Gulf Today

All Blacks thrash Australia to close in on Rugby Championsh­ip title

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AUCKLAND: NEW Zealand put one hand on the Rugby Championsh­ip trophy ater romping to a 40-14 win over Australia with a bonus-point victory in Auckland on Saturday.

Tries by Will Jordan, Codie Taylor, Sam Whitelock and Samisoni Taukei’aho plus a first-half penalty try at Eden Park kept New Zealand top of the table in the final round of matches.

The all blacks will retain the rugby championsh­ip title unless South Africa claim a bonus-point win by a huge margin over Argentina later in Durban.

The hosts earned their third straight win in emphatic style, having been 17-0 ahead at halftime ater some ill-discipline from the visitors.

“I’m delighted with the performanc­e, there is always room for improvemen­t, but I loved the atitude,” said All Blacks coach Ian Foster.

“We finished this championsh­ip really strong, so in that sense I am pleased with that.

“We have given ourselves a chance at the title.” of a sell-out crowd of 47,000.

“Keeping them scoreless for the first 60 minutes was massive,” said New Zealand captain Whitelock.

“The guys defended hard on our line -- the effort, the commitment was there.”

The Wallabies paid dearly for their ill-discipline in the first half. Forwards Jed Holloway and David Porecki were both sent to the sin bin as New Zealand built up a strong lead at the break.

“Playing with 13 men, through two yellow cards, in the first half really put us on the back foot,” said Australia captain James Slipper. “That’s a very disappoint­ing outcome for us. “We had a lot of confidence coming here, but the All Blacks were too good, clearly.”

Australia had Holloway yellow-carded ater just two minutes for a tip tackle on All Blacks flanker Dalton Papali’i.

Yet the All Blacks failed to capitalise on the numerical advantage and only broke the deadlock when Richie Mo’unga converted a penalty ater 22 minutes.

Jordan then grabbed his 21st try in as many Tests with a moment of magic.

The fleet-footed winger hit the line at pace and rode the despairing tackle of Petaia by hitting the gas to cross.

Mo’unga added the conversion and persistent All Blacks pressure caused the Australian defence to buckle again soon ater.

Wallabies hooker Porecki was shown a yellow card for dragging down a maul on their line and Irish referee Andrew Brace awarded a penalty try to make it 17-0 at half-time.

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