Under the captaincy of Newport and Wales rugby superstar Arthur Gould, the game was a draw with a goal from each side.
The match is more notable for the brawl between the two teams during the after-match dinner, where nine players found themselves in the Dublin Courts the next day.
Now under the captaincy of William Bowen, as Gould was working in the West Indies, Wales lost the match 7–3.
Wales lost heavily by a goal and six tries and Ingledew, along with his half-back partner Ralph Sweet-Escott were dropped to be replaced by Swansea pairing, brother's Evan and David James.
Despite his favoured legal stance in transport law, he was chosen as the solicitor in completing the purchase of the Cardiff Arms Park in 1922.