Australia slumps to 10th successive loss to New Zealand
• Wayne Smith Rugby Union Editor
• From: The Australian
• September 11, 2010
New Zealand skipper Richie McCaw leaves Ben McCalman in his wake on his way to the tryline at ANZ Stadium Picture: Krystle Wright Source: The Sunday Telegraph
THERE was to be no last-minute miracles for the Australia this week as New Zealand yet again staged another remarkable come-from-behind fightback.
In so the All Blacks score their record-breaking 10th straight Bledisloe Cup victory over Australia at ANZ Stadium.
Both sides scored two tries apiece in a gripping and at times pulsating contest but it was the part-time goalkicker Piri Weepu, with five goals from as many attempts, who edged the All Blacks home 23-22 while Australia's prolific kicker Matt Giteau could manage only three goals from seven attempts.
That in the end made all the difference and a heart-breaker it was for the Wallabies who played well enough for long periods of this match to have finally broken their hoodoo against Richie McCaw's world number one ranked side.
Fittingly, in the Test in which he surpassed Sean Fitzpatrick as New Zealand's most capped skipper, McCaw was to score the try that signalled the start of his country's comeback.
Certainly the gap between these two great rivals is shrinking with every encounter and the Wallabies can look towards the October 30 showdown in Hong Kong with real hope of toppling the All Blacks but until they learn to defend sizeable leads, they will remain all too vulnerable against quality opposition.
Two weeks ago, they blew 14-0 and 21-7 leads against the Springboks. Last week they let slip a 31-6 advantage and had to rely on a long-range Kurtley Beale penalty to escape with w win in Bloemfontein, while tonight they were overhauled from 22-9 in front.
"We came here to win and that didn't happen so the boys are very disappointed," growled Wallabies captain Rocky Elsom.
"A couple of little errors put the pressure back on us and at the end of the day they finished the stronger."
Coach Robbie Deans agreed. "I feel we've made progress but against the benchmark we've come up short again," he said.
The Wallabies completely dominated field position throughout the first half but some uncharacteristically poor goalkicking by Giteau, who was astray with three relatively easy shots, restricted Australia to only a 14-6 lead at half-time.
As they did in the two Tests against South Africa on the highveld, the Wallabies began with a flourish and looked to have scored a try after only five minutes when recalled winger Lachlan Turner planted the ball over the All Blacks line in the left-hand corner.
But the television match official, Matt Goddard, correctly ruled that NZ defender Cory Jane had just managed to drag Turner's foot into touch before he scored.
Still, there were some payments for the Wallabies for their early adventure as referee Lawrence returned to award them one of three penalties he had called against the All Blacks in the build-up to Turner's sizzling sideline run.
Giteau landed the easy goal to cancel out a second minute Piri Weepu penalty goal but the All Blacks struck back almost immediately, with only an heroic one-on-one tackle by Beale on rampaging centre Ma'a Nonu denying them a try.
No sooner had that raid down the left-hand touchline been snuffed out than the All Blacks lit the fire under a new one. Winger Israel Dagg, hemmed in by the cover defence, cleverly banana-kicked infield, straight to Mils Muliaina who looked certain to score until cut down from behind by Turner.
In the mad scramble that followed James O'Connor conceded a penalty in front of his own posts but the Wallabies dodged a bullet to limit the damage to only another Weepu goal.
When the first try did arrive in the 15th minute, it could hardly have come from a least-likely source, a rampaging run off the back of a scrum-gone-wrong by number eight Ben McCalman.
All Black flanker Victor Vito made a dreadful read in defence to allow McCalman to burst into the clear before sending O'Connor on an untroubled 30m run to the line.
That signalled the start of a golden period of domination by the Wallabies, with Quade Cooper and Giteau kicking deftly for field position, but with Giteau having yet another horror night on what is becoming his nemesis ground _ he did after all, miss "that" kick in front to lose the England Test in June at ANZ Stadium _ the All Blacks were able to stay well within range.
The worry was that the All Blacks, who have outscored Australia in the second half in the last nine Tests, would launch the second half with a blitz but in fact it was the Wallabies who scored first through Adam Ashley-Cooper after a disjointed build-up was made good by a brilliant Will Genia pass to his powerhouse outside centre.
The New Zealanders scrambled across in coverf but from 15m, Ashley-Cooper was never going to be denied. Yet again, however, Giteau missed the conversion, every wasted point ultimately to prove so crucial.
When the All Blacks yet again offended deep inside their own half, Rocky Elsom pleaded with Lawrence to pull out the yellow card but he showed not the slightest sign of taking such extreme measures.
Still, when Beale stepped up as Giteau's goalkicking replacement and calmly slotted the penalty goal, the Wallabies looked in be in charge at 22-9.
But that was to be the highwater mark of the Australian scoring and, as has happened so regularly in the past, it was the All Blacks who finished by far the stronger _ although to be fair, they did have the advantage of three weeks rest while the Australians have played three Tests on the trot, and made the trip home from South Africa across eight time zones.
For 10 minutes the Wallabies defended heroically on their own line but ultimately something had to crack and an O'Connor dedfensive misread from a 5m scrum provided all the opening McCaw needed to stroll over for the 19th try of his career in the 66th minute.At 22-16 down, the All Blacks knew thety were right back in the contest and there was almost a sense of inevitability about the Kieran Read try that came on the back of another five minutes of pouding away at the Australian line.
Weepu's conversion nudged the All Blacks in front 23-22 and although the Wallabies had eight minutes at their disposal to work another Bloemfontein-like miracle, this time the fell short.
NEW ZEALAND 23 (Richard McCaw, Kieran Read tries Piri Weepu 2 cons 3 pens) AUSTRALIA 22 (Adam Ashley-Cooper, James O'Connor tries Matt Giteau 3, Kurtley Beale pens) at ANZ Stadium. Referee: Mark Lawrence (RSA). Crowd: 70,288.
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