reserved special praise for their scrummaging, particularly that of hooker Garin Jenkins, who he said he had "misjudged" when he took over as Wales coach.[9]

5 June 1999
Argentina 26–36 Wales
Try: Quesada 24' c
Bartolucci 28' c
Con: Quesada (2)
Pen: Quesada (4) 5', 16', 26', 65'
ReportTry: James 40+2' c
Sinkinson 49' c
Wyatt 74' c
Con: N. Jenkins (3)
Pen: N. Jenkins (4) 37', 45', 63', 77'
Drop: Howarth 68'
Ferro Carril Oeste, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 16,500
Referee: Brian Campsall (England)
FB 15 Diego Albanese
RW 14 Octavio Bartolucci
OC 13 Eduardo Simone
IC 12 Lisandro Arbizu
LW 11 Ezequiel Jurado
FH 10 Gonzalo Quesada
SH 9 Agustín Pichot
N8 8 Pablo Camerlinckx downward-facing red arrow
OF 7 Ignacio Fernández Lobbe
BF 6 Rolando Martín
RL 5 Alejandro Allub downward-facing red arrow
LL 4 Pedro Sporleder (c)
TP 3 Mauricio Reggiardo
HK 2 Federico Méndez
LP 1 Roberto Grau downward-facing red arrow
Replacements:
PR 16 Omar Hasan upward-facing green arrow
HK 17 Mario Ledesma
FL 18 Lucas Ostiglia upward-facing green arrow
N8 19 Gonzalo Longo upward-facing green arrow
SH 20 Nicolás Fernández Miranda
FH 21 Felipe Contepomi
CE 22 José Orengo
Coach:
New Zealand Alex Wyllie
FB 15 Shane Howarth
RW 14 Matthew Robinson
OC 13 Mark Taylor
IC 12 Allan Bateman
LW 11 Dafydd James
FH 10 Neil Jenkins
SH 9 Rob Howley (c)
N8 8 Scott Quinnell
OF 7 Brett Sinkinson
BF 6 Colin Charvis
RL 5 Chris Wyatt
LL 4 Craig Quinnell
TP 3 Ben Evans downward-facing red arrow
HK 2 Garin Jenkins
LP 1 Peter Rogers downward-facing red arrow
Replacements:
PR 16 Dai Young upward-facing green arrow
PR 17 Andrew Lewis upward-facing green arrow
CE 18 Neil Boobyer
FH 19 Stephen Jones
SH 20 David Llewellyn
LK 21 Mike Voyle
HK 22 Jonathan Humphreys
Coach:
New Zealand Graham Henry

Assistant referees:
Chris White (England)
Wayne Erickson (Australia)

Argentina A v Wales

[edit]

Graham Henry changed his entire starting line-up for the midweek match against Argentina A in Rosario. The opening 20 minutes of the game saw Arwel Thomas and Felipe Contepomi trade penalties, but tries from Juan Fernández Miranda, Gonzalo Camardón and Nicolás Fernández Miranda in the second quarter meant Wales trailed 27–15 at the break. Further penalties from Contepomi, a drop goal from Camardón and a converted try from Patricio Grande extended that lead to 29 points before Wales scored their first try through scrum-half Rhodri Jones just before the hour mark. Neil Boobyer added another a few minutes later, and Nick Walne also crossed as the game entered the final 10 minutes, but despite successful conversions from Arwel Thomas, it was not enough to avoid another tour defeat. During the match, a photography gantry collapsed under the weight of around 20 spectators who had climbed on it; there were no serious injuries, but the match was stopped for six minutes while aid was provided.[10]

8 June 1999
Argentina XV 47–34 Wales
Try: J. Fernández Miranda 23' c
Camardón 34' c
N. Fernández Miranda 40+4' c
Grande 52' m
Con: Contepomi (3)
Pen: Contepomi (6) 8', 19', 40+3', 42', 47', 63'
Drop: Camardón 49'
ReportTry: R. Jones 58' m
N. Boobyer 61' c
Walne 71' c
Con: A. Thomas (2)
Pen: A. Thomas (5) 3', 13', 31', 36', 40+1'
Jorge Newbery Municipal Stadium, Rosario
Referee: Wayne Erickson (Australia)

Second test: Argentina v Wales

[edit]

