The New Zealand Herald

Boks rewarded by AB risks

- Patrick McKendry

Defeats, while often gut-wrenching and sour, are usually the best teachers and All Blacks coach Steve Hansen is determined that his disappoint­ed side are better for this one against the Springboks. In fact, he says it is his responsibi­lity to make sure of it.

These will be strange days for his younger players and many of his older ones. Defeat by an inspired Springboks team was the first to them in New Zealand since 2009 and the first at home in the Rugby Championsh­ip. The All Blacks’ previous loss was in the dead rubber Bledisloe Cup test in Brisbane last October.

In romping to three bonus-point victories in this year’s competitio­n with a high-risk and often highreward game, some All Blacks may have thought themselves invincible.

Certainly, they played with an impetuosit­y which is often a hallmark of youth and yet they quickly discovered that if their ambition isn’t matched by their skill, they can find themselves in trouble.

Instead, this was a case of high-risk from the All Blacks, high-reward for a Boks team seemingly incapable of finishing off the most simple of opportunit­ies in their previous test defeats to Argentina and Australia.

Hansen won’t want to blunt Jordie Barrett’s attacking instincts but he will hope the 21-year-old fullback, playing his seventh test, takes a breath before firing another quick throw-in which could leave his side exposed.

Similarly, although less problemati­c, Anton Lienert-Brown’s intercepte­d pass handed the Boks the perfect start to the second half.

Game management is a lesson often painfully learned and here, the All Blacks were exposed. The dropped goal question will linger too and on this, Hansen is in no doubt; his men should have at least attempted the kick in the final minutes which would have won them the game.

“As I said last night, there will be a lot of learnings for us and this team hasn’t had that much adversity,” Hansen said.

“Should we have drop kicked the goal? Yes, of course we should have. We had a lot of opportunit­ies to but we didn’t organise ourselves. It’s not as if it’s not something that’s in our back pocket because it is.

“That’s a learning, a game management thing, that this team has to go through. While it’s not at a tournament like the World Cup which we learned in ’07, last night will be a massive opportunit­y for this team to grow if we take the learnings.

“We helped their cause quite a bit, didn’t we? We threw an intercept pass, we threw a ball in . . . to try to throw it halfway across the field like that — Rieko [Ioane] didn’t come over to help. Was it on? Well, that’s questionab­le, and that’s 14 points. We helped them, but to be fair to them, they took every opportunit­y that came, they didn’t miss any. That’s the ball game, really.

“At one point, the game could have really got away from us, but with 10 minutes to go, we could have won it twice. We had plenty of opportunit­ies but we just didn’t close it out. There is the biggest learning; what do we have to do when the clock’s running down, the scoreboard’s against us . . . we just have to take a big breath, do things right and be clinical. If we’d done that, we would have won the game.”

These things and more will be dissected before the next test against Argentina in Buenos Aires a week on Saturday and then the Springboks in Johannesbu­rg a week later. One player who won’t be involved is flanker Liam Squire, who is out with a hand injury for three weeks.

The onus will be on Hansen to get his points across.

He was composed and gracious after the test and his respectful tone was the right one and should be noted by some other internatio­nal coaches.

“My job is to be a good teacher,” he said. “Their job is to be good students. I have to be a good teacher over the next few weeks; the ball is in my court.”

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