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Ross Moriarty's try was given after a TMO check

2019 Rugby World Cup quarter-final Wales (10) 20 Tries: Wainwright, Moriarty Cons: Biggar 2 Pens: Biggar 2 France (19) 19 Tries: Vahaamahina, Ollivon, Vakatawa Cons: Ntamack 2

A dramatic late Ross Moriarty try booked Wales a World Cup semi-final place at the expense of 14-man France as Warren Gatland's side came from behind to win 20-19 in Oita.

France lock Sebastien Vahaamahina was sent off after 48 minutes for a blatant elbow on Wales flanker Aaron Wainwright in a decisive moment.

France were leading 19-10 at the time and Wales scored 10 unanswered points.

Gatland's side play South Africa next Sunday in Yokohama.

Wales overcame the loss of centre Jonathan Davies just before kick-off to reach a third World Cup semi-final to follow their exploits of 1987 and 2011.

Vahaamahina, Charles Ollivon, and the brilliant Virimi Vakatawa scored France tries in a relentless first-half display, while Wales responded through Wainwright and Moriarty tries and 10 points from Dan Biggar's boot.

France won the only other previous World Cup meeting between the two nations in the 2011 semi-final when then Wales skipper Sam Warburton was red-carded.

This time it was a French sending off that proved pivotal.

Wales will be relieved after producing a disappointing and disjointed performance but again resilience and character took them to victory in a game where they trailed from the fifth minute until the 74th.

Moriarty shrugged off a first-half yellow card to score the decisive try with the ball adjudged not to have gone forward in the build-up from a rip by replacement scrum-half Tomos Williams.

Wales fans woke up to the news they did not want to hear but feared when key centre Davies was ruled out just before kick-off with the knee injury he suffered against Fiji.

Davies initially had been cleared to play and was selected in the team before being pulled out 75 minutes before kick-off.

The Scarlets centre aggravated the injury in Wales' final training session on Saturday and was officially ruled out on Sunday morning.

Owen Watkin was Davies' replacement for the biggest game of his career with full-back Leigh Halfpenny coming in on the bench.

France had defeated Argentina, Tonga and USA but not played for two weeks after their Pool C decider had been called off because of Typhoon Hagibis, but they made a blistering start in Oita.

France missed two key kicks in the contest, a penalty and a conversion attempt

Wales' slow start

So it was a battle-hardened Wales against a rested France. Who would prevail?

France provided a glimpse of what they offered with Wales grateful for crucial defensive interventions from George North and Justin Tipuric before Les Bleus powered through the gears.

France benefitted from a loose clearing kick from scrum-half Gareth Davies as Wales gifted their opposition possession and Vahaamahina powered over in the fifth minute, though Romain Ntamack hit the post with the conversion, one of two key missed kicks from France.

Les Bleus responded with a brilliant second try two minutes later. Vakatawa exposed the Wales midfield defence by stepping past Josh Navidi and linking up with Ntamack and Dupont before flanker Ollivon cantered away to score as they built up a 12-0 lead inside eight minutes.

Wales had trailed Fiji by 10 points early on in their last game in Oita and again appeared rattled following a slow start as they seemed set to duplicate the Six Nations clash where France led by 16 points at half-time.

However, the Grand Slam winners responded from nowhere when a heavy tackle from Jake Ball on France captain Guilhem Guirado resulted in a dropped ball which Wainwright latched onto and sprinted away to score.

Biggar converted and added a penalty to reduce the deficit to two points to complete a frantic opening quarter.

Wales suffered another injury blow when Navidi was forced off by a hamstring problem. He was replaced by Moriarty whose first contribution was to be sent to the sin-bin for a high tackle on centre Gael Fickou.

France immediately took advantage of their numerical superiority when Vakatawa powered over after patient build-up with Ntamack converting.

A rejuvenated and rampant France continued to attack as they capitalised on Wales' kicking tactic of keeping the ball on the field.

Wales were thankful to crucial defensive interventions from wings North and Josh Adams while Ntamack hit the post for the second time with a penalty.

Gatland's side would have been content with a 19-10 interval deficit in a half where they missed 18 tackles, which would have infuriated defence coach Shaun Edwards.

The red card was the first in a World Cup knockout match since Sam Warburton's dismissal in the 2011 World Cup semi final

Red mist changes contest... again

France made a half-time change with injured fly-half Ntamack replaced by Camille Lopez and looked comfortable until Vahaamahina had his inexplicable red-mist moment.

The lock was sent off for elbowing Wainwright in the head after already having his arm around his neck.

