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Australia

Wallabies win 18-18

20th October 2012 13:00

Maa Nonu

Ma'a Nonu: Prepares for the hit

Australia ended New Zealand's 16-match winning streak with an 18-all draw at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane on Saturday.

Though honours were shared by the trans-Tasman rivals, Australia will treat this result as a mental victory seeing that Robbie Deans' troops weren't given a chance in hell of matching the All Blacks prior to kick-off.

In a match decided exclusively by penalties, Kurtley Beale and Mike Harris combined for 18 points for Australia, while Daniel Carter slotted six penalties for the All Blacks.

But with the scores locked at 18 points apiece at the death, the world champions were camped in the Australia's 22 and Carter was given one last opportunity to kick a drop-goal to hand the All Blacks victory.

His shot was just wide, however, and the match ended in a hard-fought draw.

New Zealand were bidding to join the 1969 All Blacks and 1998 Springboks with 17 successive victories but were once again foiled by the Wallabies, who ended New Zealand's unbeaten 15-match run in a 26-24 win in Hong Kong in 2010.

Harris was on great form in the first half, kicking all his four penalty goal attempts to give the under-strength Wallabies a 12-6 half-time advantage.

The Wallabies began well when they charged down a clearing kick in the opening seconds only for the ball to elude Adam Ashley-Cooper over the dead-ball line.

Carter kicked the All Blacks to a 6-3 lead before New Zealand came the closest to scoring in the first half through winger Hosea Gear. Israel Dagg's kick ahead was just forced dead by Harris with Gear in hot pursuit midway through the half.

Wallabies' blindside flanker Scott Higginbotham could be in hot water after his scuffle with All Blacks skipper Richie McCaw. Higginbotham appeared to knee McCaw in the head to trigger the skirmish before appearing to head-butt the All Blacks skipper on the ground. Both players were cautioned by referee Craig Joubert.

Joubert made good on his warning of 'next one goes' when he gave All Blacks prop Tony Woodcock a yellow card for repeated ruck infringements on the half-time siren.

Harris kicked his fourth penalty to give the Wallabies a six-point buffer at the turnaround. Beale lifted the Wallabies' confidence even further with a prodigious penalty from just inside his own half for a 15-6 lead.

But Carter kicked his third penalty and the Wallabies lost openside flanker Michael Hooper to the sin-bin after taking out All Blacks scrum-half Aaron Smith after he had kicked ahead.

Carter then pulled New Zealand to within three points with the resulting penalty in the 56th minute.

Australia lost a line-out on their throw giving the All Blacks possession inside their quarter and they mounted successive mauls before they received a penalty for Carter to level the scores at 15-15 with 13 minutes left.

New Zealand got the big breakthrough when Adam Ashley-Cooper spilled Aaron Cruden's high kick and Nick Phibbs was in an off-side position in picking up the ball for an All Blacks penalty.

Carter kicked his sixth penalty nine minutes from time to edge New Zealand in front and in sight of victory. But Harris levelled with his fifth penalty with five minutes left in what proved to be the final score.

Man of the match: Kurtely Beale was Australia's most dangerous player and skipper Nathan Sharpe led from the front, but Kieran Read once again loomed large for the All Blacks. The number eight was heavily involved throughout and deservedly named the official man-of-the-match at Suncorp Stadium.

Moment of the match: Geez, take your pick! But in the end it just has to be Carter's last-gasp drop-goal attempt.

Villain of the match: Two yellow issued - one to Tony Woodcock and the other to Michael Hooper. But the real villain that got away was Scott Higginbotham after his headbutt on Richie McCaw.

The scorers:

For Australia:
Pens: Beale 2, Harris 4

For New Zealand:
Pens: Carter 6

Yellow cards: Tony Woodcock (NZ), Michael Hooper (Aus)

The teams:

Australia: 15 Mike Harris, 14 Nick Cummins, 13 Ben Tapuai, 12 Pat McCabe, 11 Adam Ashley-Cooper, 10 Kurtley Beale, 9 Nick Phipps, 8 Wycliff Palu, 7 Michael Hooper, 6 Scott Higginbotham, 5 Nathan Sharpe (c), 4 Sitaleki Timani, 3 James Slipper, 2 Tatafu Polota Nau, 1 Benn Robinson.
Replacements: 16 James Hanson, 17 Sekope Kepu, 18 Kane Douglas, 19 Dave Dennis, 20 Liam Gill, 21 Brett Sheehan, 22 Drew Mitchell.

