New Zealand made a statement of intent in their opening Bledisloe Cup Test against Australia when they sealed a 33-25 victory at Eden Park on Saturday.
The All Blacks were full value for their win as they were the dominant side for most of this match, although they took their foot off the pedal during the game’s latter stages which allowed Australia to score three unanswered tries during that period.
Richie Mo’unga led the way with an 18-point haul for the All Blacks, courtesy of a try, three penalties and two conversions and their other points came via five-pointers from Sevu Reece, David Havili and Damian McKenzie.
For Australia, Tom Banks scored a brace of tries while Andrew Kellaway, Jordan Uelese also crossed the whitewash and Noah Lolesio added a penalty and a conversion.
The opening exchanges were scrappy with both teams making several unforced errors and we had to wait until the 18th minute before Mo’unga opened the scoring courtesy of a penalty.
Shortly afterwards, he added another three-pointer off the kicking tee, after the Wallabies were blown up for illegal scrummaging, which meant the home side were leading 6-0 midway through the half.
Another Mo’unga penalty followed on the half-hour mark but despite trailing on the scoreboard, the Wallabies did plenty of attacking. There was little reward though but they eventually opened their account in the 32nd minute when Lolesio slotted a penalty, after an illegal tackle from Brodie Retallick on Tate McDermott.
That lifted their confidence levels and in the 36th minute the game came alive when Hunter Paisami gathered a long throw-in at the back of a Wallabies lineout, just inside New Zealand’s half. He hit the line at pace and breached the home side’s defence before offloading to Kellaway, who crossed for the opening try.
Despite that score, the All Blacks did not panic and on the stroke of half-time, Reece crossed the whitewash from close quarters with Mo’unga adding the extras to give his side a 16-8 lead at half-time.
That second half was pure #BledisloeCup footy.#NZLvAUS pic.twitter.com/ltbYPO9ZYr
— All Blacks (@AllBlacks) August 7, 2021
The hosts’ dominance continued in the second half and soon after the restart they launched an attack from deep inside their 22. The ball went through several pairs of hands before Reece rounded off behind Australia’s try-line but his effort was ruled out due to a forward pass from Aaron Smith to Retallick in the build-up.
That disallowed score gave the Wallabies a lifeline and they upped the ante on attack. However, a promising attacking move went awry in the 51st minute when Mo’unga intercepted a pass from Paisami close to the All Blacks’ 22-metre line and he raced away to score his side’s second five-pointer.
It was all New Zealand during the next 15 minutes and they were rewarded with two further tries during that period. First, Smith found Havili with a well-weighted long pass close to Australia’s try-line before the centre stepped past Lolesio on his way over.
The home side continued to dominate and in the 65th minute Smith turned provider again when he offloaded to McKenzie, who crossed for their fourth try.
Despite that score, the Wallabies finished stronger and in the 69th minute Banks rounded off out wide, after running onto a pass from Matt To’omua. Five minutes later, the full-back benefited again after gathering a grubber kick from Lolesio before Uelese added some respectability to the final score when he dotted down off the back of a lineout drive in this Test’s dying moments.
After
A grisly spectacle disfigured by repeated stoppages saw the Lions build a deserved 9-6 interval lead through three Dan Biggar penalties, but having been largely bossed until that point the world champions began to snarl in the second half.
Trailing 12-3 at the interval after being picked apart by the boot of Handre Pollard, the Lions came alive as a Luke Cowan-Dickie try ignited a fightback that was completed by the boots of Dan Biggar and Owen Farrell.
Wayne Pivac’s men ― who were without their British and Irish Lions stars ― drew with Argentina in the first game of the two-match series, but they were lucky to only be 17-8 down at half time in the second.
Koroibete was red carded for connecting with the head of Anthony Jelonch and it initially had a significant impact on the hosts as Les Bleus moved 10-0 in front thanks to Baptiste Couilloud’s try.
Samisoni Taukei’aho (2), Ardie Savea, Will Jordan, Rieko Ioane, and Shannon Frizell also went over for tries for New Zealand while Richie Mo’unga kicked five conversions and a penalty, and Beauden Barrett also slotted a conversion.
For the second successive week, the result was in the balance until the end but France were deserved winners and their victory is a momentous one as it is the first time since 1990 that they have beaten the Wallabies on Australian soil.
Leinster hooker Kelleher became the first Irishman since Denis Hickie in August 2003 to ground four times in one match, with Brian Robinson and Keith Wood the only other men to achieve the feat in the green jersey.
Smith’s madcap month took another remarkable twist, with the Harlequins fly-half receiving a Lions call-up midway through England’s 10-try romp at Twickenham.
Pumas full-back Juan Cruz Mallia was sent off for a dangerous high challenge on Wales scrum-half Kieran Hardy after 29 minutes.
In a fast-paced and exciting game, New Zealand found things very different to last week,
In a hard-fought and evenly contested battle, France held the lead for the entire game but Australia kept their nerve and pounced on an error from the visitors ― who did not put the ball into touch from a lineout after the final hooter ― and after winning a penalty, Lolesio clinched the triumph with the match-winning kick.
England were missing their British and Irish Lions contingent but Eddie Jones’ men did enough to overcome the visitors, despite a frustrating second half.
With seven of their contingent on British and Irish Lions duty and captain Johnny Sexton, plus Keith Earls and Cian Healy, rested, there was a fresh look to the hosts in their first meeting against Japan since the 2019 World Cup.
The Six Nations champions ran in 10 tries, although victory came at a cost after full-back Leigh Halfpenny’s 100th Test for Wales and the British and Irish Lions lasted just two minutes before he was carried off injured.
As the scoreline suggests, this was an easy outing for the men in black with Will Jordan leading the way with five tries and Brad Weber was next best with a hat-trick.
It wasn’t a vintage performance as there were signs of rustiness from the Boks, who were playing their first game since their triumphant 2019 World Cup campaign, but they improved as the match progressed and eventually outscored the Lelos six tries to none.
The Wales forwards departed inside the opening 21 minutes but it was the serious injury suffered by tour captain Jones that caused the greatest alarm as he was escorted from the pitch.
France needed to score four tries and beat Scotland by 21 points to deny Wales the title but the visitors stunned their hosts with a superb victory.
Les Bleus had lock Paul Willemse sent off 11 minutes from time for making contact with the eye area of Wales prop Wyn Jones, while the visitors played the last eight minutes with 13 men following yellow cards for Taulupe Faletau and Liam Williams, and ultimately could not hold out.
The highlight of Ireland’s most impressive outing since Andy Farrell took charge after the 2019 World Cup was Jack Conan’s try that concluded 23 phases of highly polished play.
Skipper Stuart Hogg admitted ahead of the game he was feeling nervous about standing-in for the injured Finn Russell at fly-half.