Rugby World Cup - New Zealand have beaten Wales 40-17 in the third place playoff in Tokyo. See how the game unfolded with live updates from Matt Chatterton.
Match info
Tokyo Stadium will host the match between New Zealand and Wales - it's a 40 minute train ride west of the city centre to the ground and it seats 49,970 people.
Both teams have played at Tokyo Stadium during the Rugby World Cup, the All Blacks twice and Wales once.
The All Blacks won both their matches there against Namibia in the pool stage and Ireland in the quarterfinals.
Wales meanwhile played Australia in their first match of the tournament at Tokyo Stadium, walking away 29-25 victors.
Englishman Wayne Barnes will officiate the match with Jaco Peyper (South Africa) and Pascal Gaüzère (France) his assistants. The Television Match Official is Marius Jonker of South Africa.
Kickoff is 6pm local time which is 10pm New Zealand time.
How to watch the All Blacks vs Wales
The match will be shown live on Spark Sport, on a one hour delay on TVNZ1 and liveblogged by RNZ.
The teams
Both teams have made a raft of changes for the match. For Wales a lot of it is due to injuries, while New Zealand's team features a number of players pulling on the black jersey for the last time.
In total, Steve Hansen made seven personnel changes to the starting XV that lost to England last week, while Scott Barrett has moved from blindside flanker to his usual lock position.
The seven new faces in the XV are Dane Coles, Shannon Frizell, Sam Cane, Rieko Ioane, Sonny Bill Williams, Ryan Crotty and Ben Smith.
The match will definitely be Ben Smith, Ryan Crotty and Kieran Read's last at the international level, while others like Williams and Coles are unlikely to play at another World Cup.
It will be Kieran Read's 127th Test for New Zealand and his 52nd as captain.
In total, Wales have made nine changes to their side with injuries forcing prop Tomas Francis, winger George North, flanker Aaron Wainwright and full-back Leigh Halfpenny to miss the match.
The All Blacks matchday 23
1. Joe Moody
2. Dane Coles
3. Nepo Laulala
4. Brodie Retallick
5. Scott Barrett
6. Shannon Frizell
7. Sam Cane
8. Kieran Read - captain
9. Aaron Smith
10. Richie Mo'unga
11. Rieko Ioane
12. Sonny Bill Williams
13. Ryan Crotty
14. Ben Smith
15. Beauden Barrett
16. Liam Coltman
17. Atu Moli
18. Angus Ta'avao
19. Patrick Tuipulotu
20. Matt Todd
21. Brad Weber
22. Anton Lienert-Brown
23. Jordie Barrett
Wales matchday 23
1. Nicky Smith
2. Ken Owens
3. Dillon Lewis
4. Adam Beard
5. Alun Wyn Jones - captain
6. Justin Tipuric
7. James Davies
8. Ross Moriarty
9. Tomos Williams
10. Rhys Patchell
11. Josh Adams
12. Owen Watkin
13. Jonathan Davies
14. Owen Lane
15. Hallam Amos
16. Elliot Dee
17. Rhys Carre
18. Wyn Jones
19. Jake Ball
20. Aaron Shingler
21. Gareth Davies
22. Dan Biggar
23. Hadleigh Parkes
What the coaches have said
Friday night marks the end of the eras of both Steve Hansen and Warren Gatland in a way neither coach wanted it to.
Hansen is stepping down after 16 years with the side, eight as an assistant under Graham Henry and eight as head coach
Warren Gatland, meanwhile, is leaving the Wales job after 12 years in charge to take over his hometown Super Rugby franchise - the Chiefs.
1953 was the third and last time Wales beat New Zealand and Gatland says his side wants to change that on Friday.
"They (Wales players) are disappointed not to be in the final but have the chance to create a little bit of history against the All Blacks," Gatland said.
"It has been a long time, 66 years, not to beat a side. We have had success against every other nation. There is definitely something at stake - a lot of pride - and a victory for us would be pretty special."
For Hansen, not being in the final has been a tough pill to swallow, but he still wants to leave the team with a winning feeling.
"It's an important test match for a number of reasons," Hansen said. "One, we've just come off a loss. Two, it's Wales and we've got a history with them that we need to keep feeding.
"We've got a legacy and a responsibility to that legacy."