Marlborough Express

Barrett weaves his magic

- RICHARD KNOWLER

He had just scored the winning try in a spectacula­r game, yet Beauden Barrett could just as easily been ordering a feed at the local kebab shop.

First five-eighth Barrett, quite understand­ably, let his emotions all hang out when he claimed the vital try in the 79th minute of the Bledisloe Cup test in Dunedin, before kicking the conversion to earn the All Blacks a memorable 35-29 victory over the Wallabies.

But by the time he had wandered into a cold concrete corridor inside Forsyth Barr Stadium to chat with media after the epic game, Barrett had appeared to have flushed all that excitement out of his system.

When asked to give his view on why the All Blacks are able to remain so focused under immense pressure, Barrett, who contribute­d 20 points by scoring two tries and kicking five conversion­s, did a decent job of trying to say it was not really that big a deal.

‘‘It is just doing the basics well, nothing special needs to happen,’’ Barrett said. ‘‘It is just doing what we train, just being in the moment and trusting that.

‘‘There is nothing special as we saw ... We always back ourselves right to the final whistle. As long as there is seven points in it, we will never give up.’’

If Wallabies kicker Bernard Foley had been better with the boot - he missed three conversion­s and a penalty - the Wallabies could have recorded one of their most memorable wins in recent years. But, unlike Barrett, he just couldn’t get his radar tuned in.

When Kurtley Beale scored his try, and Foley kicked the conversion to put the Wallabies ahead 29-28 with three minutes remaining, the All Blacks’ chances of making sure the third and final Bledisloe Cup match in Brisbane would be a dead rubber looked decidedly ropey.

If the Aussies had secured the kick-off, it could have been game over. Instead a flat re-start by replacemen­t back Lima Sopoaga was batted towards the All Blacks’ ranks by captain Kieran Read and that was the beginning of the end for the Wallabies.

As the movement swept downfield, Read was again involved. His infield pass to TJ Perenara took another defender out of the line and Barrett raced up to grab the final, vital, pass.

Pandemoniu­m broke out in the enclosed stadium and Barrett’s conversion, he recorded a clean sheet with his goal kicking, put the New Zealanders ahead by six points. The Bledisloe was secured for another year.

The crowd of 27,000 supporters weren’t in such a joyful mood as they watched the Wallabies burst out to a 17-0 lead early in the match.

Given the Aussies also scored 28 points without reply in the second half of their 54-34 loss in Syd- ney a week earlier, their tremendous start suggested they had taken great confidence from that comeback. How many teams can say they have scored 45 points against the All Blacks in the space of about 50 minutes without conceding a point?

No-one in the All Blacks will be looking forward to watching replays of their terrible start. Handling errors, missed tackles, an intercept pass and mis-timed transfers gifted the Wallabies numerous attacking opportunit­ies.

Yet Barrett was adamant he and his team-mates had prepared well and were ready for a fight from the Aussies. So why the slow start?

‘‘Look, it wasn’t a team thing - we felt we were there (mentally). It was probably just a few individual mistakes and that was basically it. We felt we had arrived, we were there to play footy. It’s not often we find ourselves 17-0 down after probably the same minutes. It was probably a good test.’’

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Beauden Barrett scores the first of his two tries as the All Blacks beat the Wallabies 35-29 to retain the Bledisloe Cup in Dunedin on Saturday night.
GETTY IMAGES Beauden Barrett scores the first of his two tries as the All Blacks beat the Wallabies 35-29 to retain the Bledisloe Cup in Dunedin on Saturday night.

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