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Italy ends 7-year wait for Six Nations rugby win by beating Wales 22-21

Mar 19, 2022 | 11:37 AM

CARDIFF, Wales (AP) — Paolo Garbisi booted the match-clinching conversion before throwing himself to the ground and bursting into tears.

After seven humiliating years, Italy finally won a Six Nations match.

A dramatic 79th-minute try by winger Edoardo Padovani earned the Italians a 22-21 victory over Wales in Cardiff on Saturday, ending one of the longest winless droughts in elite-level sport.

They had lost their last 36 games in the Six Nations, since beating Scotland in February 2015. The calls for the Azzurri to be replaced in the championship had been growing louder by the year.

Surely not anymore.

Padovani went over for the match-defining try behind the posts with barely 60 seconds left but it stemmed from a remarkable run by fullback Ange Capuozzo, who darted through the Welsh defense and produced an outrageous sidestep before an inside pass to his winger.

It still needed Garbisi to convert and he did it before some emotional celebrations from him and the team.

“You’d think we’d won the World Cup,” said Italy coach Kieran Crowley, who took charge last year and had beaten only Uruguay in his short tenure.

Crowley, a former All Black as a player, coached Canada from 2008 to 2016.

The Italians still finished in last place in the Six Nations for the seventh consecutive year, but ending with a first ever win in Cardiff — and their first win over Wales in 17 attempts — will make it feel like a successful campaign.

Their only two wins in 57 previous away games in the Six Nations were in Scotland, in 2003 and ’07.

As for Wales, an unexpected title last year has been followed by a fifth-place finish and being on the end of one of the biggest shocks in the competition’s long history.

It was a day when stalwart lock Alun Wyn Jones made his 150th appearance for Wales — an unprecedented achievement for a single country — and flyhalf Dan Biggar reached 100 Welsh caps.

There was nothing to celebrate at fulltime, though. Biggar, the captain, could barely summon up any words after the match to describe how he felt.

“It’s just not good enough,” he said.

It looked like Wales might escape from an error-strewn performance with a narrow win when Josh Adams scored a 69th-minute try, after bursting off his left wing and piercing the Italian defense, that was converted for 21-15.

Before that, the British and Irish Lions winger produced a massive, try-saving tackle in the left corner to stop Italy winger Montanna Ioane going over in the 45th minute, when the visitors were 12-7 ahead and proving more than a match for Wales.

But the Italians still had one big moment in them. In particular, the impish Capuozzo, in his first full test, who collected the ball inside his own half in front of a wall of red shirts.

He skipped to his right and sped through a gap between Taulupe Faletau and Adams — who had just been named man of the match — in a diagonal run toward the right touchline. Straightening up, he flummoxed covering defender Kieran Hardy with a sidestep that left Italy with a two-on-one. His inside pass to Padovani was perfect and the winger did the rest.

Garbisi and Padovani kicked the rest of Italy’s points with penalties.

Center Owen Watkin scored Wales’ first try in the 28th, with Biggar’s conversion making it 7-6.

Most will have thought that was the platform for Wales to march to a customary win over Italy.

Not this time.

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The Associated Press