Sunday, 27 October 2019

The #Wales vs South Africa Rugby World Cup 2019 semi-final will take place on Sunday, October 27 at 9 AM BST

The #Wales vs South Africa Rugby World Cup 2019 semi-final will take place on Sunday, October 27 at 9 AM BST (4 AM EST / 18 PM JST local time) at International Stadium Yokohama in Japan

RWC Wales vs South Africa 2019 Live

RUGBY WORLD COU 2019

How to watch Wales vs South Africa  Semi-final Live online free (Rugby World Cup)

  • The #Wales vs South Africa Rugby World Cup 2019 semi-final will take place on Sunday, October 27 at 9 AM BST (4 AM EST / 18 PM JST local time) at International Stadium Yokohama in Japan. Luckily, you don’t have to go all the way there to watch the game; by connecting to a server in another country with a Virtual Private Network (VPN), you can unblock and stream the match online for free. Best of all, this works from almost anywhere in the world.
  •  
  • We’re only recommending official sources for watching Wales vs South Africa. Unlicensed streams are common but carry the risk of being taken offline for copyright infringement. What’s worse, many offer poor resolution and may make you miss out on key moments of the match due to heavy lag and buffering. Thankfully there’s no need for an unauthorized stream as Wales vs. South Africa will be available online for free on ITV Hub.


If Wales lose against South Africa in the Rugby World Cup semi-final they will do so having won four of the last five tests and against a team they have had the edge over.

A third-place playoff is not what Gatland wants, nor a repeat of their ugly 20-19 win over 14-man France.

Both sides have injuries, with wing wonder Cheslin Kolbe the stand-out absentee for the Springboks, while arguably the world's best full-back Liam Williams joins Josh Navidi on the plane home, adding to the pre-tournament absences of Toby Faletau and Cory Hill.

It is not an ideal situation for the Welsh.

But Warren Gatland has grown the international pool of players over the last four years, giving names like Navidi, Aaron Wainwright, Josh Adams, Wyn Jones, Elliot Dee, Rhys Carre, Dillon Lewis and Adam Beard the chance to play in their first World Cup.

The men in red have the advantage in terms of caps with 857 starting and 144 on the bench, a total of 1001.

Whereas the Springboks have 23 caps less in their squad, but have scored 11 more tries, 55 more points and conceded less than half the points Wales have.

That may be because Alun Wyn Jones and Co had the toughest pool in the tournament, with Fiji and Uruguay no walkovers.                                                                 

Wales vs South Africa in the Rugby World Cup semi-final, Wales' third ever.When is it?
It's on Sunday October 27 in Yokohoma.

What time is kick-off?
It will be a 9am GMT kick-off (remember the clocks go back an hour on Sunday morning).


No comments:

Post a Comment