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Wales to win the RWC 2015

Posted:
Wed Sep 30, 2015 10:39 pm
by paul cardiffwalesmap
Now there's the kiss of death! probably lose against Fiji now!! Well hopefully not and if Australia snub out the fizzle that remains of Englands world cup dreams then we will have the knockout stages to look forward to. Mind you this game against Fiji could be very tricky, but Gatland seems to be getting them into a great frame of mind to hopefully win thursday afternoon. It'll be quite a day in the city centre tomorrow with Welsh fans still on a high from saturdays wonderful victory. If we do fall short tomorrow then I guess that means we wouldn't have been much of a match for the All Blacks! so que sera sera as I more familiarly say at the Cardiff City Stadium.
Re: Wales to win the RWC 2015

Posted:
Fri Oct 02, 2015 6:57 am
by Kyle
Nice enough win against Fiji last night, but those boys badly need a rest between now and the 10th when we have Australia. Hopefully they'll beat England on Saturday and then we've qualified for the quarter finals.
I'm really looking forward to the 10th actually. It's a double sport day - Wales away to Bosnia as well as the Australia game. Could be a double celebration that day if both our football and rugby teams play well.
Re: Wales to win the RWC 2015

Posted:
Fri Oct 02, 2015 3:36 pm
by Ben In London
Wales might not win it but Cardiff probably already has.
This is from the Telegraph.
The whooshing noise which greeted the final whistle here was the sound of 71,576 people simultaneously sighing in relief. Drained by their heroics at Twickenham last Saturday, Wales stumbled over the line against a magnificent, ambitious Fiji side, in the process winning their third game in the 'group of death’. Now England’s task on Saturday is all the more stark: it is win or bust for the hosts.
Though host is a flexible term in the Rugby World Cup. This tournament may go under the official title England 2015, but Cardiff had embraced it as if this was entirely their own affair. From midday, the city centre was rammed with enthusiastic rugby fans. The millionth spectator at the competition was in attendance at this game. And it seemed, as customers were obliged to ruck their way westwards in carriages so full they presented a health hazard, that the entire million had travelled on the same train.
Through the Welsh capital, Mancunian swag workers were selling half and half matchday scarves, stalls were offloading sheep hats and inflatable leeks, everywhere could be heard the cry of the competition: “Anyone need tickets, I’ll buy or sell.”
“Welcome to the glorious city of Cardiff on this glorious afternoon for a glorious game of rugby,” a World Cup volunteer was announcing through a loud hailer. And, packed with those still wearing a smile after last Saturday night, it was indeed a glorious sight.
In front of the giant World Cup rugby ball which is protruding from the walls of Cardiff Castle, dozens of supporters were standing with their hands in the air for photographs as if catching it. Alongside them a group of Wales fans were doing a Dan Biggar jig, imitating the fly-half’s jittery pre-kick ritual, now known throughout the Principality as the 'Biggarena’.
Regulars suggested there was a subtly different atmosphere abroad from a Six Nations game here, not least because the sun was blazing down. You never see so many neutrals here during the spring domestic competition. But there were dozens in South African shirts, in Ireland tops, in All Blacks outfits. Not to mention the two blokes waving Australia flags in full drag.
There were Fiji fans too. Or rather there were those attending who had turned Fijian for the afternoon. Certainly one lad called Jamie, who was wearing a suspiciously crisp looking Fiji flag, looked non-plussed when challenged to sing the islanders’ national anthem. “I was born in England, bred in England, live in England,” he said. “But my wife’s Welsh, so I’m supporting Fiji. She’d do the same if it was the other way round.”
Jamie was on his way to the fan zone in Cardiff Arms Park. With free admission, in addition to those crammed into the Millennium Stadium, some 10,000 people were watching proceedings unfold on a big screen right next door. It was the rugby equivalent of Henman Hill.
And what a game they got to watch. Biggar the jigger, scrum-half Gareth Davies pole-axing a giant Fijian prop, Wales playing with a rare adventure. Plus Fiji slinging the ball around like this was a rehearsal for the Olympic sevens competition. The men in white ran everything, side-stepping, dummying, squirming out of tackles. And that was just their forwards.
As Fiji came back in the second half, it did not help home nerves that a procession of injured Welshmen left the pitch with a regularity that insisted the Welsh Rugby Union had done a sponsorship deal with Injury Lawyers 4U.
But Wales held on. Just. And, as they lined up outside Cardiff station for the trip home, the tantalising prospect for Welsh supporters remains that their team will be in the competition longer than the hosts. England 2015 indeed.
Re: Wales to win the RWC 2015

