Bay of Plenty Times

‘Couldn’t be prouder’

Under-fire ABS coach praises team after epic win

- Liam Napier in South Africa

Praise and scorn featured prominentl­y as Ian Foster basked in the afterglow of a defiant, tenacious victory on the Johannesbu­rg highveld that he will hope is enough to save his All Blacks coaching tenure.

Foster had every right to be vindicated after the All Blacks delivered one of their great upset triumphs at the mecca of South African rugby.

Despite the All Blacks slipping to fifth in the world following their third straight defeat last week, Foster maintained something special was brewing at Ellis Park of all places.

Few outside the All Blacks tightknit inner sanctum believed that to be true. Yet the 35-23 bonus-point Rugby Championsh­ip victory, led by a rare dominant forward platform, Richie Mo’unga sparking the All Blacks attack and Rieko Ioane thriving at centre, casts further uncertaint­y over Foster’s future that is expected to be determined this week.

Before turning attention to those critical of his tenure, Foster first praised the All Blacks resolve. Rightly so, too. This was a performanc­e where they addressed poor starts in their last four tests; the breakdown issues that hamstrung their attacking platform and the high ball fumbles that proved costly in Mbombela.

“The performanc­e we saw was a result of the last two-and-a-half-weeks where this group has reformed and reshaped,” Foster said after the All Blacks retained the Freedom Cup in a typically captivatin­g contest against the old foe.

“I couldn’t be prouder of the effort. Coming up here to altitude, having a game that was losable and winnable and to finish strong over a mighty team on their home ground like this is a great occasion for us.

“We haven’t started that well this year. For whatever reason we’ve been behind and we’ve had to play back. You could feel it was an armwrestle. That’s what South Africa is like coming here.

“The second half of each half we targeted tired legs and the way we wanted to play and we reaped some rewards for that.”

Defensivel­y the All Blacks were superb. After leading 15-0 midway through the first half they withstood relentless waves of pressure and then launched their own late comeback.

The All Blacks halted 12 mauls from the Springboks, restrictin­g the world champions to two tries. Foster acknowledg­ed the major impact Crusaders forwards guru Jason Ryan has rapidly made in this area since replacing John Plumtree a mere three weeks ago.

The scrum largely held firm, too, following Ethan de Groot and Tyrel Lomax’s promotions. And the once malfunctio­ning lineout, where Sam Whitelock led the way, dominated to steal four South African throws.

“It’s been a bit of our Achilles heel the past few years, and probably goes back to 2018 where it started,” said Foster. “We’ve been working hard on that space. The players have done a lot of work behind the scenes. Jason and Greg Feek have done a tremendous job in terms of leading that area. We were under a bit of pressure so they were areas we had to bar up in.”

Asked what the victory meant personally after the sustained criticism and pressure from New Zealand’s demanding public after five losses from the last six All Blacks tests, Foster seized the chance to have a pop at his detractors, particular­ly the small cohort of Kiwi media in attendance, and admit the imminent review with New Zealand Rugby powerbroke­rs loomed large over his future.

“The stress has been good for me — I've lost one kg in the last two weeks and maybe over the next week or two I might lose a few more.

“It comes with the job. It has been pretty vicious. There has been a lot of onslaught particular­ly from our New Zealand media. They’ve got high expectatio­ns of us and they’ve made that loud and clear.

“They’ve clearly come very strong at me as a person. Some of them have even called our selections popgun which I found quite insulting for players that give everything to play for their nation.

“That pressure has been strong. It doesn’t change the fact that through adversity that’s the best teacher for character and we’ve stayed tight.”

Foster followed that serve by saying it is difficult to win all the time, claiming long-term success often starts with a low point.

“We’ve lost three in a row this year and it hurt but I felt last week was our best performanc­e of the year. We saw signs of our combativen­ess – we missed a beat at the breakdown but we’ve grown through that.

“We’re breeding a few young boys and a few new combinatio­ns and that takes time.

“Some people don’t have patience and I understand that; I get the frustratio­ns, but inside the camp that doesn’t mean a lot to us. What’s important is how we pull together and work hard, and keep growing.”

Sam Cane, replaced in the final 10 minutes after Beauden Barrett’s late yellow card and the All Blacks opting to utilise midfielder Quinn Tupaea off the bench to cover the backfield, echoed Foster’s initial with pride while offering an insight into the team’s under siege mentality in the Republic.

“It means a lot. I’m immensely proud of the group through this last wee while which has been tough.

“We’ve had to circle the wagons and focus internally,” the All Blacks skipper said.

“There’s never been a question about the level of care or work ethic.”

Cane underlined All Blacks ability to launch their spirited comeback, with David Havili and Scott Barrett claiming tries in the closing stages, after the All Blacks lost the lead, and Barrett to the bin, for the first time with 13 minutes remaining.

“For us to be in a test match like that under immense pressure, in such a hostile crowd and a game that goes back and forth, the belief and composure needs to be strong and that’s not always easy when you’re coming off a run of a couple of losses, so to be able to produce that speaks highly of the group as a whole. That’s what we’re all pretty proud of.”

 ?? Photo / Getty ?? Ian Foster responds to media questions after the All Blacks put in a courageous victory over the Springboks at Ellis Park.
Photo / Getty Ian Foster responds to media questions after the All Blacks put in a courageous victory over the Springboks at Ellis Park.

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