All Blacks: Deny Irish at the death
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Ireland turned up the heat in freezing conditions to push New Zealand all the way, before eventually succumbing to a 22-19 defeat in Christchurch on Saturday.
With the scores level at 19-19 and one minute remaining in the match, All Blacks pivot Dan Carter broke Irish hearts with a last-gasp drop goal to win the game and the series.
It was a valiant effort from the visitors, who led the world champions by one point (9-10) at half-time, but were left playing catch-up following an early try to Aaron Smith two minutes after the break.
But the men in green managed to claw their way back and when All Blacks full-back Israel Dagg was yellow-carded in the 72nd minute, Ireland were presented with a golden opportunity to retake the lead from 49m out.
However, Jonathan Sexton's attempt had the direction but not the distance as the ball fell agonisingly short. From there the hosts put themselves into a position to set up Carter for the match-winning drop.
His first attempt off his right boot, however, clipped an Irish hand and sailed wide. But Carter wouldn't miss the second attempt, and this time - off his left foot - sent the ball between the sticks.
Jubilation for the All Blacks, heartbreak for the brave Irish.
Declan Kidney's troops had promised they would up the intensity after being run off the park a week ago and they were certainly true to their word as the visitors - roared on by dozens of Irish fans - threatened to snaffle their first-ever Test win over the All Blacks in their 26th attempt.
Ireland supporters would have been choking on their Guinness after looking at the scoreboard to see the visitors 10-0 ahead in the opening quarter of the match thanks to an early try from Conor Murray and the boot of Sexton.
Ireland made the most of an early line-out close to New Zealand's line with brilliant effect, mauling the ball superbly before Murray - despite having no blindside support - made a dart to get the ball over for the try. Sexton added the conversion and nine minutes later he added his first penalty.
The All Blacks were able to put their first points on the board through a Carter penalty in the 21st minute. As in the first Test, Ireland went off the boil when the game headed into the second quarter and as New Zealand's intensity grew, the home side forced errors at the breakdown. This allowed Carter to add two more three-pointers that closed the gap even further.
The number ten had a chance to put his team in front on the stroke of half-time, but his fourth penalty attempt didn't have the legs and allowed Ireland to head into the half-time sheds 10-9 ahead.
That lead lasted just two minutes after the resumption before Smith grabbed his first Test try after a burst from Sonny Bill Williams. Williams crashed into the Ireland pack and as the All Blacks piled in, their livewire scrum-half was driven over the line for the try that Carter duly converted.
Any thoughts that the floodgates might open as they did in Auckland seven days ago, were dispelled as Ireland rallied with Sexton adding his second penalty in another strong attacking period that had the All Blacks scrambling to make try-saving tackles.
But with that storm weathered, the momentum again swung the other way and Carter's fourth penalty extended New Zealand's lead to 19-13.
Ireland then came back with two more Sexton penalties levelling the scores to set up a dramatic finale.
Pressure mounted on New Zealand as Adam Thomson joined Kieran Read on the injured list, leaving them only two specialist loose forwards. Dagg's sin-binning for a late charge on Rob Kearney didn't help matters either for the hosts.
But at 19-all and a man down, the All Blacks rallied one last time and fittingly, Carter - a Canterbury local - was there to hold his nerve and seal the outcome.
Man of the match: For New Zealand, Dan Carter was obviously the man of the moment thanks to his match-winning drop-goal. But it's hard to look past the gallant Irish who silenced their critics with a superb effort that came within fractions of the most famous Irish win in history against the world champions. And it's for that reason why we've opted for a collective award to the entire Ireland team.
Moment of the match: With 40 seconds of the match remaining, it has to be Carter's winning drop goal.
Villain of the match: Israel Dagg's brain implosion that so nearly cost his team defeat.
