The Citizen (Gauteng)

And then there were four

EUPHORIA: NEW ZEALAND MEDIA ALL HAD A FIELD DAY

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The All Blacks were hailed as playing rugby the way “the gods want” as New Zealand celebrated an overwhelmi­ng seven-try victory against Ireland in the World Cup quarterfin­als.

New Zealand media raised doubts that England will be able to stem the black tide when they meet next weekend in the semifinals, and suggested the Irish defence must have been organised over pints of beer.

Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern, in her message of congratula­tions, also referenced the impact of centre Jack Goodhue’s much-maligned mullet haircut, which has been a frequent sideline topic.

“And that’s a brilliant win... for the All Blacks and mullets everywhere,” she wrote on Instagram with a photo of Goodhue after the All Blacks’ 46-14 thrashing – which extended Ireland’s miserable record of never reaching the semifinals.

Writing for the New Zealand Herald, Gregor Paul said there was nothing quite like the All Blacks when they “find their sweet spot and mix beauty and brawn in a heady concoction that probably gets somewhere close to being how the gods want the game to be played.

“New Zealand in the right mood as they so obviously were against Ireland can only be stopped by the miraculous­ly brave and the fabulously inventive.

“It was at times almost bordering on perfect rugby the marriage of speed, skill, physicalit­y and imaginatio­n was intoxicati­ng. A rugby drug if ever there was one.”

The Stuff.co.nz website published a photo showing the All Blacks’ guard of honour for retiring Ireland legend Rory Best while rugby writer Richard Knowler said the win was “superb”.

“They made Ireland’s defensive line, which is organised by Andy Farrell, look like it had been organised over a few pints and a game of darts,” Knowler said.

“Cross-kicks, pop passes in the tackle, transfers quickly off the grass and runners tearing in on angles. It was designed to get in behind the rush defence, to put Ireland into the outhouse.

“It will also have England coach Eddie Jones demanding his analysts issue footage on every try and line break ahead of the semifinal. Here’s the tip: those guys are in a for a big shift because the All Blacks gave them plenty to get their teeth into.” –

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 ?? Picture: AFP ?? SHEER JOY. All Blacks fullback Beauden Barrett (left) celebrates with flyhalf Richie Mo’unga after his try during their Rugby World Cup quarterfin­al against Ireland at the Tokyo Stadium on Saturday.
Picture: AFP SHEER JOY. All Blacks fullback Beauden Barrett (left) celebrates with flyhalf Richie Mo’unga after his try during their Rugby World Cup quarterfin­al against Ireland at the Tokyo Stadium on Saturday.

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