By Gregor Paul in Dunedin
9:19 PM Saturday Oct 19, 2013
NEW ZEALAND 41
AUSTRALIA 33
AUSTRALIA 33
Anything the All Blacks
can do, the All Blacks can do better. Brilliant against South Africa, they were
somehow at a level above tonight.
Absorbing, relentless,
brutal, deft, subtle, flexible, direct, brave - they were all of that and more.
They were,
unquestionably, impossible to defend against: the point of attack was wherever
they wanted it to be.
They were a threat when
they defended; they were a threat when they kicked and they were most
definitely a threat when they passed and ran.
And here's the crazy
thing - Australia played better than they have all year. But what were they to
do? They fronted, they gave all they had, cleverly attacked the right channels,
recycled, tackled and still got blown off the park. They scored tries not many
other teams would have had the flair or imagination to sniff out and yet they
were always chasing without ever convincing they were going to quite get there.
But the All Blacks will need to be wary - the Wallabies used Israel Folau well,
Will Genia came good and they are on the right track.
But there is still a gap
between them which begs the question: how good are these All Blacks? Definitive
statements on that will have to wait, but when they score 30 points in a half
while conceding the territory and possession stakes by a distance, then they
cleanly have a fair idea what they are doing with the ball.
It's the clinical and
ruthless way that they attack which sets them apart. So often the lament in the
modern game is of chances missed: of precision only up to a point. The All
Blacks haven't left much, if anything on the field this season and were
operating at an incredible one attack-one try ratio that left the Wallabies
dazed.
The movement, the
awareness, the skill, the speed - it was devastating. The pressure the All
Blacks exerted was total. Kieran Read and Sam Cane were immense at stopping
Wallaby runners on the gainline, lifting and driving them back and then this
black wave would swarm over the ball and they'd be off. Defence one second,
attack the next and runners were everywhere, queuing up, knowing the man in
possession would have the ability to make the pass before, through or after
contact.
Cane needs particular
mention because he filled every inch of his No 7 shirt. He graduated from being
in all the right places to being in all the right places and doing all the
right things.
He had both presence and
presence of mind to own the contact zones and perhaps, finally, demand to be
seen as Sam Cane rather than the bloke standing in for Richie McCaw.
The physical contest
wasn't really anything of the sort - that's the best way to sum it up. The
world knows the Wallaby tight five love nothing more than a girls night in,
with a weepy movie and a bottle of Chardonnay - but they ditched the handbags
and got stuck in. That they came off second best was down to the technical
excellence of the All Blacks.
They held their line to
the point where they would isolate a ball carrier, double team and keep him off
the ground. Charlie Faumuina was frighteningly good at it, twice stripping the
ball in a flash.
It was demoralizing for
Australia. All that effort, all those phases and only as they turned to chase
back did they realise they had been pawns in the All Blacks' game-plan: that
all the time, the All Blacks were keeping them where they wanted them, just
biding their time to pounce.
What also helped in that
regard was the tenacity of New Zealand's scrambling defence and solidity in the
tackle when they needed it.
No one did more on that
front Charlie Piutau. Early in the game he managed to halt Israel Folau twice
in 20 seconds.
Not only was his defence
outstanding, but so too was his wider contribution. He danced away from the
touchlines when he had to, chased high balls and was always on hand.
The power and work-rate of Ma'a Nonu was a big part of the offering as was the composure and spark of Israel Dagg.
The power and work-rate of Ma'a Nonu was a big part of the offering as was the composure and spark of Israel Dagg.
New Zealand 41 (J. Savea, S. Cane, A. Cruden, K. Read tries; A.
Cruden 3 pens, 2 cons; B. Barrett pen) Australia 33 (A. Ashley-Cooper, M.
Toomua, T. Kuridrani tries; Q. Cooper 3 cons, 3 pens, DG)
Australia hit back just
before halftime with a try to Ashley-Cooper, created by a long and accurate
pass from Cooper, who also converted.
Toomua scored after
Kuridrani intercepted a pass from Savea in the 47th minute, cutting the lead to
33-26 and inflaming Australia's hopes of an upset. But Read's 54th minute try,
after brilliant interpassing by Brodie Retallick, Cruden and Ma'a Nonu put New
Zealand ahead 38-26 and snuffed out the Australian challenge.
"We're obviously
bitterly disappointed with the result," said Australian captain James
Horwill, who was replaced early in the second half. "We came here to win
and we never like to lose but we're proud of the effort the boys put in. We
went out swinging and that's what we wanted to do."
_____
New Zealand 41 (Julian
Savea, Sam Cane, Aaron Cruden, Kieran Read tries; Cruden 3 conversions, 4
penalties; Beauden Barrett penalty), Australia 33 (Adam Ashley-Cooper, Matt
Toomua, Tevita Kuridrani tries; Quade Cooper 3 conversions, 3 penalties,
dropped goal). HT: 30-19.
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