Italy v Wales: Six Nations 2025 – live

1 month ago 25

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11 mins. Lots of action in the middle third of the field as both sides have a couple of phases and then kick it away. It remains very wet and this could be the pattern for the match, unfortunately.

8 mins. Will Rowlands loses a lineout under pressure from Cannone, but Page-Relo ruins the work of his team-mate by booming his clearing kick out of the full from outside the 22.

PENALTY! Italy 3 - 0 Wales (Tommaso Allan)

6 mins. Wales are off their feet at the ruck as Italy venture into their territory. Allan calls for the tee and opens his account for the day.

3 mins. Very little nonsense in Italy’s receiving of the kick off as they execute a couple of settling carries before seeing the ball off the field via Page-Relo’s boot. Wales win the lineout and have some phases just in the Azzuri half. There’s not much happening before Tomos Williams spots a gap in the left corner and dabs a kick there with the outside of this his boot, but Josh Adams fumbles it as he tries to gather it close to the touchline.

The try was on if it was gathered, but it was a half-chance really.

Kick Off!

The ball sails through the grey sky and towards Italy to get the game started.

The teams are walking out into a very wet and miserable afternoon in Rome. The anthem formalities will soon be done and we can get underway.

Officials for the match today

Referee: Matthew Carley (England)
Assistant referee 1: Paul Williams (New Zealand)
Assistant referee 2: Sam Grove-White (Scotland)
TMO: Eric Gauzins (France)

Warren Gatland is playing down the cataclysmic, seismic and/or devastating importance of this match.

How are the nerves, Wales fans? Of what about the level of confidence in Italian ranks? Interested people of other nations may also have views and all of them can be sent to me via email or you could give me a shout on Bluesky if that’s a thing you do now.

An aerial view of Stadio Olimpico ahead of the Guinness Six Nations 2025 match between Italy and Wales at Rome’s Stadio Olimpico.
Fans of both sides can no doubt agree that there’s some stunning scenery around the Stadio Olimpico. Photograph: Ryan Pierse/Getty Images

Teams

Gonzalo Quesada makes only one change to the starting line-up from last week, Niccolo Cannone replacing Dino Lamb in the second row.

Some very late injury news for Wales with Liam Williams and Daf Jenkins both withdrawn within an hour of kick off. Blair Murray moves to fullback and Freddie Williams to lock, which will bring Josh Hathaway and Teddy Williams onto the bench

In more planned news, an injury to Owen Watkin means a change at centre for Wales with young Scarlet Eddie James the man coming in. In the forwards, Warren Gatland can take some comfort in the return of 105-cap Taulupe Faletau to the Number 8 shirt.

Italy: Tommaso Allan; Ange Capuozzo, Juan Ignacio Brex, Tommaso Menoncello, Monty Ioane; Paolo Garbisi, Martin Page-Relo; Danilo Fischetti, Giacomo Nicotera, Simone Ferrari; Niccolò Cannone, Federico Ruzza; Sebastian Negri, Michele Lamaro (capt), Lorenzo Cannone.

Replacements: Gianmarco Lucchesi, Luca Rizzoli, Marco Riccioni, Dino Lamb, Manuel Zuliani, Ross Vintcent, Alessandro Garbisi, Jacopo Trulla.

Wales: Blair Murray; Tom Rogers, Nick Tompkins, Eddie James, Josh Adams; Ben Thomas, Tomos Williams; Gareth Thomas, Evan Lloyd, Henry Thomas; Will Rowlands, Freddie Thomas; James Botham, Jac Morgan (capt), Taulupe Faletau.

Replacements: Elliot Dee, Nicky Smith, Keiron Assiratti, Teddy Williams, Aaron Wainwright, Rhodri Williams, Dan Edwards, Josh Hathaway.

Preamble

Dylan Thomas, the finest word mitherer ever produced by Wales, once wrote, “Isn’t life a terrible thing, thank God?”. The nation’s rugby fans have no need to endlessly explore their tortured souls like a poet to know what he means. However, like Thomas’s character Polly Garter who spoke those words, there can be a unifying, inspiring purpose and strange pride to be harvested from what others judge of your pitiful state. This is what Warren Gatland and his team must find today as they walk out in Rome to what is clearly their best chance to end the very-unlucky-for-them thirteen game run of defeats.

Italy will be similarly motivated to defibrillate some life into their tournament after a spluttering display in the loss to Scotland. They are in front of a home crowd with memories of wins over the men in red in two of their last three meetings. Expectations will rightly be running high for a settled squad against a Wales team at perhaps their lowest ebb since the game turned professional in the mid 1990s.

Everything regarding form and levels of fandom hope points to a victory for the Azzurri, but the visitors today will recall that the two recent defeats were of the tiniest margin, and also puzzlingly not in Rome but in Cardiff. It feels like crumbs of comfort, probably because it is.

One team’s life will be remain a terrible thing soon enough, find out which one with me here.

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