Daily Dispatch

Hansen reflects on goal drop fail

-

All Blacks coach Steve Hansen proved on Sunday that hindsight is always perfect and said his side probably should have taken the opportunit­y to attempt a drop goal to win their Rugby Championsh­ip clash with the SA on Saturday.

The world champions were upset 36-34 by the Springboks at Wellington Regional Stadium, a result that kept the Rugby Championsh­ip alive and showed that the All Blacks were fallible after three big wins in the first three rounds.

Hansen’s side, however, could have snatched a dramatic victory at the end of the game when they avoided several opportunit­ies to attempt a drop goal as they hammered away at SA’s line.

“Should we have drop kicked a goal? Of course we should have,” Hansen said.

“We had plenty of opportunit­ies and we organised ourselves. It’s not something we don’t have in our back pocket.

“That’s a [lesson] and a game management thing that this team has to go through and this will be a massive opportunit­y for this team to grow.”

The decision not to take the drop goal option, despite both Beauden Barrett and Damian McKenzie being in position to attempt it, led to finger-pointing by New Zealand fans, who have not forgotten a similar decision during their 2007 Rugby World Cup quarterfin­al loss to France.

The All Blacks, however, have consistent­ly said that 20-18 loss was the catalyst for their entire philosophy and team culture since, which has led to a success rate in excess of 80% and World Cup wins in 2011 and 2015.

It was also undoubtedl­y why SA coach Rassie Erasmus expected the option would be in their playbook at the 2019 global showpiece.

“I guess it was an option to score but that is not the New Zealand way,” Erasmus said.

“Maybe in a World Cup, Beauden would do that. But not in a [Rugby] Championsh­ip game.” While Barrett had a shocking performanc­e off the tee with only two successful shots at goal from six attempts, Hansen said that and the drop goal were not the reasons why they lost to the Springboks.

Leaking five tries, two from simple errors, was a major contributo­r as was not being able to break down a staunch defence in the final 10 minutes.

It was that final 10 minutes of the loss, however, that Hansen suspected would be invaluable for his team heading into 2019’s tournament in Japan.

“With 10 minutes to go we could’ve won it twice over,” Hansen said.

“And there’s the biggest [lesson] – we’ve just got to take a big breath and do things right and be clinical and, if we’d done that last night, we would’ve won the game.”

 ??  ?? STEVE HANSEN
STEVE HANSEN

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa