Wales vs. France

Wales 35 def. France 6

[no comp]

Wales
35
6
France
Match Info
Match URL www.rugbyleagueproject.org/matches/14974
Status Completed
Date Sunday, 22nd March, 1992
Referee Colin Morris (Huddersfield)
Venue Vetch Field (Swansea)
Crowd 10,133
Wales Scoresheet France
Allan BATEMAN T    
Jonathan DAVIES      
John DEVEREUX      
Phil FORD      
Rowland PHILLIPS      
Barry WILLIAMS      
 
Jonathan DAVIES 5 G 3 Gilles DUMAS
 
Jonathan DAVIES FG    
Wales Teams France
Phil FORD
[Leeds]
1 FB 1 Patrick LIMONGI
John DEVEREUX
[Widnes]
2 W 2 Philippe CHIRON
Allan BATEMAN
[Warrington]
3 C 3 Patrick MARGINET
Jonathan DAVIES (c)
[Widnes]
4 C 4 Philippe SOKOLOW
Anthony SULLIVAN
[St Helens]
5 W 5 Cyril PONS
 
Jonathan GRIFFITHS
[St Helens]
6 FE 6 Gilles DUMAS (c)
Kevin ELLIS
[Warrington]
7 HB 7 Patrick ENTAT
 
Mark JONES
[Hull FC]
8 FR 8 Gerard BOYALS
Barry WILLIAMS
[Carlisle]
9 HK 9 Thierry VALERO
David YOUNG
[Salford]
10 FR 10 Yves VILONI
Rob ACKERMAN
[Carlisle]
11 2R 11 Georges GRANDJEAN
Ian MARLOW
[Hull FC]
12 2R 12 Christophe BONNAFOUS
David BISHOP
[Hull KR]
13 L 13 Jacques PECH
 
Rowland PHILLIPS
[Warrington]
14 B 14 Jean FRISON
Gerald CORDLE
[Bradford]
15 B 15 Jean Paul MATER
Gary PEARCE
[Ryedale-York]
16 B 16 Franck ROMANO
Adrian HADLEY
[Salford]
17 B 17 Francis LOPE
 
Clive GRIFFITHS   HC    
   
 

Team Info

Wales

Previous Game:
Kumuls Tour 1991 - Game 1 vs. Papua New Guinea
Next Game:
[no comp] - vs. England
Out:
Paul Moriarty (second row), Matthew Silva (bench)
In:
Ian Marlow (second row), Gerald Cordle (bench)

France

Previous Game:
World Cup 1989/92 - Game 17 vs. Great Britain
Next Game:
[no comp] - vs. C.I.S.
Out:
Claude Sirvent (wing), Pierre Chamorin (centre), Pascal Fages (centre), Pierre Ailleres (front row), Bernard Llong (second row), Patrick Torreilles (bench), Pascal Bomati (bench)
In:
Philippe Chiron (wing), Philippe Sokolow (centre), Gerard Boyals (front row), Georges Grandjean (second row), Jean Frison (bench), Jean Paul Mater (bench), Franck Romano (bench)
Changes:
Patrick Marginet (bench to centre)

Match Report

by DAVE HADFIELD

WALES recovered from a sticky middle stanza to record a convincing victory yesterday which, if it will not have them singing in the valleys, will at least have them talking among themselves.

Their first international against France for 11 years drew a five-figure crowd to help mark the revival of the code in the Principality. The fact that Wales scored only one point less against France than the full Great Britain side earlier this month shows that they should be taken seriously.

Several individuals demonstrated that they should be given a chance to experience more of the international stage as members of the Great Britain touring party to the southern hemisphere this summer.

Kevin Ellis and Jonathan Griffiths formed a busy and creative pair of half-backs from beginning to end and they gave John Devereux a chance to display his finishing power after only four minutes.

It was not, however, the prelude to an early avalanche of points like the one that swept Papua New Guinea aside in October.

France showed bursts of their own handling ability and only a penalty and a dropped goal from Jonathan Davies, who spent 10 minutes in the sin-bin for fighting with his opposite number, Patrick Marginet, extended that lead during the next half hour, until Griffiths and Ellis linked up again to send Allan Bateman in.

Davies' penalty before half- time gave Wales a 13-point margin that was mildly flattering and three penalties from the French captain, Gilles Dumas, pulled his side back to within seven points after the break.

Wales took that as their cue to go into overdrive. Devereux went close with a set move from a scrum and the Carlisle hooker Barry Williams plunged over for a try which Davies converted.

Ellis then darted into the danger area and long passes from Griffiths and Davies left France hopelessly exposed to Phil Ford's scoring run.

Rowland Phillips barged over after Mark Jones had charged to within striking distance of the line and, with five minutes to go, Davies exchanged passes with Anthony Sullivan to round off Wales' win.

The Great Britain coach, Malcolm Reilly, watching for tour contenders, would have gone away well pleased with Devereux, Griffiths and Ellis in the backs, although he will perhaps share the fear of the Welsh team manager, Jim Mill, that Davies has had too much rugby over the last two years

His interest in the forwards centred on the towering Jones, who had an impressive first half, running and tackling with the full force of his 18 stones.

Jones was outshone after the interval by his fellow prop, David Young, generally not highly regarded at Leeds last season but a revitalised player with Salford since his transfer in the summer. Young crowned his quest for credibility with the man of the match award.

Source: WalesRL.co.uk

Contributions: Shawn Dollin, Andrew Ferguson