For the first time since 2002 all three major leading southern hemisphere sides were beaten on the same day as the Autumn Nations Series came to a rousing conclusion.
England were the first to strike a blow for the north with a dramatic 27-26 win over South Africa at Twickenham, another one-point game followed in Cardiff as Wales also needed a last-gasp penalty to snatch a 29-28 win against Australia before France rounded off proceedings with a 40-25 victory over New Zealand, their opponents in the opening match of Rugby World Cup 2023.
The moment the momentum shifted?@FranceRugby at their very best
— World Rugby (@WorldRugby) November 20, 2021
📽 @autumnnations
pic.twitter.com/FctVCPXJaq
Equally as dramatic was Chile’s 30-29 win over Russia in Sochi, an historic result clinched with the clock in the red thanks to Santiago Videla’s penalty, while Tedo Abzhandadze scored all 15 points for Georgia as they held Fiji to a draw in Madrid.
With Italy edging out Uruguay 17-10 and Ireland beating 14-man Argentina 53-7 in the only game on Sunday, the Six Nations teams enjoyed a rare clean sweep of wins on the same weekend. This is the only time this has happened since the first year of the Six Nations in 2000.
So what impact did this most dramatic of weekends of international rugby have on the World Rugby Men’s Rankings?
South Africa and New Zealand remain as the teams ranked first and second but with reduced points totals.
The Springboks dropped 1.22 points as a result of losing the Rugby World Cup 2019 rematch to Marcus Smith’s last-minute penalty, and now have 90.61 points – a lead of 1.86 points over the All Blacks, whose defeat to revved-up France for the first time since 2009 cost them fractionally more. England are now less than three points off top spot in third.
Ireland took full advantage of the third red card of Tomas Lavanini’s test career to extend their winning run to seven matches and maintain fourth place in the rankings. France, not Australia, are now their nearest rivals as the win over the All Blacks pushed them up to fifth at the expense of the Wallabies, who drop to sixth.
Absolute HANDS 🤲@chilerugby's skills keep the ball alive for a fine try against Russia pic.twitter.com/RdM51jDHaS
— World Rugby (@WorldRugby) November 21, 2021
Headline Hogg-er
Stuart Hogg became Scotland’s all-time record try-scorer with his 25th try for his country in a 29-20 win over Japan at Murrayfield that solidifies seventh place in the rankings, just ahead of Wales, who needed Rhys Priestland’s match-winning penalty in the game’s final act to see off 14-man Australia.
Wales and Argentina swap places with Japan making up the top 10.
Romania and Tonga also traded places as a result of the Oaks’ 32-20 win in Bucharest, with the resurgent Oaks now 15th and Tonga 16th. Uruguay’s defeat to Italy led to USA replacing them in 17th.
Elsewhere, Chile leapfrog the Netherlands into 25th and there is now just Namibia between themselves and the Bear ahead of their rematch on Friday. Namibia remain in 24th place after a 41-10 win over Zimbabwe saw them clinch the Stellenbosch Challenge title.
Poland’s reward for a 37-25 win over Switzerland was a one-place rise to 28th as their fine form in the Rugby Europe Trophy continued. Poland have won their first three games and will take a six-point lead over Germany into the new year.
Read more: France 2023: Chile closer than ever to first Rugby World Cup >>