Planet Rugby

New Zealand

New Zealand

All Blacks earn 100th win for McCaw

06th October 2012 17:24

Sam Whitelock scores South Africa New Zealand 2012

Try time: Sam Whitelock

The All Blacks completed an impressive clean sweep in the Rugby Championship on Saturday, overcoming South Africa 32-16 at Soccer City on the outskirts of Johannesburg.

In a performance worthy of their status as the top-ranked team in the world, New Zealand weathered an early storm to overturn a half-time deficit and eventually run out comfortable winners.

The result extends the All Blacks' winning streak to 16 consecutive games, moving them within touching distance of the world record.

The Springboks led 16-12 at the break having dominated for most of the first half but were given a lesson in counter attacking to be outscored two tries to one in the opening stanza.

The All Blacks reversed the trend in the second period, adding two more tries while denying their hosts any points to underline their supremacy.

It was a classic case of shifting momentum - while South Africa started with a bang and ended with a whimper, the Kiwis progressively upped the tempo until there was only one team left in the contest.

The much-vaunted Highveld crowd mirrored their team's effort as they made it very clear to the All Blacks they weren't in Auckland anymore in the early stages but the corridors were filled with fans leaving the stadium with ten minutes left on the clock.

As was the case a week ago, Johan Goosen missed his first two attempts at goal but the hosts would nevertheless open the scoring with a rare sight: A South African try from a set-piece move. Willem Alberts bust through the All Black defence before offloading to Jean de Villiers, who showed off some juggling skills but managed to hold on. Bryan Habana was in space outside his skipper and had an easy run in, scoring behind the posts.

Goosen had no problems with the conversion and could further extend the lead to 10 points at the end of the first quarter when Brodie Retallick was penalised for a dangerous tackle.

The All Blacks had hardly ventured into the South African half but took their first chance to score in typical fashion, with a blistering counter-attack from broken play to send lock Sam Whitelock over in the corner.

If the hosts weren't already alerted to the New Zealand's ability to punish their mistakes, they were given a reminder on 35 minutes. Habana came flying up in search of an intercept, it didn't work, and Hosea Gear ghosted through the gap left in the Bok defensive line before offloading to Aaron Smith, who finished. Dan Carter's conversion gave the visitors a lead that made a mockery of the possession and territory stats.

The Boks were dealt another blow as Goosen was forced off injured but replacement fly-half Elton Jantjies held his nerve with his first kick to put South Africa back in front at 13-12.

Jantjies found the target again from 48 metres with the last act of the half to give the hosts a deserved four-point advantage at the interval.

The All Blacks moved back in front almost immediately after the restart however after Jaco Taute missed a tackle on Israel Dagg, who combined with Kieran Read to set up a try for Ma'a Nonu.

Disorganised defending cost the Boks another try as Conrad Smith touched down to put the visitors ten points clear once Carter had added the easy extras.

Two misses from Jantjies suggested the Boks' woes at the kicking tee were far from finished, prompting De Villiers to turn down a shot at goal in favour of chasing a try. And it nearly paid off, but Habana was not able to hang on when presented with a chance in the corner.

The last quarter was one-way traffic. Carter added a neat drop and a penalty to move his team well clear...in more ways than one.

Man of the Match There were a number of candidates in black but the official award went to Kieran Read, who was once again the ultimate example of a complete number eight as his ball skills matched his contribution in the tight exchanges.

Moment of the match: The All Blacks' second try, scored by Aaron Smith, summed up where these teams are at the moment. An instance of a Springbok trying too hard to do something special was punished by a clinical finish. Give All Blacks scraps, and they will feast!

Villian of the match: The 'fans' who left early.

The scorers:

For South Africa:
Try: Habana
Cons: Goosen
Pens: Goosen, Jantjies 2

For New Zealand:
Tries: Whitelock, A. Smith, Nonu, C. Smith
Cons: Carter 3
Pen: Carter
Drop goal: Carter
Yellow card: Dagg (66th min - offside)

South Africa: 15 Zane Kirchner, 14 Bryan Habana, 13 Jaco Taute, 12 Jean de Villiers (c), 11 Francois Hougaard, 10 Johan Goosen, 9 Ruan Pienaar, 8 Duane Vermeulen, 7 Willem Alberts, 6 Francois Louw, 5 Andries Bekker, 4 Eben Etzebeth, 3 Jannie du Plessis, 2 Adriaan Strauss, 1 Tendai Mtawarira.
Replacements: 16 Tiaan Liebenberg, 17 Coenie Oosthuizen, 18 Flip van der Merwe, 19 Marcell Coetzee, 20 Elton Jantjies, 21 Juan de Jongh, 22 Pat Lambie.

