
The Autumn Internationals or End of Year Tours start in earnest this weekend after two weeks of watching the Kiwis dismantle half-baked sides in the name of ‘growing the global game for a few million pounds, mate’. Gents that they are. After the rancour of the Lions Tour (with more of the players now tearing up the St Gats Bible and tossing it onto the fire of missed opportunity, and the gross miscarriage of justice in holding the Rugby Championship in the backwater towns of a backwater penal colony, we get to some good old fashioned, meaty, North versus South matches: the northerners itching to avenge the defeats of the Lions tours or for those not involved to pick up some scalps as we hurtle towards France 2023 and putting down markers. For the southerners, it’s a chance to meet up with childhood family and friends who’ve strayed from home and been punished for it by having to endure the long bleak winters of their discontent (and weather and losing to the fleet of foot colonials). So to it!
Ireland v Japan
The unsmiling Irish will be looking for another, more convincing win against the Brave Blossoms, to further eradicate the memories of losing in the World Cup to Japan. They got a 39-31 victory in July, but will be looking to turn the screws this time and stamp their authority on the match. Sexton’s century and a very strong looking pack will be too much for the Blossoms, as Ireland take it by 25.
Italy v New Zealand
Not really much point in discussing this one, other than whether or not the Kiwis have put out a second- or third-choice side against the Abject Azzurri. Dane Coles and Sam Cane are the most experienced starters in the side with 75+ caps each, but from there is a long way down to Damian McKenzie and Richie Mo’unga at 38 and 29 respectively and then down to most having not more than a handful of caps. ‘A youthful combination’ is how the Kiwis have framed it, but whatever, they’ll still stick loads on Italy. New Zealand by 56
Spain v Fiji
Absolutely no idea what Spain’s 15s side is like and I can’t be bothered to Google it either. They’ve had a couple of decent wins in the 7zzz in recent years, but won’t be a match for Fiji who should simply be too physical, fast and inventive. Fiji blow hot and cold though, both temperamentally and skills wise, so it may not be the massive blow out expected. Fiji by 19
Portugal v Canada
Last time I looked the Cannucks were bloody awful. They got slapped silly in July by both Wales and England and have a win and a loss against both the USA and Chile in the current 2023 World Cup campaign, so not much to write home about. Portugal currently sit second in the Rugby Europe Championship behind powerhouses Georgia (drop Italy etc!) and look like a decent emerging side at that level. They’ve thumped Spain, Russia and Netherlands and lost to Georgia and Romania. Should be a narrow win for Canada based on experience, but stuff that – Portugal by 2.
England v Tonga
England injecting some new blood into the system, but retaining enough firepower to demolish Tonga after a sluggish start. Don’t expect any surprises in this one, bar perhaps all 15 Tongans staying on the pitch. England to win by how much they want to, and how much they’re keeping in reserve for the bigger matches to come. England by 51.
Wales v South Africa
One of the matches of the round! Wales have had the Boks number in Cardiff in recent years and have their foreign-based players back in the side after missing out against the Kiwis. An under-strength Wales were game for 55 minutes nonetheless and will feel confident that they can go one further and compete with – and beat – the Boks this weekend. The loss of AWJ is massive however, and the Boks arrive in town buoyed by their win over New Zealand and with a very strong pack. Some doubts out wide with Kolbe and Nkosi both missing and le Roux dropped, but the Boks will reverse recent form and win a hard, uncompromising duel in the end. South Africa by 8.
France v Argentina
This would have been a lip-smacker a few years ago, but Argentina have gone off the boil in the last year or so. France have improved, but still manage to confound every now and then. Which France will pitch up etc and which Pumas side will pitch up? No idea on either score, but at home, and with the depth they’ve got, it’s France for the win. Being a conservative Saffer, I’ve gone by 11 points to France, but it could be a lot more if they get going. Or not, if they don’t.
Romania v Uruguay
Romania may not be the side they were under Ceausescu, but they’re handily placed in Tier 2 of European rugby. They narrowly lost a friendly to Argentina in July, for what it’s worth, so do have some ability at the top level. Uruguay had a great 2019 World Cup and have qualified for 2023 as well, belting the USA out of the way in the process. That should see them as favourites for this match, but in a Romanian autumn, anything is possible. Romania by 4.
Scotland v Australia
Scotland warmed up for their bunnies with a sumptuous performance last weekend, missed by some Scots here who were foolishly hiding behind their sofas. They ran in some excellent tries, albeit some of the tackling was optional at times, but you’ve still got to get them in. They face an Australia that recovered from their traditional shellacking by the Ballsacks to beat both the Boks and Argentina twice, albeit all matches played in Australia. Still, the Aussies seem to be growing in confidence and getting a bit of backbone into their side. A tough match, but one I think will go the Wobblies’ way in the end. Australia by 7.
