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9th October 2019
05:59pm BST

Three minutes later, Fiji duly capitalised with another try – Kini Murimurivalu was the man on point as he bundled over the line. Volavola missed the conversion as the score read 10-0 to the Fijians.
17 minutes into the game and Wales got their hands on the scoresheet with a converted try. Josh Adams collected the ball off a precise looping cross-field kick from Dan Biggar before scoring; Biggar added the extras as the score read 10-7 to the Fijians.
28 minutes into the encounter, the momentum was with Wales as they pulled into the lead with their second try – Adams planted the Welsh flag in the corner and Biggar slotted in the conversion for a tight score of 14-10 to the Welsh.
Halftime arrived, bringing an end to a thrilling, high-intensity tie. The halftime stats showed that Fiji owned 55% of the possession and had 169m made compared to Wale's 210m.
https://twitter.com/OptaJonny/status/1181885474635501568
The second half kicked off and 53 minutes in, Fiji retook the lead with a penalty try – the Pacific Islanders smacked to the corner, forming a rolling maul before referee Jerome Garces deemed the Welsh guilty of infringing. 14-17 to Fiji, it stood.
As the game entered the final 20 minutes, Wales were awarded a penalty and Rhys Patchell made no mistake as the ball slotted through the posts to bring up a level scoreline.
61 minutes in and Wales took the lead for the second time in the game after Jonathan Davies fed Adams with an exquisite offload who proceeded to touch down for his hat trick. 22-17 it stood with the missed conversion.
69 minutes into the high flying encounter and Liam Williams extended the Welsh lead as they took advantage of a shaky Fiji defence. Patchell added the two points for a score of 29-17.
And so it finished at Oita with Wales earning the plaudits and a quarterfinal berth after a brutal game of rugby. In a match where the pendulum could've swung either way, the Welsh will be proud to have got back into the game and finish with the bonus point. But concern will arise after Jonathan Davies, Dan Biggar and Josh Adams all left the pitch fielding injuries and their absences could wreak a significant blow to their chances going forward in the tournament.
Speaking to the BBC post-game, Wales captain Alun Wyn Jones spoke:
"We probably started slow out the blocks, we knew if Fiji got their tails up we'd be in for a hard day at the office."https://twitter.com/OptaJonny/status/1181904006777577479"Full respect to Fiji, we saw the best of them today and it's difficult to play against. We did the job but there's plenty to work on."
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