The New Zealand Herald

Ferns overrun in World Cup final

After competing well in pool play, New Zealand prove no match against Australia

- Michael Burgess

The Kiwi Ferns World Cup dream turned into a nightmare yesterday, as they were smashed 54-4 by Australia in the final at Old Trafford. It was the most one-sided decider since 2003, as the Jillaroos scored 10 tries, accelerati­ng away savagely in the second half after leading 20-0 at the break.

It’s the third consecutiv­e world crown for Australia, after New Zealand won titles in 2000, 2003 and 2008.

The Ferns held Australia to three tries in the first 35 minutes, before the match became a procession after the interval. The scoreline will be a shock to many, especially after Australia edged their group game 10-8.

But the Jillaroos were near perfect at Old Trafford — composed, calm and clinical — while the Ferns couldn’t make the most of their opportunit­ies in the first half, which could have made the game closer for longer.

Australia’s dominance was reflected in the statistics, with line breaks (11-2), tackle busts (55-17), postcontac­t metres (652-367) and missed tackles (17-56) heavily in their favour.

Their win was built on relentless defence, as the Ferns spent most of the match pinned in their own half.

The tournament schedule was also a factor, as New Zealand tried to peak for the third time in 10 days, while Australia had the luxury of seven fresh players for the final.

The format was curious, with the transtasma­n teams paired in the same pool. In the end, the Ferns didn’t have much left for the decider.

Australia were smart, too, sending constant traffic down the Ferns right edge, which drained the effectiven­ess of Raecene McGregor, Amber Hall and Mele Hufanga on attack.

Australia opened with a fifthminut­e try to Jess Sergis, who barrelled through two defenders on the right edge. It was a product of a timely six again call — on the last tackle — which created more pressure.

A Krystal Rota break finally gave the Ferns some territory but they couldn’t find an end product. Ali Brigginsha­w then cut through the Ferns line, before Isabelle Kelly crossed down the left flank.

The game slowly settled into a rhythm but Australia always looked more likely.

McGregor went close with a show and go, then the half turned on two plays. New Zealand coughed up possession in a rare chance on Australia’s line, before the Jillaroos scored on the next set, as a Brigginsha­w fifth-tackle kick bounced nicely for Julia Robinson, though her opposite Madison Bartlett should have done better in the tackle.

Australia put the stamp on their first-half dominance in the 35th minute, when Kelly forced her way over again after a quick switch of play to give the Jillaroos a seemingly unassailab­le lead.

Any chance of an unlikely New Zealand comeback was extinguish­ed in the 49th minute, when Emma Tonegato split the defence down the middle, after running off an inside ball from Brigginsha­w.

That left New Zealand playing for pride, which was dented further when Sergis crossed three minutes later, before Tarryn Aiken extended the margin after a long-range break.

The Ferns got on the board in the 64th minute, after a Hall offload and a McGregor cut-out pass created space, with Bartlett finishing in the corner.

Australian interchang­e forward Kennedy Cherringto­n added to New Zealand’s misery with two late tries.

It got a bit embarrassi­ng towards the end, as Evania Pelite shrugged off four defenders to score, though the Ferns simply had nothing left. Australia 54 (Jess Sergis 2, Isabelle Kelly 2, Kennedy Cherringto­n 2, Julia Robinson, Emma Tonegato, Tarryn Aitken, Evania Pelite tries; Ali Brigginsha­w 2 cons, Lauren Brown 5 cons)

Kiwi Ferns 4 (Madison Bartlett try) Halftime: 20-0

 ?? Photo / AP ?? The Kiwi Ferns struggled to contain Jess Sergis and the Jillaroos.
Photo / AP The Kiwi Ferns struggled to contain Jess Sergis and the Jillaroos.

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