It was a game-changing moment and instantly led to comparisons to the 2011 semi-final when Warburton's red card tipped the scales in France's favour.

Wales piled on the pressure with Biggar reducing the deficit to within a score before 14-man France rallied again.

Vakatawa was causing havoc and Wales were grateful Penaud dropped the ball with the line at his mercy.

Wales then failed with an attacking overlap when Yoann Huget intercepted an attempted try-scoring pass before the decisive moment at a French scrum a few metres in front of their own line.

Tomos Williams ripped the ball away and flanker Justin Tipuric latched onto it before Moriarty dived over.

Referee Jaco Peyper checked with television match official Marius Jonker to see whether the ball had gone forward from Williams and to confirm that Moriarty's grounding was legal; the try was awarded.

Moriarty's score was converted by Biggar as Wales led for the first time with just six minutes remaining and they held on for a famous victory.

Man of the match: Aaron Wainwright

France centre Virimi Vakatawa was brilliant but Wales flanker Aaron Wainwright demonstrated he is now an established international performer with an inspirational try-scoring display.

'It was similar to 2011' - reaction

Wales coach Warren Gatland: "The message at half-time was just that we had to score next and we were able to do that.

"The red card was obviously pretty significant, but the thing I am proud about is the guys didn't give in, they just kept waiting for an opportunity that they knew would come.

"It was similar to 2011 when we had the red card and lost by a point. It wasn't the prettiest game in the world, but we showed great character.

"We will take it even though it was a little bit ugly, the important thing is going through, for us we look to get ourselves right now for the next two weeks."

Wales captain Alun Wyn Jones: "We were slow out of the blocks, we started similar to against Fiji but the character we showed to come through, we kept plugging away and it came right on the scoreboard. We wanted to take the advantage with territory and take the opportunities.

"We have plenty to work on, but we are very pleased with the result. We saw a lot of red from the Japanese fans, but the way the Welsh support have come over here is awesome."

Former Wales international Tom Shanklin: "I'm emotionally spent! What a game that was from start to finish. I'm looking at the players here, some hugging and jumping, some totally spent, exhausted.

"It's taken a toll on them this World Cup, the big games they've had against Australia and Fiji.

"The turning point was the red card, but I expected a little bit more from Wales if I'm honest. I don't think we saw the best of them in attack. They were certainly shell-shocked in that first half.

"The character those boys showed to come back when it really mattered - that scrum which just blew France away and allowed Tomos Williams to get on the ball and the way they saw the game out... they're through to a semi-final and what more could you ask."

Ken Owens made 19 tackles against France, the second most by a hooker in a Rugby World Cup match after Uruguay's German Kessler made 20 against Wales in this year's pool stages

Match stats

Wales completed their biggest comeback to win a World Cup match. They came back from 12 points down, beating their previous largest total of 10 points.

This match marked the fifth time Wales were involved in a World Cup match decided by a single point. No other team has been involved in as many.

This was the second Rugby World Cup meeting between France and Wales, with each side picking up one win with both matches being won by a single point.

Both World Cup matches between France and Wales have featured a red card.

Wales have equalled their record for most victories in a single World Cup (five in 1987).

Sebastien Vahaamahina scored his first Test try in his 46th appearance and became the first France player to be sent off in a World Cup match.

Since their defeat against France at the 2011 World Cup, Wales have won eight of their nine subsequent matches against France, only the All Blacks have beaten France more often in this timeframe (10 times).

Alun Wyn Jones played a record 19th World Cup match for Wales, surpassing Gethin Jenkins' tally of 18.

Ross Moriarty crossed for a crucial try after being sin-binned, just the third Wales player to score and be yellow-carded in a Rugby World Cup match after both Colin Charvis and Sonny Parker did that in the same game against Canada in 2003.

Teams

Wales: L Williams; North, Watkin, Parkes, Adams; Biggar, G Davies; Wyn Jones, Owens, Francis, Ball, Alun Wyn Jones (capt), Wainwright, Navidi, Tipuric.

Replacements: E Dee, Carre, D Lewis, Beard, Moriarty, T Williams, Patchell, Halfpenny.

France: Medard; Penaud, Vakatawa, Fickou, Huget; Ntamack, Dupont; Poirot, Guirado (capt), Slimani, Le Roux, Vahaamahina, Lauret, Ollivon, Alldritt.

Replacements: Chat, Baille, Setiano, Gabrillagues, Picamoles, Serin, Lopez, Rattez.

Referee: Jaco Peyper (South Africa)