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You are here: Home » News Comment » Its always worth reading about again; the day Manu Samoa arrived on the Rugby World Cup scene - and beat Wales!
8 July 2015
This is a piece I wrote for a history of the 1991 Rugby World Cup. I tried to capture with dignity (and fairness!?) one of rugby's most memorable days. Though perhaps Welsh fans might not agree!
This game is recorded in world rugby history as one of the greatest of upsets. The Welsh team ran onto their famous ground with over one hundred years of distinguished association with the game to their credit. As co-hosts to the World Cup they had a great weight of home expectation on their shoulders. Western Samoa had only been a significant rugby participant for less than five years. Surely the result would be a foregone conclusion.
Samoa had not even been in realistic contention to be invited to the first Rugby World Cup four years before. They had only made their first tour outside of other Pacific islands and New Zealand in 1988-89. On that ambitious trip around the world, budgeting was so sparse that players were asked to provide their own blazers. All that the Western Samoa Rugby Union could afford was the official jacket pocket! The captain of the Samoans, Peter Fatialofa, recalled attaching his blazer emblem via the clever use of chewing gum!
In 1991 Western Samoa, as the country was known as then, (the official match programme at the World Cup rather off-handedly called them ‘W.Samoa’) had a population of only 160,000. But with a steely attitude they put their players bodies where their opponents were not prepared to.
Never before was there seen such fierce and determined tackling. Manu Samoa, as they were nicknamed, (after an ancient warrior) thoroughly deserved their 16-13 victory. For the Welsh, to lose their opening game was a disaster. With Australia also in Pool 3 Wales looked doomed to miss out on the quarter-finals.
Quite simply the Red Dragons of Wales faltered in the face of the offensive. Though the margin looks close, in the end there was nothing but abject despair for the home team. For the Samoans the singing and celebrations led to flag waving and sights not before seen by the wider rugby world.
Local humour did shine through. “We lost to Western Samoa,” a clever quip began, “imagine what might have happened if we’d played all of Samoa! A Cardiff newspaper banner the next day shouted ‘Rock bottom!’ Coach Alan Davies said, ‘We thought we could match them for strength but we certainly came off second best.’
Back home in Apia, the capital city, the Samoan population boggled for the first time at the wonder of live TV. A national network had not yet arrived in the tiny country. Instead seven giant screens were erected in Apia Park the main rugby ground and the game was beamed in via satellite in the middle of the night. Young and old huddled under blankets and saw TV for the first time.
Reports from the capital said that for the best viewing of the TV screens, some of the populace arrived eight hours before kickoff. When as many as 15,000 crowded into the ground the most hardened supporters went without toilet visits, because the absence would surely have cost them their seat. For some Samoan children the Rugby World Cup became part of their education. Said one headmaster of a local school, “We are so isolated many of people have never left the islands. As they couldn’t grasp why we had to watch the games in the middle of the night, we had to explain time zones to them.”
When Western Samoa won it was said that “never was there a bigger and prouder celebration.” What a roar must have gone up when the sight was seen of the team doing the ‘Manu Samoa’ war dance before and after the game! Not to mention when the hugely popular Fatialofa, on the live telecast, asked to send a message home to his family, but in the excitement forgot the name of the youngest of his five children!
The Samoans, coached by Peter Schuster and ex-All Black star Bryan Williams, were superior in all aspects of play. To be fair it has to be said they were helped by a try to centre To’o Vaega. The French referee Patrick Robin signalled a try after the Welsh fullback Anthony Clement seemed to have definitely touched down behind the goal line for a defensive 22-metre line drop out. On the other hand when flanker Sila Vaifale scored the second Samoan try the TV freeze-frame showed no fewer than seven Samoans in the picture with not a Welsh player in sight. A further indication of the battering tackling can be seen in the fact that three Welsh players were injured and taken off. Lock forward Phil May dislocated a shoulder. He and the flanker Richie Collins took no further part in the tournament.
British writers, searching for reasons why their giant had been slayed, began to point at the high percentage of Samoan players who were born, raised, lived, or had been schooled in New Zealand. Such criticisms took no account of the historically close social circumstances of New Zealand and Samoa. However it had to be admitted that Frank Bunce, Pat Lam, and Steve Bachop, while Samoans for this tournament later claimed a New Zealand heritage and appeared for the All Blacks. Indeed Lam, in his career had been a New Zealand sevens player first in 1990. Then after 1991 he had switched from Samoa to the full All Blacks for one game and by 1995 was back to lead the Samoans in South Africa at the third World Cup event. Some serious attention to the eligibility had to be addressed. The lock forward Mark Birtwistle was of Samoan heritage but his father Bill had been an All Black in the 1960s.
