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Israel Folau achieves incredible slice of try-scoring history

The NSW Waratahs have survived an enormous Super Rugby fright from the Sunwolves, scraping home 31-30 thanks to a record-breaking double from Israel Folau.

The Japanese side came painfully close to pulling off a boilover on Saturday in Tokyo, only denied victory when five-eighth Hayden Parker skewed a late dropped-goal attempt.

Under pressure from Karmichael Hunt, Parker couldn’t land his attempt from straight in front of the posts, ending a game in which the Kiwi’s accurate goalkicking kept the Sunwolves in touch.

The visitors scored five tries to three but ill-discipline and poor handling let them down again, as was the case in last week’s opening 20-19 loss to the Hurricanes.

Israel Folau celebrates scoring a try. (Photo by Atsushi Tomura/Getty Images)
Israel Folau celebrates scoring a try. (Photo by Atsushi Tomura/Getty Images)

It almost cost them dearly against the competition’s wooden-spoon favourites, forced to spend most of the last 10 minutes defending grimly after winger Gerhard van den Heever’s second try pulled the Sunwolves to within a point.

The Waratahs had cause to thank Folau, the game’s most-dangerous attacking player, who crossed twice within five minutes midway through the first half.

The first came from a slick Hunt offload while the second was typical Folau, leaving a trail of defenders in his wake.

It lifted the 29-year-old to 58 Super Rugby tries, one ahead of Joe Roff for the most by an Australian.

Israel Folau in action. (Photo by Atsushi Tomura/Getty Images)
Israel Folau in action. (Photo by Atsushi Tomura/Getty Images)

Folau sits one try behind record holder, retired Blues flyer Doug Howlett.

That milestone will mean little to Waratahs coach Daryl Gibson, whose team have averaged 40-point wins over the Sunwolves in their three previous meetings. Last year, it was 77-25 in Sydney.

The visitors’ other first-half try was an opportunistic effort from inside centre Kurtley Beale.

Back-rower Jack Dempsey burrowed over soon after the break, followed by a penalty try as the Sunwolves conceded a series of infringements on their line.