The scorers:
For New Zealand:
Try: A Smith
Con: Carter
Pens: Carter 4
Drop: Carter
For Ireland:
Try: Murray
Con: Sexton
Pens: Sexton 4
Yellow card: Dagg, 72 mins (New Zealand, foul play)
New Zealand: 15 Israel Dagg, 14 Zac Guildford, 13 Conrad Smith, 12 Sonny Bill Williams, 11 Julian Savea, 10 Dan Carter, 9 Aaron Smith, 8 Kieran Read, 7 Richie McCaw (c), 6 Adam Thomson, 5 Sam Whitelock, 4 Brodie Retallick, 3 Owen Franks, 2 Andrew Hore, 1 Tony Woodcock.
Replacements: 16 Hika Elliot, 17 Ben Franks, 18 Ali Williams, 19 Sam Cane, 20 Piri Weepu, 21 Aaron Cruden, 22 Ben Smith.
Ireland: 15 Rob Kearney, 14 Fergus McFadden, 13 Brian O'Driscoll (c), 12 Gordon D'Arcy, 11 Andrew Trimble, 10 Jonathan Sexton, 9 Conor Murray, 8 Jamie Heaslip. 7 Sean O'Brien, 6 Kevin McLaughlin, 5 Donnacha Ryan, 4 Dan Tuohy, 3 Mike Ross, 2 Rory Best, 1 Cian Healy.
Replacements: 16 Sean Cronin, 17 Declan Fitzpatrick, 18 Donncha O'Callaghan, 19 Peter O'Mahony, 20 Eoin Reddan, 21 Ronan O'Gara, 22 Simon Zebo.
Referee: Nigel Owens (Wales)
By Dave Morris






Comments
kahui says...
Massive respect 2 the Irish
Posted 11:25 16th June 2012
porridge_time says...
Jp07...
Stop embarrassing yourself!
Posted 11:24 16th June 2012
Tamjon says...
Well done Ireland, as an AB fan it was great to see the way you performed, had me on the edge of my seat the whole game. Brilliant finish to the game, easily my favourite game of rugby I have seen this year.
Posted 11:20 16th June 2012
porridge_time says...
Fantastic test match Ireland were well up for it and count themselves very unlucky. The Irish certainly proved alot of people wrong myself included.
Really looking forward to next weekend.
Posted 11:15 16th June 2012
ciaran1792 says...
Robed i feel in a horrible mood now all I can say is I hope Nigel Owens doesent come to Ireland anytime soon. How do you give a penalty to a team that's getting obliterated at the scrum we were robed. I am usually humble in defeat be we were robed today. The wrong team won today is all I can say and once again denied by a terrible ref.
Posted 11:14 16th June 2012
Jmanngod says...
is it fair to raise just how poor Owens was at the ruck? he really kept the Irish in with his lax approach. Far too much leaning on the ruck with hands in from the Irish back row - it should have been punished more
Posted 11:14 16th June 2012
black47 says...
It's a lesson to all contributers to PR. On any given day any team can beat another. Theyre's been a lot of puffed out chest kiwi contributers to this forum all week stating how high the score would be. Hopefully they'll have a bit more respect for Irish rugby after this. Nigel owens has to hang his head in shame. Penalising Ireland's scrum in the last few minutes when they had AB on rack and turned was unforgivable. Franks was pushing and he was being destroyed. It was a penalty that Ireland would have got and they would have won the match. There's no glorious failure here. We were robbed of a first victory over the AB's today and no mistake
Posted 11:12 16th June 2012
tha_mai says...
Ireland lead the game for 30 minutes - 11th-41st minute only. Rest of match drawn or behind on points. People will be all heated up for a few days, some name-calling, accusations of cheating . . . they did well, but they did not win.
There is no 'deserved' a draw or 'deserved' to win. They did neither.
Next week they deserve to win by 29 points based on today's improvement on last week.
Posted 11:11 16th June 2012
hayj05 says...
God, only had to wait for 10 minutes for the the trolls to show their true spirit.
You watch that game again & you watch the Irish players getting away with holding on to the tackled players & diving straight off their feet, in contrast the AB's were clean & that's why Ireland got quick ball.