New Zealand: 15 Israel Dagg, 14 Cory Jane, 13 Conrad Smith, 12 Ma'a Nonu, 11 Hosea Gear, 10 Daniel Carter, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read, 7 Richie McCaw (c), 6 Liam Messam, 5 Sam Whitelock, 4 Brodie Retallick, 3 Owen Franks, 2 Andrew Hore, 1 Tony Woodcock.
Replacements: 16 Keven Mealamu, 17 Ben Franks, 18 Luke Romano, 19 Adam Thomson, 20 Piri Weepu, 21 Aaron Cruden, 22 Tamati Ellison.

Referee: Romain Poite (France), Greg Garner (England)
Assistant referees: Shaun Veldsman (South Africa)

By Ross Hastie at Soccer City

Comments

ruckingkiwi says...

new_j4a says, looks like you answered your own question, penalty at 1.30, you said it yourself.

Carpelone, haha you are Captain Whinge but whatever, victory tastes sweet so whatever you say boy.

Posted 19:20 22nd November 2012

new_j4a says...

@7ton and Carpelone, Yes AR is directly behind the run of play and so not best positioned to judge and perhaps that is why the Boks get the benefit of the doubt. And there certainly is doubt: the ball appears to travel only1 meter forward relative to the ground/line over 10+ meters while the players are charging at full tilt. Anyway, as I said, I come down on the side of ruling the pass legitimate although very close and JDV's handling very lucky.

Posted 07:11 12th October 2012

7ton says...

new_j4a

A very good clip that explaining the laws and while I haven't seen it before it is how a have understood things.

None the less I have looked at the replay again and it still appears to be a forward pass. However to be certain I would have to see it from all angles.

From the replay I can't see where the linesman is or if he had a clear view but the ref was behind the players so he was probably not in the best position to judge.

As I said it is no big deal and these things happen often and sometimes they go your way and sometimes they don't.

What annoys me is certain posters who persistently go on about what the opposition get away with but ignore what their own team gets away with.

Posted 01:07 12th October 2012

Carpelone says...

I saw it again. Still difficult to judge given the angle.

Posted 21:26 11th October 2012

Carpelone says...

new_j4a

Thanks for that. I knew that. I do not have the slomo of the play, as far as I can remember I had the impression that was forward. It was a good move anyway.

Posted 20:54 11th October 2012

Rosbif says...

In the pantheon of greats, I cant believe no-one has mentioned Maradonna? ....hehehe the "hand of God"....snigger snigger.....

(and I guess the whole Lance Armstrong saga is a good reminder that "greatness" really is hard to come by)

Posted 19:20 11th October 2012

new_j4a says...

@Carpelone, Please have a look at this irb video explaining that a pass is not judged forward relative to the ground, then consider that JDV is stopped after the pass.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=box08lq9ylg

Then, PLEASE come back with an opinion on whether it was forward.

Posted 17:12 11th October 2012

Carpelone says...

Nobody could deny that the pass to Habana was very suspicious (understatement of the year).

@ new_j4a

You are right. He and his mate Sandal are whinging winners, a new category on this forum.

Posted 13:58 11th October 2012

new_j4a says...

@ruckingkiwi, Really? I found a possible penalty against the Boks at 1:30....and what looks like an error in the "coming in from the side" penalty against the ABs. What did you find....minute and Law please. Or are you just a clueless whinger?

Posted 12:31 11th October 2012

ruckingkiwi says...

Anyone who thinks South Africa didn't infringe in the first 65 mins (or whenever the first penalty was awarded to NZ) is dreaming, including the referee.

Posted 10:05 11th October 2012

new_j4a says...

@7ton, Thanks, I try very hard to be objective but sometimes fail. And as you mention, the camera angle often defeats any attempt to be objective. You probably have seen this video from the irb many times, but just on the off chance that you haven't, here's an interesting clip on the Laws wrt forward passes: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=box08lq9ylg

Posted 08:43 11th October 2012

7ton says...

new_j4a

I respect your good knowledge of the laws and your fair minded comments regarding them but even taking account of the proper laws in regard to forward passes It very much did appear that the pass to Habana when he scored the try was forward. Well at least it appeared to be from the camera angle and my chair and I have watched a replay of it several times.

However it's no big deal and I am certainly not complaining

In regards to the penalties I think that the reason why SA never conceded any in the first half is because they played very well and the AB's never really put them under much real pressure. Sure they scored 2 very well worked trys but they game from some very adept ball handling and not from persistent pressure.