Preview gracias a Deebee7
Onna telly this week
Friday 5th November
| Leicester v Bath | 19:45 | BT Sport 1 |
| La Rochelle v Bordeaux | 20:00 | Premier Sports 2 |
Saturday 6th November
| Ireland v Japan | 13:00 | Channel 4 / RTÉ2 |
| Italy v New Zealand | 13:00 | Prime |
| Toulouse v Perpignan | 13:45 | Premier Sports 2 |
| England v Tonga | 15:15 | Prime |
| Brive v Racing 92 | 16:00 | Premier Sports 2 |
| Wales v South Africa | 17:30 | Prime |
| France v Argentina | 20:00 | Prime |
Sunday 7th November
| Scotland v Australia | 14:15 | Prime | ||
| England v New Zealand (women) | 14:45 | BBC2 / iPlayer | ||
| Wasps v Harlequins | 16:30 | BT Sport 1 | ||
| Clermont v Toulon | 20:00 | Premier Sports 1 |

Japan score. 41-5.
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Dan Sheehan on at hooker. He’s a big lad at 6 foot 3. His baby brother Bobby also plays hooker and is 6 foot 5.
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Revenge for the World Cup.
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Cracking from Conway to score.
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50 up.
Ireland bringing on the youth – Healy, Murray, O’Mahony and Earls all 2nd half subs.
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60 points to end the match!
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Oof, that was a biffing.
Totally dominant by Ireland
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Japanese pack looked way off the pace
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Tonga’s ball-handling skills leave something to be desired.
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I think the yellow is a little harsh there.
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That’s a heartbreaker for Veainu.
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Hell of an effort by lawes to get back
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Bit of a harsh yellow, thought he was going for a catch
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Two tries for Youngs? Eddie’s never going to replace him.
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Sounds like a thrilling end to the Portugal Canada game. Portugal snatch the lead with 78th minute try to win 20-17.
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Great result for L.Irish: 34- 34 with Sarries whilst playing with 14 men from 22nd minute
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Your boy with MOTM, Slade.
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not vaccinated neiver
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What a nose Kwagga Smith possesses!
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Oh dog, I forgot about that.
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Hopefully this match will be somewhat less one-sided than the others so far.
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Nearly a lovely score by LRZ..
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I love Ellis Jenkins.
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Boks are way off the pace here. They’ll need to really pick it up in the 2nd half. Sorry, but if Ox gets carded for that then rugby may as well pack it up.
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Took it for the team deebs. Nothing wrong there.
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Talking about the first apparent infringement. Not a penalty at all. Second one was probably a penalty.
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Ref agreed too
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Kiwis would’ve scored from that break.
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That’s exactly what the ref said, Deebs. The card was because they were on a team warning.
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Ah! Didn’t hear that – busy pouring wine.
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C’mon Big Trev! One of my favourite players!
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And now Wales lose one for the same reason.
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Big call. Go for the try!
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Not one sided but one for the purists as they say.
Not sure I’ve seen two consecutive passes.
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Am enjoying this a lot
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I”m enjoying it too.
I think there’s not a lot of passing because it’s chucking it down.
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Boks really should be doing more with the ball. FFS.
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Half-watching. It’s good. Tompkins still a liability.
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Ellis, though. What a player that boy is.
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Unlike you to be sniffy about Wales or South Africa, flair.
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Nick Mallet and half of South Africa are moaning about Wales driving early on the lineouts. They’re right, but we’re not playing well enough anyway.
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Tomp, unlike you to be sniffy at me .
How about talking about rugby instead of ad hominem?
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They’re obvs wanting to get a drive going asap but was interested that the ref in the last maul blamed SA for pushing de jager over themselves
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Wales haven’t missed AWJ yet. Overrated tit.
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Have a feeling that Wales are gonna find an extra gear in the second half. Not confident at all.
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Your bench is good, Deebs. I’m not so sure about ours. Back row needs to be going really strong as we’ve only got second row cover. Would like to see a LRZ-Basham one-two for the winning score.
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Pathetic. On the front foot and hoist it a metre forward. We deserve to lose with this shit.
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Good ref evasive action there
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That was some proper rugby there: 13 or so phases, a turnover, a kick, a wobble, a run, a tackle and a penalty.
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Thaum, yes finally. The first half was an ocean of mediocrity, endless errors, silly penalties and lack of skills besides frontal opposition but it seems to open up.
Good attack by SA and even better defence by Wales.
Am beginning to enjoy it.
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