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28th September 2019
12:23pm BST

26 minutes in and Lafaele pulled off a lovely one handed offload and Matsushima found himself in a favourable footrace with Rory Best heading towards the touchline but was eventually denied by Josh Van Der flier who demonstrated great tracking and mobility to douse the fire.
32 minutes into the match and Japan were awarded another penalty after Conor Murray was found to have not released the tackled man and a few moments later, Tamura popped the ball through the posts for a score of 6-12.
As the first half ebbed to a close, Japan rose to to the cheers of the crowd, while the Irish were fading.
Three minutes before halftime, and Japan got their hands on another penalty after van der Flier got an illegal dart on the ball. Tamura landed the penalty to cut the deficit to three points.
As the halftime gong sounded, Japan certainly would've felt that the game was within their grasp and there to be seized whereas Ireland might've have rued not taking full advantage of their stretches of dominance in the first half.
Halftime stats showed 58% possession was held by Japan who also had 208m made to Ireland's 166m.
In the final few minutes of the tie, the noise in the stadium was unrelenting as the Japanese fans were on their feet egging their team towards the finish line.
77 minutes in and Fukuoka found himself free and sprinting towards the Irish touchline but was prevented an easy try after a sound tackle from Keith Earls.
A couple of minutes later and full-time bought unparalleled elation to the Japanese players and fans in a manner which words fail to describe. What Japan had achieved here was nothing short of astounding; people watching within the stadium and around the world played witness to one of the greatest upsets in the history of the Rugby WC and certainly the biggest shock of the tournament so far.
https://twitter.com/rugbyworldcup/status/1177874611825975297
What.A.Game.
https://twitter.com/OptaJonny/status/1177880059501256706
After the game, Japanese captain Pieter Labuschagne spoke to ITV:
"We are really happy. It is difficult top put it into words but I'm proud of every man and it was a great team effort."Ireland coach Joe Schmidt also spoke:
"Congratulations to Japan, what an intense effort that was. We knew that was coming but we are disappointed we didn't manage to control the end of the game"For Ireland, there can be no doubt about the despondence and disappointment that will hang over the players and fans after this result. They didn't score since their first try in the 20th minute and that's simply unacceptable for a Tier 1 side such as themselves. But all hope is not lost. Ireland sit second in the group thanks to their bonus point and have a clash against Russia coming up next. Schmidt's side have plenty of time to turn around this unfavourable result and put themselves in a stronger position heading into the knockouts. As for Japan, the hosts have rewritten history with a first ever victory over Ireland in Test rugby and find themselves top of the group with 9 points. They face off against Samoa next. https://twitter.com/OptaJonny/status/1177877307475812352 https://twitter.com/IrishRugby/status/1177895734227587073
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