Wales Return to Argentina After Nearly 60 Years
Wales have touched down in Argentina, continuing a tradition that spans almost six decades of touring the Pumas. It is eight years since the last Welsh appearance in South America, and this visit will be a brief one, featuring a single Nations Championship match in San Juan before the squad heads to Durban for a showdown with South Africa. The journey covers roughly 7,000 miles, a distance never before traveled by Wales for a solitary fixture, and the players arrive on two separate flights. Previous trips to Buenos Aires have been marked by drama, from onâfield battles to offâfield intrigue, setting a colourful backdrop for the current campaign. As BBC Sport Wales recounts, each encounter with the Pumas has added a new chapter to a longâstanding rivalry.
1968: Wales’ First South America Trip
The inaugural Welsh tour to South America took place 58 years ago, a sixâmatch schedule under coach Clive Rowlands that yielded three victories, two draws and a single loss. The series was initially not recognised as a Test by the Welsh Rugby Union, but seven of the players later received presidentâs caps in 2013, cementing its status. For Phil Bennett and JPR Williams the trip launched illustrious careers, while for many others it remained their solitary opportunity to wear the Welsh jersey. Argentina shocked the visitors with a win and a draw, handing Wales a series defeat that still resonates in Welsh rugby memory. The 1968 tour laid the groundwork for future encounters and highlighted the challenges of playing far from home.
1999: Wales’ Historic Series Win
After a 31âyear hiatus, Wales returned to Argentina in 1999 and made history by becoming the first northernâhemisphere side to secure a 2â0 Test series victory. Both matches were staged in Buenos Aires, with Wales triumphing 36â26 and 23â16, the latter result securing a 10âmatch winning streak under Graham Henry. Neil Jenkinsâ 18âpoint haul in the second Test pushed him beyond the 800âpoint milestone in international rugby. The game will forever be remembered for a fierce melee that began on the field and spilled into the dugâout after Argentinaâs prop Mauricio Reggiardo struck Wales wing Dafydd James. Despite the melee, only yellow cards were shown to Reggiardo, captain Pedro Sporleder and Wales prop Peter Rogers, a curious outcome that still sparks debate. The tumult continued into the 1999 World Cup in Cardiff, where a gouge by Wales hooker Garin Jenkins and a retaliatory ban for flanker Colin Charvis added further drama.
2004: Shane Williams’ Brilliance Helps Wales Equalise
The 2004 tour mirrored the current schedule, with Wales facing Argentina and South Africa on the same trip. Mike Ruddock led his first Wales tour, opening with a twoâTest series in Buenos Aires. The first Test proved a nailâbiter, a 50â44 defeat that featured 11 Welsh tries and a 94âpoint total, while Felipe Contepomiânow Argentinaâs coachâscored 20 points, edging out Gavin Henson by a single point. Wales rallied seven days later, securing a 35â20 win thanks to a dazzling firstâhalf hatâtrick from Shane Williams and another 15 points from Henson. After the euphoria of levelling the series, the squad endured a grueling fiveâtimeâzone move to Pretoria, where they suffered a heavy 53â18 loss to South Africa. The 2004 campaign showcased Walesâ ability to compete at high altitude and highlighted the contrast between success against Argentina and disappointment against the Springboks.
2006: Alun Wyn Jones Starts on Path to Record Caps
Under new head coach Gareth Jenkins, Wales endured a double defeat in Argentina in 2006, marking Jenkinsâ first matches in charge after replacing Ruddock. The opening Test was played in Puerto Madryn, a city linked to the Welsh colony of Patagonia founded in 1865, adding a historic flavour to the contest. A narrow 27â25 victory for the Pumas marked the international debut of lock Alun Wyn Jones, who started at flanker on that day and would later become the worldâs mostâcapped player with 158 Test appearances. Fellow Ospreys lock Ian Evans opened his account with a spectacular 45âmetre galloping try after intercepting a pass from AgustĂn Pichot, but a week later he faced a sixâweek ban for a reckless charge on Pichot during a 45â27 defeat. The 2006 tour reinforced the physical demands of playing in Argentina and set the stage for Jonesâ extraordinary career.
