Sunday Times

N Zealand in 2nd half rampage

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A DEVASTATIN­G late surge saw New Zealand pound dogged Argentina in a frenetic Rugby Championsh­ip encounter at Waikato Stadium in Hamilton yesterday.

The All Blacks scored eight tries to one, but it was not until Ryan Crotty crossed 13 minutes into the second half that they started to gain command.

With the score at 24-22, Crotty’s try sparked a 33-point spree in the closing 27 minutes. By the end the dominance was clear-cut, but after strolling to victory twice over Australia in the opening rounds of the tournament, the All Blacks found a more formidable opponent until the Pumas ran out of steam.

Julian Savea, Ben Smith and Beauden Barrett scored first-half tries for the All Blacks, who turned with a 24-19 advantage. Ryan Crotty scored twice and Charlie Faumuina, Smith again and Luke Romano touched down in the second half.

Argentina held the lead three times in the first spell. The game was less than three minutes old when they scored the opening try, and though they did not cross the All Blacks line again they commanded sufficient territory to land a string of penalties.

It was not, however, the power of the Pumas pack that did the damage but their turnovers and smart offloads in an expansive game that stretched the All Blacks.

They scored the first try in the second minute when a deft pass from scrumhalf Martin Landajo sent Santiago Cordero away on a 25-metre run to the line. Nicolas Sanchez landed the conversion and kept the scoreboard ticking over with four penalties in the first half.

The All Blacks were keen to show they had muscle up front and opted for scrums over close-range penalties early on. It paid dividends with a try to Savea, coming into the line from the blindside wing, after Kieran Read had plucked the ball from the back of a scrum.

When the All Blacks slipped behind 137, Smith brought them back into the game with his first try after a powerful run by Savea in which the big wing steamrolle­d his way up to the line.

When a further Sanchez penalty restored Argentina’s lead, the All Blacks hit back with a long-range penalty by Israel Dagg and a try to Barrett.

Sanchez landed his fifth penalty early in the second half to close the gap to 2422, but then the Pumas started to tire — as the All Blacks stepped up a gear to score at better than a point a minute.

With their third win out of three, the victory kept the All Blacks on track to win the southern hemisphere championsh­ip for the fourth time in five years. They also remain unbeaten after 23 clashes with Argentina, winning 22 and drawing one, and they stretched their current unbeaten run against all sides to 14.

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