Business Day

All Blacks finished because of a drawn series? Nonsense!

- Read Keohane on www.keo.co.za and on twitter.com/mark_keohane MARK KEOHANE

All Blacks coach Steve Hansen was all class in victory, defeat and in a draw — and New Zealand will be stronger in their 2019 World Cup defence because of the drawn three-Test series against the British and Irish Lions.

Social media’s pitchfork mentality has focused on the brilliance of the Lions and the vulnerabil­ity of the world champion All Blacks.

I do not quite get that because there wasn’t a series winner and in the context of three Tests the All Blacks scored more points and more tries than a Lions squad promoted as being the best to have been assembled in the profession­al era.

If this Lions squad, benefiting from the best talent from four countries, is that good, then what does it say about the All Blacks?

Hansen, after the first Test win, said the match was closer than a 15-point differenti­al. He did not look for excuses when his team lost the second Test to a contentiou­s 77th minute penalty, despite playing with 14 men for 50 minutes.

The coach did not moan when the All Blacks were robbed of the chance to win the third Test in the last minute with a penalty that was inexplicab­ly overturned by the same referee who ruled the penalty to New Zealand.

The Lions have been anointed as the moral victors, even though the series was drawn.

Again, what to make of the ease with which a world rugby audience wants to rubbish the quality of a team that did not lose the series but equally cannot praise enough the team that did not win the series?

The All Blacks created enough opportunit­ies to win the third Test in Auckland. They also outscored the Lions two tries to nil.

They did not win and Hansen was at pains to stress that they didn’t play well enough to win the series.

He said that it was not the All Blacks’ god-given right to win every Test and that there were other teams who could also play the game particular­ly well, especially when four of them combined effectivel­y to make up one team.

Hansen and All Blacks captain Kieran Read were generous in their praise for the Lions coaching staff and players.

Not once did they look to blame the referee, the weather conditions or unavailabi­lity of the likes of Ben Smith, Ryan Crotty, Sonny Bill Williams and Dane Coles.

Hansen said that the series was drawn because his team was not good enough.

He said it was a reality check to the squad.

I would suggest that the All Blacks haters should take a pause before gloating about a drawn series because the All Blacks do not play the best of four teams at the 2019 World Cup.

Hansen’s All Blacks have lost just five times since 2011 and won four Rugby Championsh­ips and two successive World Cups.

They have now drawn a three-Test series against the greatest Lions team in the profession­al era.

Does that mean their mystique is gone?

Former Lions and England coach Clive Woodward was bullish in saying that after the drawn series. It was all too predictabl­e from one who should know better.

The All Blacks are the game’s best because they remember the ones they lose or draw as much as the rest remember the ones they win and draw.

The series was brilliant for the game, but I suggest the All Blacks will benefit more in the long term from not losing to the best Lions team than they would have in winning the series.

It was in many respects the best outcome for Hansen in his quest to win a third successive World Cup.

There will be no arrogance from within the All Blacks or illusions about their own vulnerabil­ity, individual­ly or collective­ly.

The Lions players, who were quick to tell the world they were very much the equal of the All Blacks and matched them blow for blow, do not play the All Blacks in 2019 as the Lions.

Currently there is not an All Blacks opponent (whether it be England, Ireland, Wales, SA or Australia) the equal of the British and Irish Lions.

No team and individual are unbeatable and none is without flaw, the All Blacks included.

Talk of an All Blacks demise, based on one home drawn series against the best of four countries, is as ignorant as it is disrespect­ful to the class and quality of those opponents in red, who held them to a 15-all draw in the series decider in Auckland.

THE ALL BLACKS ARE THE GAME’S BEST BECAUSE THEY REMEMBER THE ONES THEY LOSE OR DRAW AS MUCH AS THE REST REMEMBER THE ONES THEY WIN AND DRAW

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