The teams and the officials result;
FULLTIME SCORE: WESTERN SAMOA 16 WALES 13
Halftime Score: Western Samoa 3 Wales 3
Scoring: For Western Samoa: Tries by T.Vaega and S.Vaifale. 1 conversion and 2 penalties by M.Vaea.
Scoring: For Wales: Tries by A.Emyr and I.Evans. 1 conversion and 1 penalty by M.Ring.
Team 1: WESTERN SAMOA Team 2: WALES
FB Anetelea Aiolupo (Moata’a) Anthony Clement (Swansea)
W Brian Lima (Marist St Joseph’s) Ieuan Evans © (Llanelli)
C To’o Vaega (Auckland, New Zealand) Scott Gibbs (Neath)
C Frank Bunce (North Harbour. New Zealand) Mike Hall (Cardiff)
W Timo Tagaloa (Wellington, New Zealand) Arthur Emyr (Cardiff)
FH Steven Bachop (Canterbury, New Zealand) Mark Ring (Cardiff)
HB Matthew Vaea (Marist St Joseph’s) Robert Jones (Swansea)
8 Pat Lam (Auckland, New Zealand) Phil Davies (Llanelli)
F Apollo Perelini (Auckland, New Zealand) Richie Collins (Cardiff)
L Mata’afa Keenan (Auckland, New Zealand) Kevin Moseley (Newport)
L Mark Birtwistle (Wellington, New Zealand) Phil May (Llanelli)
F Sila Vaifale (Marist St Joseph’s) Emyr Lewis (Llanelli)
P Vili Alalatoa (Sydney, Australia) Laurance Delaney (Llanelli)
H Stan To’omalatai (Vaiala) Kevin Waters (Newbridge)
P Peter Fatialofa © (Auckland, New Zealand) Mike Griffiths (Cardiff)
Reserves:
Tavita Sio (Sydney, Australia) *Garin Jenkins (Pontypool)
Eddie Ioane (Auckland, New Zealand) Hugh Williams-Jones (South Wales Police)
Junior Paramore (Counties, New Zealand) *Martyn Morris (Neath) Tupo Fa’amasino (Wellington, New Zealand) *Mike Rayer (Cardiff)
Filipo Saena (Moata’a) David Evans (Cardiff)
Tu Nu’uali’itia (Counties, New Zealand) Andrew Booth (Cardiff)
Replacements in the match:
P.May was replaced by Martyn Morris (Neath), A.Clement was replaced by Mike Rayer (Cardiff) and R.Collins was replaced by Garin Jenkins (Pontypool)
.....
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NEPIA, GEORGE
Hawke’s Bay, East Coast and New Zealand
9 internationals for New Zealand 1924–30
A legendary figure in a legendary team, the 1924 ‘Invincible’ All Blacks. Only 19 at the time, George Nepia played all 38 matches during that gruelling tour of Australia, Britain, Ireland, France and Canada.
British sides were unstinting in their praise of Nepia, the rock on whom so many of their attacks foundered. His courage under the high ball and in repelling foot rushes, the crunching certainty of his tackling and the strength of his spiraled line kicking – all of these combined to restrict opposition teams to no more than 180 points against the All Blacks in the 38 games.
Nepia could also run with the ball. He had started his first-class career as a wing, then a five-eighth, before outstanding fullback displays in 1924 resulted in his being chosen as the only last line of defence. Early in the tour of Britain he made a sizzling run, but the dictatorial Mark Nicholls told him to leave the running to his five-eighths and three-quarters: his job was to defend. It was not until the 37th match of the tour, in Canada, that Nepia scored his first try!
A bogus telegram which advised the selectors of Nepia’s ‘unavailability’ cost him a place with the New Zealand Maoris’ trend-setting tour to Britain in 1927, and his All Black career finished after the 1930 home series against the British Isles. After a temporary retirement, Nepia returned to bid for a place with the 1935–36 All Blacks to tour Britain but was surprisingly not selected, though then playing as well as at any time of his career.
With his financial security in tatters at the end of the Depression, Nepia readily accepted the lure of rugby league money and played two seasons in England, and then for New Zealand. Reinstated to rugby in what was then called the ‘war-time amnesty’ which allowed rugby league professionals to return without recrimination to the amateur rugby union, Nepia played for East Coast in 1947, and in 1950 captained the Olympians club in a first-class fixture against Poverty Bay. George Nepia, father and son, were the fullbacks and captains on this historic day, George senior being 45 years old at the time.
He became an active referee and many spectators went to games just to watch Nepia referee, rather than see the two teams doing battle.
What was significant about J.I.Rees (Wales) and W.R.Logan (Scotland) captaining their countries against each other in 1937?
What do you think?
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