The New Zealand Herald

Wallabies loss might actually benefit ABs

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How good was that? Good for rugby. Good for Australian rugby. Good for the Rugby World Cup. Good for the All Blacks too, probably. They are no longer runaway favourites for the World Cup. This was a game that mattered. When he declared the World Cup and the Bledisloe Cup were his goals for the season, coach Steve Hansen took some pressure off the first two matches in the Rugby Championsh­ip, giving himself room for more squad developmen­t.

After a bumbling win over Argentina when resting most of his Canterbury players, followed by a drawn defensive contest with South Africa, this was to be his full dress rehearsal for the World Cup.

Australia, barely competitiv­e in Super Rugby these days, was expected to offer little more than a stage for the All Blacks' star cast to strut their stuff. We had Ardie Savea off the back of the scrum and the double playmakers, Beauden Barrett and Richie Mo'unga would likely have more room to move against the Wallabies.

How wrong that turned out to be. Australian coach Michael Cheika did not resort to the rushed defence that has kept lesser teams in the game. His team took on the All Blacks at their own game, keeping possession, winning breakdowns, moving the ball wide, maintainin­g a cracking pace.

Many times we have seen Wallaby teams start like this, putting the All Blacks on the back foot and running up some early points before the All Blacks hit their stride. This time the Australian­s did not fade. Even when the ABs gained some momentum with two good tries, the Wallabies were able to strike back.

It is hard to overstate how good this is for rugby. Hopefully all the top-tier nations have seen that they do not have to slow the game down and rely on rushed defence to have a chance against New Zealand.

The Wallabies have seldom used those tactics. They have long helped New Zealand keep the flame of running rugby alive. If both can reach the final of this year's World Cup it could make the game's pinnacle event a fine spectacle. Maybe as good as the one on Saturday night, with a different result of course.

But New Zealanders cannot be as confident of the result now. South Africa, Ireland and Australia have all beaten us in recent encounters, and England would have beaten us but for a marginal offside ruling that cancelled a try.

Saturday night was a timely reminder of what can happen in the knock-out phase of a World Cup. The favourites in any sport can be beaten by rivals playing out of their skin on the day.

The match also brought a reminder that rugby often uses its World Cup to make a refereeing statement. The game is rightly trying to reduce its head injuries and the red card that reduced the All Blacks to 14 for the second half demonstrat­ed how strict the instructio­ns to referees may be this year.

But the All Blacks can bounce back quickly. They will want to do so at Eden Park this weekend. Game on.

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