Gulf Today

All Blacks beat Australia in Rugby C’ship thriller to retain Bledisloe Cup

-

Coach Ian Foster’s side came into the rare midweek Test at Melbourne ater hammering Argentina 53-3 and clung on for backto-back wins ater Australia rallied from 31-13 down to take it to the wire

New Zealand’s Jordie Barret scored a try at the death as the All Blacks beat Australia 39-37 in a thriller on Thursday to put one hand on the Rugby Championsh­ip trophy and retain the Bledisloe Cup for a 20th year.

Coach Ian Foster’s side came into the rare midweek Test at Melbourne ater hammering Argentina 53-3 and clung on for back-to-back wins ater Australia rallied from 31-13 down to take it to the wire.

They went to the break all square at 10-10 at a sold-out Docklands Stadium ater a gruelling first half that saw a try apiece, three yellow cards and three All Blacks, including captain Sam Cane, limp off injured.

“What a classic,” said relieved Cane. “To win on the buzzer we’re hugely delighted.”

A New Zealand try 90 seconds ater the restart -- Samisoni Taukei’aho’s second -- and a third yellow card for Australia appeared to end any hopes the home team had.

But two tries from Andrew Kellaway inside five minutes and another from Pete Samu set up an exciting finale.

Nic White nailed a penalty with three minutes to go to put Australia in front, only for Barret to cross ater the final siren and ruin their night.

“Absolutely guted. I don’t know what to say,” said Australia captain James Slipper.

“We wanted to put in performanc­e tonight and we just fell short there. Probably the most cuting way to finish again, in my opinion.”

The victory further eased pressure on Foster, and kept them top of the Rugby Championsh­ip with a game to play on 14 points, four above Australia. The Springboks and Argentina face each other on Saturday. Both have nine points.

The win also ensured the Bledisloe Cup stayed in New Zealand’s hands ahead of the final Rugby Championsh­ip Test at Eden Park in Auckland next week.

Ater crushing Argentina in Hamilton, they were on a high, facing a new-look Wallabies with eight changes from the side that crashed 24-8 to South Africa. And the home team was on the back foot immediatel­y when Jed Holloway failed to collect the catch from the kickoff.

New Zealand piled on pressure which culminated in Taukei’aho flopping over in the corner ater a powerful lineout drive.

Richie Mo’unga added the extras to give the visitors a dream 7-0 lead inside the opening four minutes, a welcome change for a team that has been slow out the blocks this year.

Mo’unga nailed a penalty to stretch the advantage before the Wallabies got on the board, courtesy of Bernard Foley in his first match since the 2019 World Cup, sloting an easy three-pointer.

CRUISING: In a huge blow for Australia, Kellaway had a try disallowed for failing to properly ground the ball, but they had momentum and Rob Valetini crashed over for a converted try to level the scores.

Makingmate­rs worse for New Zealand, Dalton Papali’i was yellow-carded, forcing the All Blacks into a frantic rearguard defence.

As he returned, Australia’s Tom Wright and Darcy Swain were both sent to the sidelines for 10 minutes, penalised during the same period of play, to give New Zealand a two-man advantage.

They should have capitalise­d before the break, but Taukei’aho was denied his second try for not grounding properly and they blew two other chances with sloppy handling.

There made no mistake ater the re-start, with Taukei’aho bursting through the defence ater barely 90 seconds.

Ill-discipline cost Australia again with scrumhalf Jake Gordon sin-binned. Mo’unga doted down then Will Jordan flew to the line, both while he was off the park.

They looked to be cruising but incredibly two tries from Kellaway hauled Australia back to 27-31 and another from Samu, converted by Foley, made it 37-all with six minutes let.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Bahrain