2018: Wales Dominate Again and Set Up Future Success
Warren Gatlandâs side repeated the twoâTest triumph of 1999 when they visited Argentina in 2018, building on the momentum of a warmâup win over South Africa in Washington DC, Rassie Erasmusâ first match as Springbok coach. The squad, missing many British & Irish Lions players from the 2017 NewâŻZealand tour, was led by coâcaptains Ellis Jenkins and Cory Hill. Wales opened with a 23â10 victory in San Juan, thanks to tries from flanker James Davies and wing George North, while Rhys Patchell contributed key kicks. The second Test in Santa Fe saw Patchellâs 20 points seal a 30â12 win, with further scores from Josh Adams and Hallam Amos. The only blot on the tour was a late red card for number eight Ross Moriarty, ejected for a prolonged headlock on Argentinaâs outsideâhalf Nicolas Sanchez; the dismissal made him the eighth Welsh player to be sent off. The series lifted Wales to third in the world rankings and laid the groundwork for Gatlandâs 14âmatch winning run, the 2019 Grand Slam and a semiâfinal appearance at the Rugby World Cup in Japan.
Current Tour: What It Means for Wales
The upcoming tour marks the first time in over six decades that Wales will contest a single Test in Argentina before moving on to face South Africa, a schedule designed to test depth and adaptability. The squadâs arrival on two flights and the 7,000âmile trek underscore the logistical challenges that have defined past visits. With the Nations Championship game in San Juan serving as a warmâup, the experience mirrors earlier tours that combined tournament play with goodwill matches against the Pumas and the Springboks. History suggests that a strong performance against Argentina could set the tone for the rest of the campaign, much as the 1999 and 2018 series wins propelled Wales to new heights. Fans and pundits will watch closely to see how the current group builds on those legacy tours and whether they can add another memorable chapter to Walesâ South American story.
Past Argentina v Wales Results
- Argentina 9â5 Wales, Buenos Aires, 14 September 1968
- Argentina 9â9 Wales, Buenos Aires, 28 September 1968
- Wales 16â7 Argentina, Cardiff, 9 October 1991
- Wales 43â30 Argentina, Llanelli, 21 November 1998
- Argentina 26â36 Wales, Buenos Aires, 5 June 1999
- Argentina 16â23 Wales, Buenos Aires, 12 June 1999
- Wales 23â18 Argentina, Cardiff, 1 October 1999
- Wales 16â30 Argentina, Cardiff, 10 November 2001
- Argentina 50â44 Wales, TucumĂĄn, 12 June 2004
- Argentina 20â35 Wales, Buenos Aires, 19 June 2004
- Argentina 27â25 Wales, Puerto Madryn, 11 June 2006
- Argentina 45â27 Wales, Buenos Aires, 17 June 2006
- Wales 27â20 Argentina, Cardiff, 18 August 2007
- Wales 33â16 Argentina, Cardiff, 21 November 2009
- Wales 28â13 Argentina, Cardiff, 20 August 2011
- Wales 12â26 Argentina, Cardiff, 10 November 2012
- Wales 40â6 Argentina, Cardiff, 16 November 2013
- Wales 24â20 Argentina, Cardiff, 12 November 2016
- Argentina 10â23 Wales, San Juan, 9 June 2018
- Argentina 12â30 Wales, Santa Fe, 16 June 2018
- Wales 20â20 Argentina, Cardiff, 10 July 2021
- Wales 11â33 Argentina, Cardiff, 17 July 2021
- Wales 20â13 Argentina, Cardiff, 12 November 2022
- Argentina 29â17 Wales, Marseille, 14 October 2023
- Wales 28â52 Argentina, Cardiff, 9 November 2025
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