To be honest I have no problem with them getting away with it as the Irish played to the ref & that's what you've got to do. I'm just trying to put it into perspective for the ones complaining about the ref, claiming AB's are cheat etc.
Yes Ireland were unlucky not to at least get a draw but it was not fault of the refs, It's was the AB's (Dan Carters) ability to take the oppportunity for the win.
I give all credit to Ireland on a classy performance & this is from a Kiwi.
Posted 11:10 16th June 2012
NHsaints says...
So close Ireland....if anyone says the North-South gap isn't closing I think we have proof here that it is. Scotland are still on for a grandslam tour, Wales should have beaten Australia last week were it not for priestland having an off day and Ireland should have won today. I'm not going to say England should have won last week but they gave an experienced bunch of boks a good push...last year all the NH teams were losing by 20 points on their tour down south (except england but that was because we had the more experienced, older team than Australia.)
Posted 11:08 16th June 2012
new_j4a says...
@Trinats2 says..."24 - 18 to someone" Are you psychic????? (I already know you are psycho)
Posted 11:08 16th June 2012
carpelone says...
Mmmmmm,,,,,the call on that scrum with 3 muntes away was suspicious.
Ireland should have won that. Great performance by Sexton, a bit unlucky with some plays which could have been decisive.
Reddan should play, hw many of you lads were shouting to Murray just secs before he scored? I was.
Savea useless, Guildford useless, SBW useless. NZ resued by the usual fire brigade, McCaw, Carter and Smith. Cane had a good game.
Was good to see rugby back to Christchurch.
Posted 11:05 16th June 2012
Jmanngod says...
@macte... "where would the ABs be without Carter?"
.....still World Champions.
Posted 11:05 16th June 2012
UBA05 says...
Bloody good test match! Well done Ireland!
So bloody disappointed for the Irish and BOD in particular! Great player and i SO wanted that victory for him and im an AB fan! Great player! The disappointment on his face at the end was heartbreaking!
Hope this isnt viewed as poor play by the ABs from what it really was; Great Irish play!!!
Posted 11:05 16th June 2012
crunchfit says...
@Euskadi
It probably had something to do with leading with the shoulder but also striking Kearney in the face with his elbow / forearm. That on it's own is at least a yellow, so considering he did it while he was charging straight into the guy as well as trying to nail him with his whole body and shoulder, I think it was a fair call.
Posted 11:05 16th June 2012
tha_mai says...
That was a real test. Both sides will look at the video and groan - so many what-ifs'.
"How the Irish nearly broke their All Blacks duck!" says PR - but they needed to win, not draw to 'break their duck'; they were behind on points, or drawn, from Smith's try in the 42nd minute. A draw would have only achieved a chance of drawing the series next week. And a (very brief) moment's silence for a good friend who bet on a draw at half or full-time. It was close.
My un-men of the match: Ali Williams for his -3 point contribution, he did little else, and Dagg for that aerial jump at Kearney.
Hope we see Kieran Read again this season, but that they don't rush him back - maybe after last week's head knock he shouldn't have played anyway.
Posted 10:59 16th June 2012
chuckpaki says...
Hard luck to Ireland on a courageous display of rugby you did your country well up against the world champions
Posted 10:54 16th June 2012
macte says...
What would NZ be without Carter?
Posted 10:53 16th June 2012
marzie says...
I can't say there was a poor performance by anyone in green today, though Ross looked undestandably rusty in the first half, rallying mightily in the second to put the All Black scrum on the back foot. The sobering fact is, however, that Ireland are unlikely to play a New Zealand side playing that badly for quite some time. For us to win we need that perfect alignment - us playing tip-top, the AB's playing below par - and it came heartbreakingly close today. The amount of black-eyes on both sides after the game was testament to the ferocity. Finally, Sean O'Brien's turning into an openside of real substance. Well done lads and hard luck. Let's bring it again next week and take a long and well-deserved holiday afterwards.
Posted 10:49 16th June 2012
ABlack says...
Wow! well done Ireland your forwards were awesome and you probably should have won this test.
Posted 10:49 16th June 2012