Having failed to live up to his performance against Tucumán in the first test, Matthew Robinson was dropped in favour of Gareth Thomas on the right wing as one of two changes to the Wales line-up from a week earlier; the other change saw Geraint Lewis come in for Colin Charvis in the back row.[11] Wales took an 8–0 lead in the opening 15 minutes thanks to a penalty from Neil Jenkins and a try from his namesake Garin. Felipe Contepomi reduced the deficit with a penalty 10 minutes later, but that was soon followed by the biggest flashpoint of the game; after Dafydd James was deemed to have illegally killed the ball, he was punched by Argentina prop Mauricio Reggiardo, sparking a mass brawl on the sideline. As a result, Reggiardo was yellow-carded along with Argentina captain Pedro Sporleder and Wales prop Peter Rogers. Contepomi put Argentina into a 9–8 lead with two more penalties, only for Jenkins to edge Wales back in front with a kick of his own on the stroke of half-time. He added another early in the second half, before stretching the lead to 17–9 with a 46th-minute drop goal after Chris Wyatt managed to steal the ball from an Argentina line-out. Wales had the chance to put the contest to bed shortly after as Thomas headed towards the try line, only to knock on. Contepomi missed the opportunity to close the gap with two kicks at goal, and Wales responded with two more penalties of their own to take the lead to 23–9 and Jenkins' international points total past the 800 mark, behind only Australian fly-half Michael Lynagh. José Orengo's try, converted by José Cilley, reduced the home side's deficit to seven points in the final minutes, but it was too little, too late as Wales secured the whitewash and their first series win in the Southern Hemisphere.[12]

12 June 1999
Argentina 16–23 Wales
Try: Orengo 77' c
Con: Cilley
Pen: Contepomi (3) 26', 33', 36'
ReportTry: G. Jenkins 15' m
Pen: N. Jenkins (5) 12', 40', 44', 65', 68'
Drop: N. Jenkins 46'
Ferro Carril Oeste, Buenos Aires
Attendance: 20,000
Referee: Chris White (England)
FB 15 Diego Albanese
RW 14 Octavio Bartolucci
OC 13 José Orengo
IC 12 Lisandro Arbizu
LW 11 Gonzalo Camardón
FH 10 Felipe Contepomi downward-facing red arrow
SH 9 Agustín Pichot
N8 8 Gonzalo Longo
OF 7 Miguel Ruiz
BF 6 Rolando Martín downward-facing red arrow
RL 5 Ignacio Fernández Lobbe downward-facing red arrow
LL 4 Pedro Sporleder (c)
TP 3 Mauricio Reggiardo downward-facing red arrow
HK 2 Federico Méndez downward-facing red arrow
LP 1 Roberto Grau
Replacements:
FH 16 José Cilley upward-facing green arrow
LK 17 Alejandro Allub upward-facing green arrow
HK 18 Mario Ledesma upward-facing green arrow
FL 19 Lucas Ostiglia upward-facing green arrow
PR 20 Omar Hasan upward-facing green arrow
CE 21 Juan Fernández Miranda
SH 22 Nicolás Fernández Miranda
Coach:
New Zealand Alex Wyllie
FB 15 Shane Howarth
RW 14 Gareth Thomas
OC 13 Mark Taylor
IC 12 Allan Bateman
LW 11 Dafydd James
FH 10 Neil Jenkins
SH 9 Rob Howley (c)
N8 8 Scott Quinnell
OF 7 Brett Sinkinson
BF 6 Geraint Lewis downward-facing red arrow
RL 5 Chris Wyatt
LL 4 Craig Quinnell
TP 3 Ben Evans downward-facing red arrow
HK 2 Garin Jenkins
LP 1 Peter Rogers downward-facing red arrow
Replacements:
PR 16 Dai Young upward-facing green arrow
HK 17 Jonathan Humphreys upward-facing green arrow
PR 18 Andrew Lewis upward-facing green arrow
CE 19 Neil Boobyer
FH 20 Stephen Jones
SH 21 David Llewellyn
LK 22 Mike Voyle
Coach:
New Zealand Graham Henry

Assistant referees:
Brian Campsall (England)
Wayne Erickson (Australia)

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Welsh name newcomers". BBC News. 26 April 1999. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  2. ^ "Llewellyn earns Wales call-up". BBC News. 29 April 1999. Retrieved 19 March 2024.
  3. ^ a b "Gibbs out of Wales tour". BBC News. 17 May 1999. Retrieved 15 March 2024.
  4. ^ Hewett, Chris (18 May 1999). "Rugby union: Wellington move gives Yates hope". The Independent. Retrieved 25 March 2024.
  5. ^ "Wales shock". The Irish Times. 31 May 1999. Retrieved 23 March 2024.
  6. ^ "First win for Wales". BBC News. 2 June 1999. Retrieved 25 March 2024.
  7. ^ Godwin, Hugh (4 June 1999). "Rugby Union: Quinnell a true believer". The Independent. Retrieved 26 March 2024.
  8. ^ "Welsh come back for Test win". BBC News. 5 June 1999. Retrieved 26 March 2024.
  9. ^ "Henry: We were lucky". BBC News. 6 June 1999. Retrieved 28 March 2024.
  10. ^ "Stand collapses during Welsh defeat". BBC News. 9 June 1999. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  11. ^ Godwin, Hugh (9 June 1999). "RUGBY UNION; Henry drops Swansea pair". The Independent. Retrieved 27 March 2024.
  12. ^ "Wales secure historic whitewash". BBC News. 12 June 1999. Retrieved 28 March 2024.