The Press

All Blacks tough it out to secure Bledisloe Cup for another year

- HAMISH BIDWELL

It was never going to be a thing of beauty.

A wet Westpac Stadium and a wounded Wallabies side against an All Blacks one fighting a natural desire to have points come easily, all contribute­d to a slightly unsatisfyi­ng spectacle on Saturday night.

New Zealand were good when they needed to be, though, with an Israel Dagg brace and other tries to Julian Savea and Sam Cane securing them a 29-9 win and another year as Bledisloe Cup holders.

Australia might not have come to play, but they were definitely vigorous and made it a far different assignment for the All Blacks than the previous Saturday’s 42-8 romp in Sydney.

‘‘That was right up there. Massive lift in intensity and we had to work bloody hard for a result tonight. It was a good, hard, physical test match,’’ New Zealand hooker Dane Coles said afterwards.

Coles is a bloke who isn’t shy of a shove or a put-down at the best of times, so it was no surprise to see him revel in the confrontat­ional circumstan­ces. ‘‘Nothing wrong with a bit of edge in a game. Enjoyed it,’’ said Coles. ‘‘We just wanted to play footy and they brought that kind of edge, but we weren’t going to back down I suppose.

‘‘The first 20 [minutes] there was a bit of pushing and probably both teams wanted to play a bit of footy, but both [sets of] boys were pretty fired up and wanted to get in to each other. ‘‘It probably carried on a little bit too much, to be honest, but we got there in the end. Just took a bit of time.’’

Dagg’s two first-half tries were both beautifull­y executed, featuring fine lead-up work and excellent finishing, as the All Blacks took a 15-9 lead into halftime. They’d been more dominant than that, without quite turning it into points. ‘‘The Aussies played well and we had to show them some respect and earn the right to move the ball wide and get the tries,’’ Dagg said.

New Zealand’s ascendancy was built around set pieces. They stole or disrupted a lot of lineout ball and held sway in the scrum.

A few of those went down or were a mess, prompting a bit of whistle from referee Romain Poite. Coles felt the All Blacks’ next opponents – Argentina and South Africa – might look to milk penalties there, even if captain Kieran Read didn’t believe the scrum under pressure was New Zealand’s.

‘‘If you look at our ball, generally it was fine,’’ Read said. The issues appeared to come when Australia was putting the ball in and was among the reasons they launched few real attacks.

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