(REUTERS) – Tonga beat Japan 31-18 in a frenetic World Cup clash last night in a fitting end to a day that started with rugby heavyweights France being accused of cynically devaluing the tournament.
The front page splash on New Zealand’s best-selling Herald newspaper screamed that the French had turned Saturday’s highly-anticipated clash with the All Blacks into a “farce” by naming a “B Team” for the Eden Park match.
The allegation had added piquancy because of conspiracy theories swirling around since Ireland’s shock humbling of Australia last weekend exploded the presumptions of who would play who in the quarter-finals.
The thrust of the conspiracy theory is that France had named a weakened side because finishing second in Pool A would keep them away from the side of the draw likely to contain all three Tri-Nations teams.
France lock forward Pascal Pape laughed off the accusation as a desperate bid to sell newspapers but then warned that it might backfire on the hosts.
“It is a lack of respect for the players chosen for Saturday,” he said. “That motivates us more than it de-motivates us. It is extra motivation.”
Winger Vincent Clerc was also amused and said it was perhaps the result of France having knocked the All Blacks out of the 1999 and 2007 World Cups.
“They need to reassure themselves if they are to beat us in a World Cup after those two defeats,” he said. “I’m not upset, it makes me smile actually.”
There was support too from All Blacks assistant coach Steve Hansen, who said he thought the French team selected was “really good” before contemptuously dismissing any suggestions that New Zealand would ever be guilty of such manoeuvring.
“We’d get hung from the highest tree in New Zealand if we go out and try not to win a test match, it’s just not in our psyche,” he said.
Tonga will be joining all of New Zealand in hoping for a comprehensive victory for the All Blacks on Saturday after their win in the only match of the day kept alive their slim hopes of a place in the quarter-finals for the first time.
The Pacific islanders made the most of their physical superiority in the scrum and at the breakdown at Whangarei but it was 16 points from the boot of Tonga flyhalf Kurt Morath that separated the two sides, who both scored three tries.
“We have one more game left and we have nothing to lose, especially to play against a team like France,” said Tonga coach Isitolo Maka, whose team must now win their final game with a bonus point and hope the All Blacks hammer the French.
“The win tonight will give us big confidence to take them on next week.”
JAPAN MISTAKES
Japan coach John Kirwan bemoaned his side’s error count as they ensured that, for all the good rugby they have played at the tournament, the ‘Brave Blossoms’ would go home without the two wins they craved.
“It was a very difficult game for us,” he said. “Tonga were a very physical side, but we just made too many mistakes.”
Australia will be looking for their second victory of the tournament in Wellington tomorrow and they named their team to face the United States.
Scrumhalf Will Genia will captain the Wallabies for the first time in the absence of lock James Horwill, who is rested, but there was no place for flanker David Pocock, who is still struggling with the back injury that ruled him out of the Ireland defeat.
Today’s single encounter pitches the defending champion Springboks against Namibia, who shipped 105 points in their only previous meeting with their southern African neighbours.
Assistant coach Gary Gold visibly bristled when he was asked whether South Africa would ever countenance trying to manipulate their quarter-final draw with a less than wholehearted effort in a pool match, describing the idea as “preposterous”.
“Under no circumstances would it even be considered that anything else but winning right to the end is what’s going to be required,” he said.
Namibia fullback Chrysander Botha, meanwhile, said his team were at least anticipating the support of the majority of the locals as they took on their monumental task at the North Harbour Stadium.
“In Auckland everybody seems to hate the Boks so everyone is getting behind us,” he said.