The Herald (South Africa)

All Blacks coach satisfied after Rugby Championsh­ip

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Foster did not know for sure that the All Blacks had won the Rugby Championsh­ip when he spoke to the media after their 40-14 victory over Australia on Saturday, but he could not disguise his satisfacti­on at a third straight win.

Ultimately, SA’s 38-21 win over Argentina in Durban was insufficie­nt to steal the title, so the All Blacks were crowned champions for the eighth time in the early hours of the morning New Zealand time. It was their 19th southern hemisphere title in 26 seasons since rugby went profession­al, but even the most ardent fan would not claim it was a vintage All Blacks campaign.

Still, after losing a home series to Ireland in July and a first home Test to Argentina, coach Foster was reasonably happy with how his team were looking with a year to go until the World Cup.

“We’ve done some good problem-solving. We’ve worked hard. It’s given this team a bit of steel,” he said in Auckland.

“And it’s given us some harsh lessons we wish we didn’t have to live with, but we did.

“In those situations, you either fold and walk away because it’s too hard or you buckle up and get stuck in work. We’re growing belief, but we’ve still got some steps to go.”

The All Blacks remain fourth in the world rankings but will at least now take a winning record (5-4) on their November tour when they will play Japan, Wales, Scotland and England.

The lack of consistenc­y the team have shown this year still rankles with many All Blacks fans but Foster said a full assessment of the season would have to wait.

“Right now we can only do what’s in front of us, which was to finish this championsh­ip really strong,” he said.

“I’ve forgotten about the rollercoas­ter, to be honest, I’m just happy in the moment ... we look at the last championsh­ip and half’of we re really the pleased with what we’ve done.”

Foster said a convincing win over Australia, especially coming after the tight 39-37 victory in Melbourne last week, should not be underestim­ated.

“It’s a losable game when you play Australia at the moment we saw last week how good and dangerous they can be,” he said.

“We had to be on our game and we had to improve.

“We highlighte­d some areas where had some edges last week and I think we were a lot more ruthless in the way we exploited them. ”—

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