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Wales skipper Sam Warburton. David Jones/PA Archive/Press Association Images
Rugby

Wales and Argentina keen to build on global gains

Today’s contest will indicate how much either side has learned from recently facing the top three teams in the world and go a long way to defining their final campaign of the year.

TWO NATIONS THREATENING to shake-up the rugby world order face each other when Wales welcome Argentina to Cardiff’s Millennium Stadium today (2pm ko).

The red dragons of Wales and Los Pumas of South America may only be ranked sixth and eighth, respectively, in the International Rugby Board standings but are arguably the most improved Test teams of recent years.

Hosts Wales are the reigning top dogs in Europe, having claimed a third clean sweep of the Six Nations in eight years in March, on the back of reaching the semi-finals of the World Cup in New Zealand.

Meanwhile Argentina come into the match fresh from a promising debut in the Rugby Championship that saw them prove stubborn opponents to the might of world champions New Zealand, Australia and South Africa, with the Pumas managing a draw against the Springboks.

Today’s contest will indicate how much either side has learned from recently facing the top three teams in the world and go a long way to defining their final campaign of the year. Wales captain Sam Warburton is braced for a tough month of rugby with Samoa, the All Blacks and Wallabies following Argentina to Cardiff in successive weeks.

“The great thing about the autumn is that you’re playing the best teams in the world back-to-back at the Millennium Stadium,” said Warburton.

“Even in the Six Nations we get the odd week off between games so physically and mentally it’s a tough and demanding campaign because with games one after the other,” the flanker added.

“Argentina’s involvement in the Rugby Championship will have done them so much good and their standard of rugby will have gone through the roof from playing in that intensity.

“It’s a massive challenge but hopefully we can get off to a winning start because momentum is always the key thing in these campaigns, as it was in the Six Nations and World Cup.

“We need to click from the off as a good win could set up a good campaign, and we’ve given ourselves every possible chance by having a good build-up.”

Pumas

Argentina start with 11 players who appeared in the Rugby Championship team but have recalled two vastly experienced former fly-halves in Felipe Contepomi and Juan Martin Hernandez to their back division.

“To be playing against the best three teams in the world was great competition for us,” said Argentina captain Juan Martin Fernandez Lobbe. We have tried to take advantage of that and hopefully use all the experience we have gained to keep improving.

“But we know it is going to be a tough challenge at the Millennium Stadium which is a great place to play rugby. Wales are full of great players who have been together for a long time and we saw how close they came to Australia in June.”

- © AFP, 2012

VIDEO: 3 venues, 3 recent South African visits

VIDEO: 3 venues, 3 recent South African visits