Posted:
Fri Oct 02, 2015 4:44 pm
by MattW
I was at the game last night, whilst it was a tense and tough match with a great atmosphere, what makes it so special is having a stadium like that in the city centre. The build up before the game and hanging around/drinking after is something that many of the other venues cannot provide i.e. Wembley, Twickenham. So lucky to have it and the city puts others to shame, im sure all the visiting fans and players will have very fond memories of Cardiff.
Re: Wales to win the RWC 2015

Posted:
Sat Oct 03, 2015 1:38 pm
by Frank
We're so lucky in Wales to have Rugby as our NATIONAL game. I don't mean to be disrespectful to minor sports like Cricket, Golf and Soccer, but Rugby is what REALLY matters in Wales. It may be a game designed for thugs but it's played by gentlemen. Look at how they clap each other off the pitch! Rugby is worth its weight in Gold for our reputation around the world for people to know that our national game is a gentleman's game without all the diving, abuse and vulgar wealth of the ENGLISH* Premier League. Whether it's our national newspapers, broadcasters, businesses, ordinary punters or even cynics like Jantra, everyone wants to get behind our boys, not out of some mindless, deluded hope but the knowledge that we are, truly, world class. And even those like Jantra, who follow minor sports, know in their patriotic hearts that you can't beat the Welsh rugby team.
*Admittedly a lot of the players, the managers and the owners aren't English but let's make the mud stick.
Re: Wales to win the RWC 2015

Posted:
Sat Oct 03, 2015 2:33 pm
by Rhodri
That post is the internet message board equivalent of a lighted match in a box of dynamite ...
Re: Wales to win the RWC 2015

Posted:
Sat Oct 03, 2015 7:35 pm
by Jantra
Where to start.....
The game of rugby came about when the shires needed an annual competition to keep the peasants happy. Each shire consisted of approximately 15 villages and each village had at least one idiot. Now as time passed the game of rugby involved into 15 village idiots fighting each other for the prestige of grappling with a turnip that was to be shared out amongst the winning village. Each contest was watched by peasants and serfs who knew no better and expected nothing better in life than a share of a prize turnip.
For some reason the lackwit bumpkins in Wales seem to think this still passes off as entertainment.
Compare such an oafish fame of brute strength with the beauty and simplicity of football, a game played by more than any other across these beautiful lands.
Some of us have evolved whereas others still watch rugby.
Re: Wales to win the RWC 2015

Posted:
Mon Oct 05, 2015 11:13 am
by Zach
Wales to win the RWC 2015
On yer Bike Mate!
Wales will be lucky to have any players left if they get to the final.
Where as Ireland are playing a slow build up and keeping their powder dry until the later stages. I would not be surprised if they decide to lose to France in order knock out NZ in the quarters.

Re: Wales to win the RWC 2015

Posted:
Sun Oct 18, 2015 8:51 pm
by paul cardiffwalesmap
Oh well it wasn't to be! mind you maybe we've been spared a rather enormous battle with the All Blacks next week. I'm not saying that at our very best we can't have a crack at them - but Wales would've been on their last legs and a heavy defeat would've been harsh on the team. So we move on - six nations in the new year, the start of Japan 2019 build up!!
I went for a wander around town this morning and many pubs were packed by 11:30! what a shot in the arm the rugby world cup has been for pubs, clubs, bars, hotels, restaurants etc. and it seems that once again The Cardiff Experience has been raved about by many visiting rugby fans. So the city has benefited substantially from hosting a healthy number of games, I'm just hoping that the council have something of a clean-up over the next week or so as some areas have been left filthy. The end of Queen Street by the statue is like a health risk, it actually and quite literally stinks! Still I'm sure it'll be cleaned up and all in all it's been great for Cardiff and Wales. Yes it's a shame we didn't go further or indeed all the way! but I reckon we did extremely well when you consider the injuries we had to contend with.