Manu Samoa have booked their ticket for the 2023 Rugby World Cup after seeing off Tonga 37-15 in Hamilton today.
Samoa were able to press home their advantage from the first leg, having beaten their Pacific Island neighbours 42-13 in Auckland last week, and can now look forward to a trip to France.
Samoa will join England, Japan, Fiji and an undetermined team from the Americas in Pool D at that tournament, always looking likely to seal the two-leg series in wet conditions in Hamilton.
“It’s very satisfying, the last four weeks have been building to this game,” said Samoan captain Michael Ala’alatoa. “We made it hard for ourselves in the second half, they were in our faces and we weren’t able to deal with that well, but the boys stuck at it.
“We don’t expect anything less when we play against Tonga.”
Tonga needed to win by 30 points to overturn their first-leg deficit and the difficulty of their task was compounded inside the first 20 minutes when lock Harrison Mataele and front row pair Siua Maile and Jethro Felemi were forced from the field through injury.
Samoa took advantage to gradually impose themselves on the game, soon taking the lead after capitalising on an error-prone Tongan lineout. Alamanda Motuga recovered a lineout steal well before Rodney Iona threw a clever cut-out pass for Ed Fidow to cross untouched.
Tonga were always physical in defence and enjoyed some good field position in the first half but struggled to string together enough phases to seriously test the opposition defence. And Samoa were able to cement their ascendancy just before the break, with a great break from Neria Fomai allowing Jonathan Taumateine to score his side’s second try.
That extra bit of quality separated the sides at halftime and it took Tonga until early in the second half before they were able to put together double-digit phases.
They proceeded to dominate large stretches of the second spell and soon closed the gap through Jay Fonokalafi’s try, with the substitute burrowing across the line after a strong carry from Ben Tameifuna.