The Herald (South Africa)

‘Kiwis at different level’

All Blacks’ dominance of internatio­nal rugby a concern for many pundits

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THE All Blacks’ easy canter to the Rugby Championsh­ip crown has triggered concerns in New Zealand about the state of the internatio­nal game, amid claims their dominance is unhealthy.

“Rugby was the loser,” columnist Chris Rattue wrote in the New Zealand Herald yesterday after the All Blacks beat South Africa 41-13 in Christchur­ch to wrap up the title with two rounds of the championsh­ip still to be played.

“There is increasing daylight between them and anyone else in world rugby,” Radio New Zealand’s Jamie Wall said, a sentiment rugby writer Gregor Paul echoed in the Herald.

“It becomes increasing­ly apparent the All Blacks’ greatest enemy is themselves,” Paul wrote.

Fairfax writer Richard Knowler likened the All Blacks superiorit­y to that of “a cruel cat that likes to toy with a bird with a busted wing”.

Despite losing more than 800 caps worth of experience after winning the World Cup last October, the All Blacks have barely broken a sweat in winning all seven tests played this year.

In June, they swept the three-test series against Wales, the Six Nations runners-up, and have romped to bonus-point wins in all four Rugby Championsh­ip matches played so far, racking up 24 tries in the process.

The southern hemisphere championsh­ip comprises the four semifinali­sts from last year’s World Cup – New Zealand, South Africa, Australia and Argentina.

While the post-World Cup months produced the usual welter of retirement­s from internatio­nal rugby, New Zealand have managed to bounce back arguably stronger than ever, while the other three appear to have gone backwards.

“World rugby is in a parlous state,” Rattue wrote.

“The All Blacks beat Argentina by about 30 points in a ‘close’ test, and they have now crushed the hopelessly naive Springboks by a similar margin without even playing well.”

The All Blacks, with away matches against Argentina and South Africa still to come, claimed the quadrangul­ar tournament for the fourth time in five years, with Australia taking the crown last year.

The All Blacks have now gone 15 games unbeaten and Paul wrote: “That makes it hard not to think of this team as shaping as one of the best in history.

“There’s no point in pretending, the All Blacks are some way the best side in the world and it will take a supreme effort to beat them.”

Eric Watson, owner of the Warriors side in the rival rugby league code, said the All Blacks’ dominance of world rugby union was not “real sport” and that the Australian­based National Rugby League was more exciting.

But while the outcome of All Blacks matches is at present a foregone conclusion, Knowler noted that it was what their supporters appeared to want.

“The Springboks were in the fight at 15-10 early in the second half, when the crowd, no doubt to the disgust of the purists, signalled their frustratio­n by executing a Mexican wave,” he wrote.

“That seemed to set the All Blacks off. Perhaps they don’t like the human waves, either”, as the response was four unanswered tries. – AFP

 ?? Picture: GETTY IMAGES ?? FLYING KIWI: New Zealand’s Ardie Savea dives over to score a try with Springboks Faf de Klerk and Eben Etzebeth unable to stop him in their Rugby Championsh­ip match in Christchur­ch on Saturday
Picture: GETTY IMAGES FLYING KIWI: New Zealand’s Ardie Savea dives over to score a try with Springboks Faf de Klerk and Eben Etzebeth unable to stop him in their Rugby Championsh­ip match in Christchur­ch on Saturday

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