Russia beat Hong Kong 39-27 in the second game
of the two-test series at Hong Kong Football Club on Saturday.
The victory means Russia win the inaugural Ustinov Cup with a clean sweep
after having won
the
first test last week, 31-10.
The game on Saturday was much
closer however, as Hong Kong’s dangerous backline proved they can
operate with the barest of possession, but still pose a threat.
Two tries to right winger Tom McQueen, one in each half, plus
tries by centre Max Woodward and left winger Rowan Varty – playing his 40th international – resulted in a much-better scoreboard
underlying the vast strides the team had made over the week.
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Rowan Varty. Click to Enlarge.
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Despite losing both tests to Russia, ranked 20th and three
places above Hong Kong, there was an air of satisfaction around
head coach Andy Hall.
“There are many positives we can take
from this series, primarily the fact that we have capped ten new
players for Hong Kong so that is a massive plus,” Hall said. “We will also take aspects of our performance tonight as a
positive. There were aspects of the match where we saw evidence of
the new systems we are putting in place so that’s another step
forward. Probably the biggest thing the players will take
out of this is that appreciation of what the level we need to
aspire to really is. Now it is up to them to take that intensity
that they have experienced back to their clubs and to maintain it
ahead of the Asian Championships next spring.”
Russia began forcefully and once again dominated the set pieces
with their huge forwards controlling play superbly.
Winger
Igor Galinovsky touched down twice in the first quarter to give
his side the early ascendancy, his brace sandwiching McQueen’s
first-half try.
Russia - using the blindside cleverly,
scored from a five-metre scrum when skipper Vasily Artemyev
crossed over to extend the lead to 22-10. They increased the lead
further right on halftime when lock Nikolay Serkov picked up from
a ruck and scored from close range to push the score to 29-10.
Jamie Hood who had added the extra points to McQueen’s try,
knocked over a penalty as Hong Kong defended grimly.
It was
a different story in the second half with Russia losing lock
Andrei Garbuzov to the sin-bin for a late hit on Hong Kong captain Paul Dwyer.
Hong Kong capitalised superbly running in three
tries in his absence, McQueen completing his brace, along with
tries to Max Woodward and Rowan Varty, as Hong Kong came roaring
back to 29-27.
“We got a tune up, and rightly so, from the
coaches at halftime. We simply didn’t show up for long periods of
the game but the boys dug in and came off with a flier in the
second-half,” said Dwyer who was standing in as captain for the
injured Nick Hewson.
All the tries came from broken play
with the ball being punted downfield and the Hong Kong sevens
stars winning the race.
But order was restored quickly and
Russia was helped when Hong Kong played a man down for the next
twenty minutes after first flanker Bill Brant, and then substitute
prop Jack Parfitt were sin-binned.
To rub salt on the
wound, Hong Kong also conceded a penalty try after the Japanese
referee decided they had pulled down a scrum with Russia five metres from their line.
“All credit to Hong Kong for coming
back strongly in the second half which was a nightmare for us. But
we showed good character to grind it out,” said victorious captain Vasily Artemyev.
Ustinov Cup
Named after the
first native Russian consul general to Hong Kong, Mikhail Ustinov,
from 1900 to 1903, the inaugural Ustinov Cup marks the first
matches between Hong Kong and Russia since 1992 when the visitors
toured as a Commonwealth of Independent States team.
Russia are currently ranked 20th in the world, four places ahead of Hong
Kong.
Ustinov Cup,
HK,
Hong Kong,
Rugby,
Russia
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