New Zealand secured the Bledisloe Cup for the 20th successive year and consolidated their position at the top of the Rugby Championship table courtesy of a 39-37 triumph over Australia in Melbourne on Thursday.
In a drama-filled contest, in which the result was in the balance until the end, the Wallabies thought they had clinched a stunning comeback victory when Nic White landed a long range penalty in the 78th minute before the All Blacks struck late with the match-winning try from Jordie Barrett in the game’s dying moments.
The teams had momentum at various stages of a brutal encounter which proved costly for both sides. The All Blacks lost the services of their captain, Sam Cane, and David Havili, who both failed HIAs while Quinn Tupaea also limped off with a knee injury. Meanwhile, Wallabies skipper James Slipper and Rob Leota were forced off the field with calf injuries.
In the end, New Zealand outscored their hosts by five tries to four with Samisoni Taukei’aho leading the way with a brace while Richie Mo’unga, Will Jordan and Barrett scored their other five-pointers. Mo’unga also succeeded with four conversions and two penalties to finish with a 19-point haul.
For Australia, Andrew Kellaway (2), Rob Valetini and Pete Samu crossed the whitewash with Bernard Foley adding four conversions and two penalties and White also succeeded with a three-pointer off the kicking tee.
There was some pre-match drama when the Wallabies lined up in a boomerang shape before advancing on the All Blacks, while they were doing the Haka, but the home side were soon on the back foot as Jed Holloway failed to gather the ball from the kick off. New Zealand went on the attack and set up a lineout drive from which Taukei’aho crossed for the opening try.
Mo’unga added the extras and extended his side’s lead to 10 points when he slotted a penalty before Foley reduced the deficit with a penalty of his own in the 18th minute.
With points on the board, the Wallabies’ confidence grew and midway through the half they thought they had their opening try when Kellaway crossed the whitewash. However, it was ruled out after television replays revealed that Rieko Ioane did brilliantly to get his hands under the ball while the full-back tried to ground it.
Despite that setback, Australia did not panic and shortly afterwards they received a penalty and set up a lineout inside New Zealand’s 22. They launched a maul which was stopped close to the try-line by Dalton Papali’i but the ball was recycled quickly and Valetini dotted down with two defenders on his back.
Papali’i received a yellow card after referee Mathieu Raynal ruled that he had stopped that maul illegally, while Foley slotted the conversion which meant the scores were level and the hosts had a spring in their step during the latter stages of the half.
There was plenty of drama during that period, though, as Tom Wright was yellow carded for a professional foul inside his 22 while Raynal also sent Darcy Swain to the sin bin for taking out Tupaea with a shoulder charge to his knee at a ruck which resulted in the All Blacks centre leaving the field for the rest of the match.
The visitors made a fine start to the second half when shortly after the restart Kellaway was caught in possession just inside his half. The All Blacks won a turnover before shifting the ball to Taukei’aho close to the 22-metre line and he did brilliantly to shrug off three defenders on his way over.
Ten minutes later, the Wallabies received another yellow card after Jake Gordon too collapsed a maul illegally in his 22. The All Blacks made full use of their one-man advantage soon after Gordon’s exit with Mo’unga waltzing through the Wallabies’ defence to score his five-pointer. Beauden Barrett then delivered a perfectly weighted chip kick which Jordan gathered close to the halfway line before outpacing the cover defence to cross for his team’s fourth try in the 55th minute.
Wallabies fightback before crazy ending
With the score 31-13 in New Zealand’s favour, Australia needed a response and it came in the form of two tries in quick succession from Kellaway after excellent work from Foley on both occasions.
Another Mo’unga penalty gave his team a 34-27 lead before the Wallabies struck back with a brilliant try from Samu out wide with Foley’s superb conversion drawing his side level in the 72nd minute.
