Kenya are in pole position to make history and qualify for a Rugby World Cup for the first time after maintaining their winning run in the Confederation Africaine de Rugby Africa Cup Division 1A Rugby World Cup 2015 qualifying tournament in Antananarivo on Wednesday.
Kenya, aiming to break Namibia’s recent stranglehold as the Africa Region’s second representative on Rugby’s greatest stage, recorded a bonus point 34-0 win over Madagascar to open up a four-point lead over Zimbabwe at the top of the table with one round remaining on Sunday.
Meanwhile, Zimbabwe’s 24-20 defeat to Namibia in the opening match of the day means that it is mathematically possible for all three teams to finish top of the table going into Super Sunday when Madagascar play Namibia and Kenya face Zimbabwe.
rugbyworldcup
To have any hope of winning the title, Namibia, Rugby World Cup ever-presents since 1999, need to take maximum points from their clash with bottom-of-the-table Madagascar and hope Zimbabwe beat Kenya with neither side picking up a bonus point in the process.
Such a scenario would put all three teams level on 10 points with points difference then taking care of who finishes top and qualifies for England 2015 as Africa 1 and who finishes second and enters the Repechage.
If the sides still cannot be separated by competition points or points difference then the following criteria applies in this order:
- the team with the best try difference – tries scored minus tries conceded
- the team with the highest ‘points for’ total
- the team with highest number of tries scored
- the team ranked highest in the IRB World Rankings at the beginning of the tournament
CAR Division 1A standings:
- Kenya 10 points
- Zimbabwe 6 points
- Namibia 5 points
- Madagascar 0
Madagascar 0-34 Kenya
Lock Ronnie Mwenesi made a sensational return to the Kenya starting line-up after scoring a brace of first-half tries to help the Simbas record a second straight bonus-point win.
Mwenesi crossed in the 3rd and 20th minutes – either side of a try from second row partner Oliver Mangeni – as Kenya opened up a 17-0 lead inside the first quarter.
Centre Humphrey Kayange then raced home for the all-important fourth try before hooker Maxwell Adaka got in on the act as the half drew to a close with Kenya leading 27-0.
Had it not been for number handling errors and fly half Kenny Andola’s off day with the boot – he was only able to convert one of his four kicks at goal – Kenya would have been even further out of sight at half-time.
Both sides lost a man to the sin-bin 14 minutes into a scrappy third quarter before Kenya captain and flanker Andrew Amonde, the match winner against Namibia in round one, scored his second try in the space of four days.
Madagascar’s misery was complete moments later when replacement Saloniaina Anth Razafindratsimba was sent off by English referee Luke Pearce.
Namibia 24-20 Zimbabwe
Namibia came from behind to beat Zimbabwe, scoring 14 unanswered points in the second half, to keep their slim qualification hopes alive.
Namibia drew first blood when fly half Theuns Kotze landed an early penalty before Zimbabwe responded with a try from full back Tangai Nemadire which was converted by Guy Cronje.
A penalty try and Kotze’s conversion edged Namibia ahead again but their lead lasted all but a few minutes after Cronje kicked a penalty to level the scores at 10-10.
Stephen Hunduza crossed for a 34th minute try, converted by Cronje, who added a penalty shortly after the re-start to put Zimbabwe 10 points clear.
However two converted tries from back row duo, Renaldo Bothma and Rohan Kitshoff, saw Namibia to victory.
Tour reaches Madagascar
With the Webb Ellis Cup arriving in Antananarivo as part of the popular Rugby World Cup Trophy Tour driven by Land Rover and DHL, a festival atmosphere and a vociferous capacity crowd looks set to welcome the decisive round of matches on Sunday.
The Tour will feature school and club visits, United Nations World Food Programme (RWC 2015 humanitarian partner) activation and the IRB’s Get Into Rugby programme, which has been responsible for more than 500,000 boys and girls taking up the sport since its launch in 2013.
IRB Vice Chairman Oregan Hoskins said: “Rugby in Africa is thriving. More than xx men, women and children now play the game on the vast continent, and no place better embodies the sheer passion of African Rugby than Madagascar.”
CAR President Abdelaziz Bougja added: “We are proud that the Rugby World is focused on African Rugby as we look set to confirm our representative to Rugby World Cup 2015. The standard of Rugby in this great continent continues to grow, along with participation, and the compelling nature of this tournament is certainly a reflection of that growth. We are set for a fantastic final round of matches.”
The IRB and CAR are committed to developing Rugby across Africa. Between 2013 and 2016, the IRB will be investing more than £8 million in tournaments, development, administration and high performance across the continent.
IRB Vice Chairman Oregan Hoskins said”…………………….”.
Chairman of Vice. A SAFFA.
How awesome is that.
1 @ cane:
haha Cane 😀 no man I think you may find that is not what it means 💡
The lucky Qualifier will join:
New Zealand
Argentina
Tonga
and Georgia, in Pool C.
Not a very strong Pool at all.
And what has happened to Zimbabwe?
They would have eaten most of these “others” for breakfast a few short years ago.
3 @ cane:
Quite right not a strong group especially when you compare that to the group that has Australia, England, Fiji, Wales in it. Think Argentina and Tonga should qualify quite easily from that group, ok maybe Georgia would give them both a run for their money… and then he woke up
@ Bullscot:
Yes, to be fair,
O’Regan is one of my favourite Rugby Officials.
Tactful, respectful and articulate.
And he seems extremely genuine.
@ Bullscot:
LOL.
True, Pool A is indeed “The Pool of Death”.
But there always has to be a Pool of Death. Even if there isn’t one.
SA is in Pool B.
Marginally stronger than Pool C, With:
Samoa
Scotland
Japan
USA
Week Pools are a severe disadvantage to the highly Seeded Nations. IMHO.
6 @ cane:
South Africa’s Pool is possibly a bit tougher than one thinks at first glance, going on current form. There are 4 top 10 countries in that Pool, only one top 10 country in New Zealand’s group. This is on the latest rankings.
6 @ cane:
Yeah it can leave you a bit ‘undercooked’ coming from a weak pool into the knockout rounds but with such a high attrition rate in rugby these days it is possibly better to have a few ‘easy’ games to keep the stars from injury and give decent amount of game time to the whole squad in case of injuries later in the tournament, and also it does help boost confidence, even if you get a big win against a small team it does give you a boost and help you feel more confident, the top teams are surely too professional to be complacent going into knockout matches after big wins in group stage against minnows.
cane wrote:
you know our SA brethren rather too well bro
cane wrote:
My personal experiences with the man would indicate the exact opposite.
Guy Cronje did the kicking to posts for Zimbabwe didn’t know he was Zimbabwean. Was he not one of the two Cronjes who went from Sharks to Lions?
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