On Saturday 22 November 2025 in Bucharest, Romania hosted Uruguay and were defeated 21 – 31 . This fixture carried significant weight for both sides: Uruguay looking to affirm their upward trajectory among Tier-2 nations; Romania aiming to re-establish themselves and stop a slide in form.



Butnariu T. (39'), (56'), Cretu T. (77')
Tries
Kessler G. (14'), Basso B. (18'), (44'), Myszka J. (66')
Conache A. (40', 57', 78')
Conversions
Alvarez S. (15', 19', 45', 67')
Penalties
Alvarez S. (60')
On Saturday 22 November 2025 in Bucharest, Romania hosted Uruguay and were defeated 21 – 31.
This fixture carried significant weight for both sides: Uruguay looking to affirm their upward trajectory among Tier-2 nations; Romania aiming to re-establish themselves and stop a slide in form.
Uruguay started strongly, establishing territory and pressure early. Their disciplined approach in the opening exchanges forced Romania into defending deep and gave Uruguay access to scoring opportunities.
Uruguay love to keep the ball alive and their ability to keep the ball alive was key in the opening try. Along with strong forward running, Romania couldn’t stop Uruguay going over under the posts. Their second try however, was true Uruguay attacking display which ending with Alvarez putting a grubber kick into the try area for Bautista Basso to chase and dive on. With 18 minutes on the clock, and with both conversions made. it looked like Uruguay could completely run away with this one.
However, the Oaks showed their true grit and determination to keep Uruguay at bay. They then finished the half with their normal lineout maul try to rumble over and bring the score line back to 7 - 14.
Coming out of the interval, Uruguay maintained their composure. Their forward platform grew in influence, their defence held firm, and they converted pressure into scores. Uruguay showcased their lineout manouevering to score a few minutes after the break from a line out maul of their own.
Romania did rally with physicality winning themselves another try in the 56th minute. However, a Suarez penalty and another driving maul try converted by Suarez took the Teros to a 14 - 31 lead with roughly 15 minutes to play.
The Oaks dug deep and avoided further punishment, and gave themselves a glimmer of hope in the 77th minute with another physically dominant try but it was too little too late for them to mount a comeback.
Uruguay
Their structured game-plan paid off: efficient kicking, strong phases, and clinical finishing.
Decision making under pressure was a highlight — avoiding big mistakes and turning opportunities into points.
Growth in consistency: this win confirms they can perform away from home and against European opposition.
Romania
Fight and moments of quality were present: they showed they can compete in spurts.
But structural issues remain: set-piece instability, defensive reaction time and error count were costly.
The late rally suggests potential, yet they must close games more strongly and minimise the turnover/out-of-possession moments.
For Uruguay, the result reinforces their status as a Tier-2 side on the rise. They will take confidence from winning on the road and executing under pressure. For Romania, the performance is a reminder that ambition must translate into consistency. The pieces — talent, structure, intent — are present, but the gaps remain clear.
Santiago Alvarez stands out for controlling the match’s rhythm and impact.
This was a meaningful victory for Uruguay and a telling test for Romania. Uruguay asserted their growth, and Romania were reminded that raising standards is more than intent—it is execution, discipline and duration over 80 minutes. For fans of emerging rugby nations, the match encapsulated both promise and challenge.