Select Edition

Northern
Southern
Global
NZ

'It was a shock to everyone' - The latest on Leigh Halfpenny's knee injury

By PA
Leigh Halfpenny is carted off /PA

Wales full-back Leigh Halfpenny will undergo a scan to gauge the extent of a knee injury that forced him off inside two minutes of his 100th Test match.

Wales boss Wayne Pivac said that Halfpenny “tweaked” his knee during a 68-12 victory over Canada at the Principality Stadium.

He left the pitch on a stretcher cart, with Wales moving wing Jonah Holmes to full-back as they ran in 10 tries in front of a first home crowd since February last year.

Pivac said: “It was a shock to everyone, wasn’t it? Just under a minute into the game.

“He just stepped off one leg and tweaked the knee. We won’t know how bad it is until he gets that scanned, and he will do that early next week.

“He is in his 100th Test match, and he knew straightaway he had done something, we just don’t know how bad it is.

“He was frustrated that was how his 100th Test finished. Anyone would be like that I guess. We will know more once he’s had a scan.

“He is still driven and he still feels he can offer something for his country. While he has that at the forefront of his mind, I have no doubt he will bounce back.”

Guinness Six Nations champions Wales delivered in front an attendance of just over 6,100, taking charge through first-half tries from Holmes, Tomos Williams, Nicky Smith, Elliot Dee, James Botham and Will Rowlands.

Williams added another try early in the second half, and there was also a double for Taine Basham in his first Test and Holmes claimed a brace, while fly-half Callum Sheedy kicked seven conversions and Ben Thomas added the extras following second scores for Basham and Holmes.

A far biggest test now awaits, though, with Wales hosting Argentina in Cardiff on the next two weekends.

Pivac added: “It wasn’t the start that anyone wanted, but the reaction to that was good. To have 40 points in the bank by half-time, you have to be relatively pleased.

“We knew there would be mistakes, and there were. We will look at that and pull out the learnings for individuals and for the group as a whole.

“We needed a game. To go in cold against a side (Argentina) that has drawn twice against Australia and beaten the All Blacks, you have to respect that team.

“They are a serious Tier One nation now, and for this young team to go up against a side like that is exactly what we need.

“It will show them how much hard work they need to put in if they want to play at this level on a regular basis.

“We will need to step it up across our whole game, really. It has highlighted a few things for us that we will go away and work on. We will be tested across the board.”

Canada, who face England at Twickenham next weekend, went ahead through wing Kainoa Lloyd’s early try, but their first Test since the 2019 World Cup ended in a hefty defeat.

Full-back Cooper Coats claimed a late consolation touchdown, converted by fly-half Peter Nelson, yet it proved a frustrating afternoon for Canada’s Welsh coaching trio of Kingsley Jones, Rob Howley and Byron Hayward.

Jones said: “The way we started was excellent, but Wales kept the ball in hand and they fancied running us off the park, and we hit the wall after about 20 minutes.

“We talked about it at half-time, and for the boys to finish the game the way they did was great.

“It is about the boys getting used to the speed. I thought they adjusted to it. We constructed some nice opportunities, and I think we need to take that into next week against England.”