With the game being played between the two 10-metres lines and turnovers aplenty, including four missed lineouts on the Georgian throw, there was not too much in the way of continuity and no further points were scored.

Re-energised by a new front-row and half-back combination, Georgia started the second half brightly and Lashki could, and possibly should, have scored after a huge gap opened up in front of him but the winger, who scored twice against South Africa, wasn’t able to hang onto Luka Gelashvili’s inside ball. A few minutes later, though, replacement fly-half Tedo Abzhandadze got his side on the board with a penalty.

A second close-range try from Ashman followed, after Roan Frostwick’s quick tap had caught Georgia off guard. But Georgia hit back, a solid scrum providing the perfect platform for them to launch an attack through Lashki. After he was stopped just short, play was swiftly moved to the left, and Abzhandadze was able to ignore a three-man overlap outside to stroll over for a try that he converted.

With the game finely balanced at 12-10, Jack Blain thought he’d given Scotland some breathing space but the pass between Matt Davidson and Rory McMichael in the build-up was found to be forward. Blain then pulled off a brilliant cover tackle to deny Mikheil Alania but there was no stopping Nioradze who charged over after picking off an overthrown Scotland lineout with five minutes to go.

Georgia captain Tedo Abzhandadze: “We’re so happy to win our first game in the tournament. Our attacking speed was much better in the second half. I’m so proud.”

Scotland captain Connor Boyde: “I think we just took our foot off the gas. We talked about playing smart and playing in their half and I thought for the first 10 minutes of the game we did that. I thought our lineout was very good until the last 20 minutes, but our scrum just didn’t function, and we let that big Georgian pack get in the game. You can’t tire those big Georgian forwards out if you give the ball away in the first few phases.”

POOL C: SOUTH AFRICA 25-17 NEW ZEALAND

South Africa weathered the loss of three men to the sin-bin to maintain their dominant tournament record over New Zealand and march into the semi-finals as Pool C winners.

But for New Zealand, their involvement in the title race is over, a 77th-minute penalty from Sanele Nohamba denying them the losing bonus point they needed to qualify as the best runner-up at France’s expense.

A brilliant out-the-back offload from Rikus Pretorius to Vaughen Issacs set South Africa on their way after eight minutes and while Hendrikse pulled his conversion wide, the livewire scrum-half made no mistake with his first penalty attempt.

After Thomas Gallo’s brilliant solo effort in the earlier Argentina-France game, the crowd were then treated to another forwards’ special when JJ van der Mescht stole lineout ball and raced home from halfway as the first quarter drew to a close.

Despite going down to 14 men in the 20th minute after Dylan Richardson saw yellow for a deliberate knock down, South Africa continued to boss proceedings, their aggressive, in-your-face defence forcing New Zealand back behind the gain-line time and time again. The Junior Springboks negotiated the 10-minute period short-handed with no points conceded and came close to adding to their own tally when Thaakir Abrahams nearly got on the end of Issacs’ grubber kick.

In the 26th minute, Billy Proctor finally sparked New Zealand into life as an attacking force, the centre gathering his own chip kick ahead to set up a promising position inside the Junior Springboks’ 22. Leicester Fainga’anuku picked up at the base and went close but the move eventually broke down. After referring to the TMO, referee Damon Murphy sent South Africa openside Sibusiso Sangweni to the sin-bin for a no-arms tackle.

Fergus Burke slotted the resulting penalty to finally get New Zealand on the board. Again, New Zealand failed to press home their numerical advantage and South Africa finished the half with a 19-3 lead thanks to two penalties from the boot of Hendrikse.

When replacement Kaylum Boshier hacked on and was tackled off the ball by fly-half James Mollentze with the try-line in his sight five minutes into the second half, referee Murphy reached for his pocket again as well as awarding New Zealand a penalty try.

For the sixth time in the tournament as a whole, South Africa had seen yellow. It threatened to be a game-changing moment but more determined defending by the Junior Springboks maintained their two-score, 19-10 lead.

Defences stayed on top and it took another 25 minutes for any more points to be scored, replacement scrum-half Nohamba slotting the ball between the posts in the 71st minute after the Junior Springboks had forced another penalty at scrum time.

New Zealand threw everything at South Africa and when Lalomilo Lalomilo scored from Proctor’s no-look pass and Burke converted, with five minutes to go, the six-time champions had a sniff of victory – until a collapsed maul gave Nohamba the chance to make the game safe for South Africa.

South Africa captain Phendulani Buthelezi: “It was massive game for us, and credit to the New Zealand side, they pushed us all the way. I’ll be honest, our discipline let us down today but I’m proud of the way the boys responded and stuck together. We’re going to focus on our recovery now and make sure we hit the ground running in the semi-final.”

New Zealand captain Kianu Kereru-Symes: “The South African boys brought the pressure we knew they were going to bring, but I don’t think we adapted properly until the last few minutes of the first half which meant we didn’t get in the game. In the first half we rushed our plays and that put us under pressure quite a lot. When we took our time, we got some good results out of it but we couldn’t quite execute.”