Posted 00:40 11th October 2012

APV1 says...

@ ruckingkiwi - Murali has a dodgy action, so you can't trust him!

;-)

Posted 14:56 10th October 2012

ruckingkiwi says...

Murali has a better record than Warne and wasn't Warne a drugs cheat?

I would put Eales and Gregan ahead of Campo although he was one of the best at signing autographs. When thinking about greats Tiger Woods, Federer, Pele, Ali, Ivan Mauger, Rossi, Schmacher, among others. Not sure about McCaw just yet.

Posted 09:14 10th October 2012

new_j4a says...

@StunnedMullet, The YC against Dagg was OTT, but there were at least 2 and possibly (at a stretch) 3 other opportunities to show Yellow to an AB. See if you can figure out when (a small hint: one YC was issued after the match). And the forward pass....against whom? If you are talking about BH's try, you need to review your understanding of the forward pass laws. If not BH, when/whom?

By the way, @sandal I have reviewed the 1st half over and over in slowmo. There is a possible penalty against SA (1:30+)and I think you have a case that the coming in from the side at the (non-)ruck was a mistake by AR....BUT the rest looks clean and there are a couple of occasions where he treats the ABs very lightly. AB 5 should have walked for 10 after head high elbow/arm barge on BH from an offside position when BH had not yet received the ball....he takes a step further off side and floors BH with an illegal "tackle"....YC IMO

But I am happy when no YC are given....keeps the playing field level. And nothing he did detracted from a master class in how rugby should be played. The Boks did well for 30-40 minutes and the gap that needs to be closed is clear.

Posted 07:55 10th October 2012

new_j4a says...

@APV1 and Trinats, On the topic of Rugby greats, Shane Warne was a pretty good cricketer (I am told), but makes it onto my list of all time greats (with Winston Churchill) for his repartee (the wife/biscuit response to the "Warnie, why are you so fat?" sledge). By the way, according to George Bush Jnr., "The problem with the French is that they don't have a word for repartee."

Posted 06:17 10th October 2012

StunTheMullet says...

@ Sandal - Don't forget to throw in the dodgy yellow card, missed forward pass for a try alongside the refereeing of one team.

Rolland must have been disappointed that his bias was unrewarded and he had to go home with a Rolox instead of a Rolex.

Of course we'll hear nothing about it after all it's only the All Blacks and Bryce wasn't refereeing.

Posted 03:13 10th October 2012

new_j4a says...

@APV1, I was saving Umanets for my tribute to Rougerie....

Posted 14:00 09th October 2012

Trader2 says...

Trinats

Ritchie is certainly good enough to be a Queenslander but unlike the rest of your foreign imports, not silly enough. (sorry couldn't help myself)

and

David Campese, a great?? give me a break he was entertaining thats for sure, but not in the same class as a Warne, Federer, Pele, Bobby Charlton etc. Don't take my word for it just ask Marto.

Posted 13:34 09th October 2012

APV1 says...

@ Trinats2 - I'll accept Pele and Warne. Woods lost the golf cup thing recently; Campo was not the best "ever in the world"; Federer... Sampras - although he was very hairy, he did it all first.

"Schumacher ? he drives a fast car ! Why doesn't he do something useful like drive an Ambulance !!!"

Brilliant idea! He's retiring (again) at the end of the season and will have some time on his hands.

@ new_j4a - getting in touch with your artistic side again. How lovely. But you missed Vladimir Umanets from your list.

@ rugby_rockstar - if you'd paid for the £6.50 version, you would have seen what Y did next. Now THAT was really something...

Posted 12:01 09th October 2012

Page 1 of 7

Character Count : 0/1900

  • New Zealand Fixtures
Forthcoming Fixtures
FixtureDetails
All times are local
International Match
Saturday , June 22
New Zealand vs France08:35
More International Match fixtures
Rugby Championship
Saturday , August 17
Australia vs New ZealandTBC
Saturday , August 24
New Zealand vs AustraliaTBC
Saturday , September 7
New Zealand vs ArgentinaTBC
Saturday , September 14
New Zealand vs South AfricaTBC
More Rugby Championship fixtures
  • New Zealand Results
Recent Results
FixtureDetails
All times are local
International Match
Saturday , June 15
New Zealand 30 - 0 FranceNew Zealand vs France Report
Saturday , June 8
New Zealand 23 - 13 FranceNew Zealand vs France Report
More International Match results
  • Table
League
Rugby Championship Table
PosTeamPPts
1New Zealand626
2Australia612
3South Africa612
4Argentina64