Herald on Sunday

Sloppy All Blacks rattled by Fiji

Foster’s side struggle at breakdown as Fijians expose multiple issues

- Liam Napier in Dunedin

Passive, sloppy, frustratin­g. The All Blacks comfortabl­y defeated a spirited Fijian side in Dunedin last night but the manner in which they did so sparked major concerns for the season ahead.

Aaron Smith’s maiden test as All Blacks captain brought many more challenges than most expected.

Fiji took it to the All Blacks — their supporters bringing the noise amid another underwhelm­ing 15,013 test turnout.

For a side that held two training runs together as a full squad after emerging from two weeks quarantine, this was a monumental effort.

Fiji had two halfbacks, Frank Lomani and Moses Sorovi, and firstfive Teti Tela stuck in Australia due to the closed transtasma­n bubble.

Inspired by their Island nation’s battle against Covid-19, with some players losing family members, Fiji scored three tries to rattle the All Blacks, particular­ly in the collisions.

Despite his men scoring nine tries, All Blacks coach Ian Foster has plenty to ponder. After making 13 starting changes from the team that humbled Tonga 102-0 last week, the lack of cohesion was widely evident from the All Blacks.

The story of the match was Fiji’s ability to dominate the All Blacks at the breakdown. More often than not, the All Blacks lacked urgency, accuracy and aggression with their cleanout work as they were frequently unable to shift the strong Fijians over the ball.

Given this is an area the All Blacks specifical­ly targeted after being exposed there in recent seasons, there are no excuses for being beaten to the punch.

The All Blacks struggled to build sustained pressure due to their lack of quick, clean ball. Even when they didn’t win turnovers, Fiji’s success in slowing the ruck allowed their defensive line to reset. Other areas need urgent attention. The All Blacks’ restart receptions were poor, offloads didn’t go to hand and their kicking game was wayward at times.

Dane Coles claimed four tries off the bench in the second half — three from lineout drives — as the All Blacks finished with a flourish to blow out the final scoreline.

Other than Coles, Sevu Reece was the standout for the All Blacks against his countrymen. Reece was heavily involved from the right wing, making one telling bust that led to a try.

Others, though, will be looking over their shoulders for next week’s return test against Fiji in Hamilton as Foster ponders his first-choice starting squad.

Typically, Fiji are renown for their flamboyant skill, offloading and running rugby, but while captain Levani Botia proved a handful from the midfield, they did their best work at the breakdown.

The All Blacks conceded eight first-half turnovers (11 in the match) with the vast majority of these breakdown penalties won by Fiji.

Referee Paul Williams was lenient at times with his ruling of the tackler releasing but the All Blacks were guilty of being too slow to adapt and commit more numbers to clearing the ruck.

Despite scoring three first-half tries, frustratio­n built for the All Blacks. Three tries, one to Jordie Barrett and two from Havili, who swiftly recovered from a wayward early pass, establishe­d a 21-6 lead but the All Blacks could not put the foot on the throat, with several other errors creeping into their game.

Patrick Tuipulotu spilled two restarts, Hoskins Sotutu’s lifters abandoned him, leading to a lost lineout, and on attack, the All Blacks’ ball carries were often static, which sparked indecisive decision-making.

Losing Beauden Barrett for a short stint after he copped Brodie Retallick’s boot to his face caused disruption, but even when he returned, the All Blacks lacked their attacking flow.

Credit must be paid to Fiji. After crashing over through London Irish No 8 Albert Tuisue, they deserved to be right in the contest, 21-11 at halftime, with their defensive pressure causing the All Blacks problems, too.

Both sides conceded yellow cards in the second half — Havili sent to the bin after Fiji claimed a penalty try, while Fijian Kini Murimuriva­lu copped his for a cynical infringeme­nt.

With two further second-half tries, Fiji refused to play their part in another Pacific walkover. Vern Cotter’s side will certainly be much more pleased with how this test unfolded than the All Blacks.

New Zealand 57 (Dane Coles 4, David Havili 2, Jordie Barrett, George Bridge, Will Jordan tries; Beauden Barrett 6 cons) Fiji 23 (Albert Tuisue, Mesulame Kunavula tries, penalty try; Ben Volavola 2 pens). HT: 21-11.

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 ??  ?? Hoskins Sotutu fends off Mesulame Kunavula during the All Blacks’ win over Fiji in Dunedin last night.
Hoskins Sotutu fends off Mesulame Kunavula during the All Blacks’ win over Fiji in Dunedin last night.
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Photo / Photosport

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