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 Charlie Faumuina, 2 Keven Mealamu, 1 Tony Woodcock.
Replacements: 16 Andrew Hore, 17 Owen Franks, 18 Luke Romano, 19 Victor Vito, 20 Piri Weepu, 21 Aaron Cruden, 22 Ben Smith.

Referee: Craig Joubert (South Africa)

Comments

jmanngod says...

As the ABs themselves noted: To the Aussies they were strutting around like they had won (rather than almost bottle it at the end) - to the ABs it was like a loss.

It says it all really. To the Aussie players a draw, at home, in a dead rubber is about the best they can hope for against this present AB team (certainly the best the world has ever seen). To the ABs it is a timely bitch-slap that will re-focus them towards 2015.

Posted 21:44 21st October 2012

Ripzy007 says...

@PR is this for real or you just making fun of the Aussies with the heading...Its a DRAW

Posted 20:31 21st October 2012

KiwiJoe says...

Well played the Wobblies, we should,ve expected the dogged old Aussie Battler to emerge sooner or later, just wish it was against someone else...

But it,s still a case of "the prisoner assaulting the jailer, but he,s still in jail"

and they need to build on this with an unbeaten Autumn Internationals (a far better tournament now than the sorry 6N ) and a series win against the Lions, with The Dingo in charge of course, no one could have done any better.

The All Blacks will be see this as a loss, bad news for their opponents in the autumn, but a great way to start building the next winning sequence.

Posted 19:21 21st October 2012

KiwiJoe says...

Well played the Wobblies, we should,ve expected the dogged old Aussie Battler to emerge sooner or later, just wish it was against someone else...

But it,s still a case of "the prisoner assaulting the jailer, but he,s still in jail"

and they need to build on this with an unbeaten Autumn Internationals (a far better tournament now than the sorry 6N ) and a series win against the Lions, with The Dingo in charge of course, no one could have done any better.

The All Blacks will be see this as a loss, bad news for their opponents in the autumn, but a great way to start building the next winning sequence.

Posted 19:06 21st October 2012

Wallaroo says...

Grrrr had to watch the reply, I hate hospitals. Well done to both the Wallabies and AB's, an extremely hard fought test.

Would have been great to win albeit a draw is better than a loss.

Positives for Australia from this game, are:

Cummins - has proved his worth and is a must for the future Wallabies.

Harris - played extremely well and proved his versatility.

McCabe - as solid as rock.

Beale - coming back to form rapidly.

Palu - with a couple more games will be his effective self.

Must say though we were extremely lucky to only have 1 sin binning against us.

Posted 13:13 21st October 2012

AWEBLAX says...

Shyte I had the AB s by 15 well atleast I got the 15 right,(hehe) anywho Congrats to Sharpie and the Wallabies, well played gentlemen thankyou and goodnite.....

Posted 11:26 21st October 2012

new_j4a says...

@Lacroix, What are you going on about......hang on a minute. Name says it all. No point in arguing the Laws of the game and referee performance with an eye gouger....best you go back to Pétanque where you actually know what you are talking about.

Posted 11:11 21st October 2012

golden_statenba says...

@Toulousain

Yep I don't think we will hear to many complaints he did a great job. He is probably the top ref in my opinion.

Bokavenger is obviously delirious with his teams final standing in the competition.

Lots of positives looking forward for Boks tho.

Posted 10:39 21st October 2012

new_j4a says...

@Bambo, have a virtual pint on me

Posted 09:44 21st October 2012

Lacroix says...

Another execrable performance by Craig Joubert. He really is abysmal. Ironic of course because without Joubert's craven home town spineless selective blindness the ABs would have lost the world cup final.

