Wales secured their third straight win at the 2015 Rugby World Cup, surviving a huge scare in a 23-13 victory over Fiji at the Millennium Stadium

No bonus point was picked up by Warren Gatland's men, which may annoy the Kiwi, but the victory was the most important factor in the tightest of Pools. 

Wales now sit top of Pool A with 13 points, piling the pressure onto England, who now must beat Australia to stay in their own competition. 

Davies crosses again as Webb looks on

The biggest talking point surrounding this Welsh side going into the World Cup, has been the injuries which have left the squad without a number of their stars. 

Scrum-half Rhys Webb was one of the players lost to injury on the eve of the tournament, with the Welsh player of the year in 2014 clearly a huge loss to Gatland and his coaching staff. 

With Webb in attendance having handed out the players jerseys on Wednesday evening, his incumbent in the nine jersey, Gareth Davies, put in another sterling performance which was crucial towards picking up the victory. 

After scoring twice in Wales' World Cup opener against Uruguay, and once against the English at Twickenham, Davies scored for the third match running to give Wales the perfect in Cardiff. 

Dan Biggar and Ben Volavola then exchanged penalties, before Scott Baldwin stretched over for Wales' second try, giving them a 17-3 lead just before the break. 

Tikoirotuma leads Fijian fightback

With Fiji all-but knocked out after two matches, this was their last big chance to leave a marker at this World Cup against a Tier 1 nation, and they started the second half in that very fashion.

London Irish winger Asaeli Tikoirotuma was at the heart of everything great the Fijians achieved with ball-in-hand, cutting the Welsh defence to ribbons on numerous occassions. 

After one of the wingers' breaks, the ball made it to Vereniki Goneva who crossed for the Pacific Islanders first try to cut the lead to four. 

That was as close as they got in terms of the score, with Wales just about doing enough to stave off the Fijian threat, who came close to taking the leading after an astonishing piece of play by the game's best player Leone Nakarawa

A couple of second half penalties for the ever-depenable Biggar saw Wales lead move out to ten points, and that's how it stayed after a pulsating match which leaves Wales in an excellent position to qualify from Pool A.