The Citizen (KZN)

Foster a very relieved man

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Auckland – A relieved Ian Foster (above) said he was satisfied yesterday after his All Blacks side took “a very different journey” to retain their Rugby Championsh­ip crown by winning their last three matches following a stuttering start to the campaign.

New Zealand beat Australia 40-14 in Auckland on Saturday, then had to wait around eight hours to be confirmed champions when South Africa failed to record the landslide win they needed against Argentina in the final match of the four-nation southern hemisphere tournament.

South Africa had needed to score three more tries and 40 more points than the Pumas but managed neither in a 38-21 victory.

It gave the All Blacks the championsh­ip on 19 points, one ahead of the Springboks, the 2019 World Cup winners. Australia were third on 10 points with Argentina a point further back.

“I’m very satisfied,” Foster told reporters in Auckland, having stayed up to watch the South Africa match early yesterday morning in New Zealand.

“We did it the hard way, but we put ourselves in with a chance last night [Saturday] and it was enough.”

The celebratio­ns at the All Blacks’ Auckland hotel were a huge contrast to the start of the Rugby Championsh­ip when New Zealand were beaten 26-10 in South Africa after losing a home series to Ireland, their fifth defeat in six Tests.

It put Foster under severe pressure as calls mounted for him to be sacked with the World Cup in France just over a year away.

Foster kept his job when the All Blacks beat the Springboks in the next match in Johannesbu­rg, only to be under fire again when his side suffered a first defeat to Argentina in New Zealand.

The All Blacks recovered to finish with three straight wins including home and away victories over Australia that enabled them to retain the Bledisloe Cup and the Rugby Championsh­ip.

“It’s been a very different journey to other rugby championsh­ips that we’ve won,” said Foster.

“To do it from behind the eight ball at the start and have to climb through that is not the way we wanted, but it’s really satisfying.”

Foster said the experience will help the All Blacks when they play Tests on their northern hemisphere tour starting late next month.

“We want to improve, because where we want to be in 12 months time is not two, three, four or five, it is to be one,” he added.

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