Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
The Guardian - UK
The Guardian - UK
Sport
Luke McLaughlin

Fast-rising Fiji carry a nation’s pride in redemption match with England

Fiji’s Jiuta Wainiqolo runs the ball towards the try line against Scotland in July
Fiji’s Jiuta Wainiqolo runs the ball towards the try line in the 29-14 victory against Scotland in July. Photograph: Josua Buredua/AFP/Getty Images

True, they are the lowest-ranked team England will play this month, but it would be highly dangerous to underestimate Fiji. Coming between an opening victory against Australia and a box‑office encounter with the All Blacks, it might be easy to regard the Twickenham game on Saturday as a relatively straightforward assignment. Easy, but foolish.

You don’t have to go back far – two years or so, to an autumn afternoon in Marseille and England’s 2023 Rugby World Cup quarter-final – to remember how potent Fiji can be.

Picture the scene: with 10 minutes to play at Stade Vélodrome, Vilimoni Botitu’s attractive try has levelled the score at 24-24. An Owen Farrell drop goal edges Steve Borthwick’s side back in front, before Ben Earl’s frantic dash downfield sets up a penalty. Parisian bars are packed with French and South African supporters, warming up for their momentous Stade de France quarter-final by roaring the underdogs on.

England ultimately scrape through with a six-point win. This came weeks after Fiji made history at Twickenham, beating England for the first time in a pre-tournament warm-up game. That amounted to England’s sixth defeat in nine during the distinctly shaky beginning of Borthwick’s reign. It was difficult then to imagine them progressing to a semi-final defeat by the Springboks.

Things are different now. England are aiming for a ninth victory in a row and are on an upward trajectory a month before the draw for Australia 2027 is made.

In rugby-mad Fiji, memories of that narrow quarter-final defeat remain fresh. “Redemption” was the back-page headline on Tuesday in the Fiji Times: this is a chance to settle a score. Supporters in their hundreds of thousands are ready to rise early, or stay up all night, for kick-off at 5.40am local time on Sunday.

“You cannot exaggerate how extraordinarily popular rugby union is in Fiji,” says Mark Evans, chief executive of Fijian Drua, the country’s Super Rugby side. “Young, old, male, female, iTaukei [ethnic Fijians], Indo-Fijian, every island, rich or poor – they do play other sports, but culturally rugby is incredibly important.”

The Wales wing Louis Rees-Zammit is fit for selection and will be considered against Argentina on Sunday. The 24-year-old has made a handful of appearances for the Bristol Bears since his return to rugby after two years in the US trying to break into the NFL. There had been questions around his fitness for Wales's four-match programme this month.

"Yes, he's fit for selection," the Wales assistant coach, Danny Wilson, said on Wednesday. "We are quite fortunate at the moment this squad is fit and healthy. The likes of him and some of the other names available give us a challenge to select the team." Steve Tandy, the new head coach, will name the side on Friday with Rees-Zammit in the frame for the game at Cardiff's Principality Stadium. Reuters

 

In post since 2022, the former Saracens director of rugby and Harlequins chief executive is well placed to judge the health of the game in Fiji. “Across its various teams it has probably never been as consistently strong as it is at the moment,” Evans says.

“The men’s national team are ninth in the world, close to its highest‑ever position. Apart from Portugal at the World Cup, they haven’t lost to a team below them since 2022. And this is a team that hardly ever plays at home.”

The launch of Fijian Drua in 2017 has widened the talent pool and improved many of the players who will run out at Twickenham. Fiji’s world-ranking points (81.16) put them comfortably ahead of 10th‑placed Italy (77.7) but close to Scotland in eighth (81.57) and Australia in seventh (82.90).

“We’ve got a fair amount of depth because of the Drua – you’ve got 40-odd full-timers playing 15-a-side at a pretty high level,” Evans says. “Plus all the European-based players. The rankings don’t lie.”

Mick Byrne, the head coach who led them to a triumph against Wales in Cardiff last November, has expounded a straightforward approach for Saturday. “We just want to be physical,” Byrne told the Fiji Times. “Take it to them. Just get on the front foot and go after the game.”

Most recently Byrne oversaw a thrilling 33-27 Pacific Nations Cup final win against Japan in September in Salt Lake City, securing back-to-back titles. After Twickenham they will head across the Channel to meet France in Bordeaux on 15 November.

In Evans’s opinion who should England fans look out for on Saturday? “Jiuta Wainiqolo is, if not the best wing in the world, damn close,” he says of the 26-year-old Toulon back. “He’s had a wonderful last 18 months. Josua Tuisova [Racing 92] is still a handful at inside-centre. ‘The Bus’ is quite an extraordinary rugby player.

“For more of a bolter, there’s Elia Canakaivata from the Drua, who might play No 7. He can play No 8 or No 6. He has had a breakout year and is a hell of a ball carrier.”

It is sure to be physical. This week, Earl described the punishing nature of that Marseille meeting. “Whenever anyone says: ‘What is the biggest hit you have witnessed?’ – it was Tom Curry on Levani Botia,” Earl said. “The noise that made I was like: ‘Oh my God.’ It is very rare you think that on the pitch. That is what it takes playing these guys.”

However it plays out, Fiji’s future looks bright. “They are nowhere near the ceiling,” Evans says. “There’s a pile of work to do on facilities, physical treatment, coaching, pathways, etc. It’s by no means the finished product.”

But rest assured, they will be ready for England on Saturday.

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.