New Zealand increased their lead at the top of the rankings over Ireland to 3.46 points as a result of their 16-15 win against England, although for a moment it looked as though all their hard work in fighting their way back from 15-0 down had been undone when Sam Underhill turned Beauden Barrett inside and out to score with only a few minutes remaining. To the relief of the All Blacks, the TMO had spotted an earlier offside infringement and the visitors hung on for the narrowest of wins.
With no rating points available to Ireland irrespective of the outcome of their match against lower-ranked Argentina, which ended in a 28-17 win for the home side, third-placed Wales knew they had an opportunity to close the gap on their Celtic rivals if they could end a 13-test losing run against the Wallabies in Cardiff.
A game of few chances looked to be heading for a draw at 6-6 but, to the relief of the home crowd, replacement Dan Biggar kept his nerve to kick the match-winning penalty. The 9-6 win was worth 0.35 of a point and moves Wales on to 86.70 points overall – 3.42 behind Ireland.
South Africa, ranked fifth, gained ground on England after they played their ‘get out of jail’ card to beat France 29-26 in Paris. Les Bleus held a 23-9 lead early in the second half, but the Springboks fought back to clinch the win with a try from Bongi Mbonambi in the last play of the game. Having received 0.91 of a point for their third straight victory at the Stade de France, South Africa are now only 1.6 points adrift of Eddie Jones’ men.