Japan opens Rugby World Cup by running past Russia

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TOKYO — Kotaro Matsushima scored a hat trick of tries as host Japan overcame a strong bout of nerves to overwhelm unfancied Russia 30-10 in the Rugby World Cup’s opening match on Friday.

Matsushima became Japan’s first World Cup hat-trick scorer, as well as notching his own first treble at international level. The pacey right winger’s finishing proved the difference as Japan was otherwise sloppy against a lowly ranked but tenacious Russia.

The Tokyo Stadium crowd was stunned after four minutes as fullback William Tupou missed a routine catch under no pressure to allow left winger Kirill Golosnitskiy an easy converted try. Another first: The quickest opening-match try in tournament history.

“There was a bit of magic with us but it wasn’t for long enough,” Russia coach Lyn Jones said. “It’s playing at an intensity and focus the players just aren’t used to.”

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Japan equalized seven minutes later, as Tupou’s looping pass set up Matsushima in the right corner, followed by a woefully botched conversion attempt from flyhalf Yu Tamura.

Pockets of Russian fans — including a handful dressed as Soviet-era astronauts — were louder than the home crowd watching in silent anxiety as the home team dropped high balls or fumbled them.

It could have been even worse but this was not New Zealand attacking them. After Japan again carelessly gave the ball away, Russia center Vladimir Ostroushko burst through midfield but kicked ahead aimlessly instead of waiting for support.

Matsushima thought he had a second try five minutes from halftime, but fullback Vasily Artemyev made a brilliant captain’s tackle and video review showed Matsushima spilling the ball inches above the ground. Referee Nigel Owens ruled it out, drawing jeers.

Moments from the interval, Matsushima made it count as Japan finally established a period of sustained pressure and center Ryoto Nakamura fed him an overlap pass for an easy converted score.

After Tamura’s penalty settled nerves in the second half, the anxiety lifted when flanker Pieter Labuschagne stripped Andrei Ostrikov before scampering 40 meters over for an unconverted try.

Russia battled away, still, and flyhalf Yuri Kushnarev’s penalty cut the deficit with 20 minutes left after Japan infringed at the ruck.

But Tamura found his range, at last, to slot over a 45-meter penalty to give Japan a better cushion.

Then Matsushima finished Russian resistance off, breaking a weak tackle as he overlapped again down the right.

For Russia it was a learning experience.

“When we did have the ball they took our time away, our boys are just not used to that. Tier one rugby isn’t another level, it’s another sport,” Jones said. “I’m very proud of the way our players stuck in there and gave everything they had for their nation.”

Russia has little time to recover, with Samoa coming up on Tuesday. Japan’s next Pool A match is against Ireland next Saturday.

World Rugby postponing July test matches

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World Rugby has postponed July test matches involving southern and northern hemisphere nations because of ongoing restrictions on international travel during the coronavirus pandemic.

The sport’s international governing body issued a statement Friday saying the mid-year test window will be rescheduled when cross-border travel and quarantine regulations are relaxed.

New Zealand had been scheduled to play Wales and Scotland, Australia was set to play Ireland and Fiji and South Africa had planned to host Scotland and Georgia. World Rugby said the postponement is due “to ongoing government and health agency COVID-19 directives.”

Bill Beaumont re-elected as World Rugby chairman

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Former England captain Bill Beaumont has been re-elected as World Rugby chairman on Saturday after beating Agustín Pichot, the current vice-chairman.

The sport’s governing body says the 68-year-old Beaumont achieved a first-round majority of 28 votes to 23.

Beaumont says: “I am honored to accept the mandate of the World Rugby Council to serve as the international federation’s chairman once again.”

He begins his four-year term after a council meeting on May 12.

French rugby federation president Bernard Laporte becomes Beaumont’s new vice-chairman.