Monday, September 13, 2010

Nerveless All Blacks come-from-behind to beat Wallabies

Nerveless All Blacks come-from-behind to beat Wallabies
By MARC HINTON in Sydney - Stuff
Last updated 00:10 12/09/2010


For a team chasing perfection this was far from perfect. But who cared? The All Blacks once again showed that they have nerves of steel and superb mental strength as they kept their remarkable run for 2010 alive.
Only just though, by an almost unbearable one-point margin, 23-22. It took everything they had, and a 17-3 second-half effort that included 14 unanswered points over the final quarter to achieve it. But somehow the New Zealanders found a way to rattle up their ninth straight victory for 2010, and a record 10th on the trot against these Wallabies.
The Australians contributed plenty to a thrilling match, and when they led 22-9 with just 20 minutes to go it looked for all money as though they were about to pull off a remarkable, against-the-odds victory.
But, just as they had done in Soweto, the All Blacks kept their nerve splendidly and never panicked even when they had every right to. Richie McCaw scored a crucial try off a slick scrum move and the superb No 8 Kieran Read put his team in front just seven minutes from the end when he charged over as the New Zealanders finished with a wet sail.
From there McCaw and his men held on over a frantic finale and kept alive their dream of the perfect season. They certainly completed a pretty perfect Tri-Nations, becoming the first side to sweep the board in the six-game series
What a great way it was to celebrate McCaw’s 52nd test as captain (with just six losses), breaking Sean Fitzpatrick's record. The leader was wonderful in the second half and was at the forefront of a remarkable fightback.
It was a poor first 40 minutes from the All Blacks who mixed way too many errors in with their early endeavour. In fact you could make a case that they were a shade lucky to be trailing just 6-14 at the break, Lachie Turner going within inches of adding to the only try of the opening half by Justin Bieber lookalike James O’Connor.
The New Zealanders had showed some early promise, especially whenever they attacked down Israel Dagg's wing, but spent most of the second quarter battening down the hatches on defence. Much of it was self-inflicted stuff too as the Wallabies were gifted a succession of opportunities.
The All Blacks were badly off key, from Aaron Cruden's wonky restarts, to some sloppy passing, to some fairly ragged defence. They were even getting bested at the breakdown. It was supposed to be the Wallabies who were weary, but instead it looked as if McCaw's men were playing their third test in as many weeks.
You expected the adjustment would come in the second half, and it did eventually. Too loose. Too inaccurate for too long. But the charge came just in the nick of time and you have to heap credit at this side's feet for their cool composure.
Dan Carter was missed. Badly. Cruden's kicking game was well short of the mark and for all his courage, he needs to be able to execute in this area. The youngster's restarts were atrocious, his general kicking only marginally better and he hit the depths midway through the second spell when he missed touch off a penalty.
As Henry noted later he would have learned from the experience, but it didn't help the New Zealand cause as they struggled to establish field position for the first 60 minutes.
If this was an experiment for Henry, albeit a forced one, it demonstrated vividly that this young man is not yet up to this level of rugby. Victor Vito was marginally better, but the All Blacks were much better when Jerome Kaino came on. Suddenly the loose trio took command.
The same couldn't be said for Dagg over on the left wing, where the 22-year-old looked every inch a top test performer. Read -- this side's most improved player -- had a highly influential game, too, for the All Blacks to cap a fine campaign.
But most of all this win was satisfying because a class team survived a bad day at the office and still snuck away with a win. Sometimes you just have to take that and smile.
And now the quest will go on. The All Blacks have won 15 tests on the trot. They could become the first team to complete a perfect calendar year in the professional era. The record winning streak of 17 and 18 is now tantalisingly close.
They could do a lot of things if they keep finding ways to win like they did last night.
New Zealand 23 (Kieran Read, Richie McCaw tries; Piri Weepu 3pens, 2cons)
Australia 22 (Adam Ashley-Cooper, James O'Connor tries; Matt Giteau 3pens, Kurtley Beale pens).

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