Wales finished sixth out of eighth in the Rugby League Commonwealth Championships in Brisbane, Australia – a Nine a side under 23 tournament – following a 10-8 win over England and a loss to Scotland.
RANKING SEMI-FINAL – ENGLAND 8 WALES 10
Wales completely deserved their 10-8 win over England after pounding their defence for much of the game.
They forced the English into giving away a number of penalties, and finally the English defence crumbled when Liam Silver got the second of his two tries late on,
England took the lead after a good passing move found an unmarked Gregory Howland who scored in the corner.
A Connor Farrer grubber kick came to nothing as Wales looked for a try back.
They eventually got one after Silver leapt on a grubber to score in the corner to level things at 4-4.
But England regained the advantage when Halton found a gap on the wing to score giving them an 8-4 lead at the break.
Wales earned a repeat set early in the second half and from the drop-out, England gave away a penalty for offside with Wales twice being held up over the line from the resulting set.
England knocked on underneath the sticks then gave away a penalty and Wales finally went over through Silver again with Paul Edwards converting.
There were 30 seconds to go and England had a chance to win but the Welsh held strong.
FIFTH-SIXTH PLAY-OFF – SCOTLAND 16 WALES 10
Scotland clinched an even fifth-sixth play-off game with a last second try, but it was a vast improvement for Wales on Friday’s 24-0 defeat.
Wales took the lead through a well-worked move where Liam Silver set up Paul Edwards who ran under the sticks and converted himself.
Scotland hit back straight away when Matt Hogg broke through to ground but failed to convert.
But from kick-off again, Wales scored their second when Karlin Claridge dived over to make it 10-4 at half-time.
A Davey Dixon try converted by Hogg with three minutes to go, levelled the scores at 10-10, and a mistake at the play-the-ball gave the Bravehearts the opportunity to score the winner, one that they didn’t waste, Luke Westman grounding just before the hooter with Hogg converting.
WALES SIDE
1 Cobi Green (Bradford Bulls)
2 Stefan Collins (Coleg Y Cymoedd)
4 Paul Edwards (Unattached)
5 Liam Rice-Wilson (Coventry Bears)
6 Zak Williams (Coventry Bears)
7 Rhys Gant (Valley Cougars)
8 Dan Crabtree (Ulverston ARLFC)
9 Connor Farrer (West Wales Raiders)
10 Jake Thomas (Torfaen Tigers)
11 Blake Turner (Rochdale Hornets)
12 Aneurin Walker (West Wales Raiders)
14 Macauley Harris (West Wales Raiders)
16 Morgan Jefferies (West Wales Raiders)
17 Karlin Claridge (West Wales Raiders)
18 Liam Silver (Torfaen Tigers)
FULL DAY TWO RESULTS AND RANKINGS
MEN’S TOURNAMENT – DAY TWO
10.45am – Ranking semi-final – Scotland 16 Papua New Guinea 14
11.10am – Ranking semi-final – England 8 Wales 10
1pm – Major semi-final – Australia 18 Samoa 10
1.25pm – Major semi-final – Tonga 22 Fiji 6
2.15pm – Seventh / Eighth Place “Bowl” play-off – Papua New Guinea 0 England 14
2.40pm – Fifth / Sixth Place “Shield” play-off – Scotland 16 Wales 10
5.25pm – Bronze medal match – Samoa 20 Fiji 6
5.50pm – Gold medal match – Australia 14 Tonga 8
RANKINGS
1. Australia
2. Tonga
3. Samoa
4. Fiji
5. Scotland
6. Wales
7. England
8. Papua New Guinea
WOMEN’S TOURNAMENT – DAY TWO
11.35am – Semi-Final – Australia 14 Cook Islands 8
12pm – Semi-Final – Tonga 0 Samoa 20
1.50pm – Fifth / Sixth Place “Shield” play-off – Canada 16 Fiji 12
4pm – Bronze medal match – Cook Islands 20 Tonga 0
4.25pm – Gold medal match – Australia 14 Samoa 8
RANKINGS
1. Australia
2. Samoa
3. Cook Islands
4. Tonga
5. Canada
6. Fiji
PHYSICAL DISABILITY TOURNAMENT – DAY TWO
10.20am – Australia 0 New Zealand 0
12.35pm – New Zealand 0 Commonwealth All Stars 0
3.05pm – Gold medal match – Australia 0 New Zealand 0 – Australia win Gold due to superior group record.
RANKINGS
1. Australia
2. New Zealand
3. Commonwealth All Stars