The delight at winning for the first time in this year’s Six Nations was writ large all over the faces of the Wales players, but the man wearing the biggest smile of them all was without doubt the captain, Ken Owens.
What has appeared to be a poisoned chalice at times over the past five weeks had finally turned into something resembling hope for the recently installed leader.
After a wave of sheer relief at the end of a period that has seen him at the centre of the debate over financial meltdown in Welsh rugby and a possible strike, the weight of the world seemed to have lifted off his shoulders. “Some people have said there hasn’t been any effort and that we haven’t been trying but we certainly have been trying over the last seven weeks,” said Owens in the wake of the 29-17 win over Italy in Rome. “We work very hard as a squad, as do the coaching group, and we’ve been building. “Nobody gave us a chance here today but I’m just very happy – not with proving people wrong, because I don’t care what people say, but with the effort we’ve put in.
I’m just very proud of the boys. We’ve had a good performance and a good win, but we know we’ve got to improve.” A first Six Nations whitewash in 20 years may have been averted, but the battle to avoid being given the dreaded Wooden Spoon for the first time since 2007 isn’t over just yet.