The match was far from done, though, as White slotted a 48-metre penalty to give his side an unlikely lead, but there would be a crazy ending when Raynal awarded a penalty to Australia in the 79th minute. That happened close to their try-line but, when Foley took his time to kick for touch, the referee awarded a scrum to the All Blacks after ruling that Foley had wasted time.
From the resulting set-piece, New Zealand launched an attack and the ball was shifted out wide where Barrett crossed in the right-hand corner for the match-winning try.
The Springboks were excellent throughout, controlling possession and territory and moving in front via Damian de Allende’s early try.
As the scoreline suggests, the All Blacks dominated proceedings for long periods and eventually scored seven tries, with Ethan de Groot, Caleb Clarke, Rieko Ioane, Jordie Barrett, Ardie Savea, Brodie Retallick and Beauden Barrett all crossing the whitewash.
Foster received a stay of execution following their victory over South Africa but this result is a catastrophe for both the head coach and the governing body.
The home side were deserved winners as they dominated for long periods and eventually outscored the Boks by three tries to two with Fraser McReight leading the way with a brace, while Marika Koroibete also crossed the whitewash.
Tries from Sam Cane, Samisoni Taukei’aho, David Havili and Scott Barrett helped ease the pressure on Ian Foster as the All Blacks ended a three-game drought.
Los Pumas usually start well against the Wallabies before seeing their opponents have a second-half surge to snatch victory, but the hosts had no such problems in San Juan as they recorded their biggest ever win over the green and gold.
In a fast-paced an entertaining affair, the Springboks were full value for their win as they were the dominant side for long periods and eventually outscored the All Blacks by two tries to one.
Although they had to dig deep for this victory, Australia were deserved winners in the end as they outscored Argentina by five tries to two.
This historic triumph on New Zealand soil is a landmark moment for Andy Farrell’s men and they were thoroughly deserving of the result at Sky Stadium.
After losing the opening Test in Perth, the English completed an impressive turnaround as they backed up last week’s win with a second in the decider.
It also spared the blushes of the southern hemisphere giants after both New Zealand and Australia had succumbed to Ireland and England respectively earlier in the day.
Gregor Townsend’s men were the better team for the majority of the first half, despite only going into the break with a one-point buffer.
After suffering a 32-17 defeat in the first encounter of their two-match series against the New Zealand indigenous team, this was a much improved performance from Ireland’s midweek outfit.
With just two minutes remaining the Welsh crossed for the game’s only try when the ball was spread wide to Josh Adams for the score and Gareth Anscombe kept his cool to land the crucial conversion, which proved to be the match-winning points.
The All Blacks were their own worst enemy as their discipline let them down and they had to play most of the match with 14 men after Angus Ta’avao was red carded for a dangerous hit on Garry Ringrose.
The Red Rose dominated the opening period, going 19-0 ahead through Billy Vunipola’s try and 14 points from the boot of Owen Farrell.
Tries from Hamish Watson, Mark Bennett, Matt Fagerson and Sam Johnson saw Gregor Townsend’s men to a morale-boosting victory on the road.
As the scoreline suggests, this was a hard-fought battle and Japan will be kicking themselves as they held the lead for long periods until a superb try from Baptiste Couilloud late in the second half sealed France’s win and a 2-0 series triumph.
Wales defended superbly in the opening exchanges and took their chances when they presented themselves.
Swain received his marching orders for headbutting Jonny Hill in the 34th minute but the Wallabies dug deep and secured the result, which is their first victory over Eddie Jones’ team in nine attempts.
As the scoreline suggests, New Zealand were deserved winners as they dominated proceedings for long periods and eventually outscored their visitors by six tries to three.
It was also Michael Cheika’s debut match as head coach and his side did him proud, withstanding a Scottish comeback to go 1-0 ahead in the three-Test series.
Although Les Bleus outscored their hosts by five tries to two they did not always have things going their way as Japan were competitive for long periods but they fell off the pace as the match progressed.
The home side were full value for their win as they made an excellent start to the match and raced into a 32-10 lead at half-time.