Have to give some credit to Australia who played with courage. Mostly.

Posted 08:55 21st October 2012

tweedledee49 says...

@Uglea, not so fast....

Posted 08:06 21st October 2012

Cats_Meow says...

@georgesmith... for the love of God, enough of the Richie McCheat rubbish, you're an embarrassment mate

Posted 07:46 21st October 2012

kiwihelpgeek says...

Wallabies win? Well, I suppose that i true since every other team is so far behind the All Blacks that for Southern Hemisphere teams a draw feels like a win and for the Northern Hemisphere teams getting within 7 points will feel like a win.

But well done to the Wallabies. They bought it to the All Blacks this time round.

Next bit of interest is just how big the wet bus ticket is that they hit Higginbotham with, maintaining the status quo that if you commit any sort of foul on Ritchie McCaw you may well be unlucky enough to just feel a slight breeze as the finger gets waved in your face.

Posted 05:45 21st October 2012

cuw3100 says...

hmmm unimpressive display by S H'botham and Referee.

R McCaw must be held at he highest esteem for so many players to take so many cheap shots at him. Find it funny that no one really cares to wave handbags when he is standing LOL. chicken

how could u miss so much ref , seriously. yellow for not releasing tackled player; hellow for knee and headbutt. This week is bad for international sport.

So many thugs got away with so much , in football and now rugby.

Posted 04:19 21st October 2012

jonesy2 says...

well this is the last thing the euro teams wanted! hahaha. now they have the wallabies who just drew with the world champions with a second/third string side and an all blacks team who recieved a wake up call and a loss that they needed headed into the spring tour.

Posted 03:51 21st October 2012

georgesmith says...

Fix -match by SANZAR. S. Higginbottom did nothing wrong. It is part of the game. He was committed and R. McCheat keeps cheating so what can players do. Same as the Springboks prop who whacked the bloody cheat for cheating. R. McCheat should be banned from rugby instead.

Posted 02:44 21st October 2012

isthatrightref says...

Had Carter kicked in out in the 81st min I'd probably have thought of this as a loss avoided, but with the missed drop in the 85th it somehow feels more like a win not taken.

Great contest, shame about Higginbotham's cheap shots, can't wait to read how Deans had nothing to do with it & how useless Sharpe is etc.

Two quibbles: why did CJ not have the TMO confirm that Harris had in fact forced the ball - I think he probably did but wouldn't have hurt to make sure & avoid feeding the conspiracy nutters; and why did the TMO not act on the Higginbotham incidents - isn't this the sort of thing they're supposed to be there for?

Lastly, wishing Hoani McDonald a speedy & full recovery. Kia kaha.

Posted 01:36 21st October 2012

kpe12 says...

Not releasing the tackled player cost the ABs this game, such a pedantic rule, especially when often someone makes the tackle low and the second player knocks them over and starts scavenging at the same time. (Can someone clarify who the tackler is for me from the rugby laws or experience as a ref.)

Well done the the Wallabies, they played a smarter game plan today and should have taken the last act of the game. Beale needed to demand the ball for the DG, he's still feeling that lack of confidence from earlier in the year but getting there.

ABs DG would have been successful if Piri had of served up a half decent pass, Carter had to snatch at it to catch it.

Posted 00:52 21st October 2012

DGreyling says...

'Wallabies win'? Ye gods, is the state of Australian rugby so bad that Wobbly fans are now counting 'mental victories'? That's a very slippery slope. With a few more mental victories (or, far worse, moral victories), the Aussies may grow comfortable with the same role of 'plucky loser' that England have perfected during their long, giggling slide into the sea.

Let's be clear: there is no such thing as a mental victory, nor does anyone ever 'deserve to win.' The only way to victory is by scoring more points than your opponent, something neither side managed to do in Brisbane. Certainly, McCheats was well aware of that fact, which is why he had the sack to call for a scrum after full-time.

Australia played well, but don't be silly . . .

Posted 00:42 21st October 2012

startledwombat says...

To the poster who asked "why is it always McCaw???"

Um, because he's among the best on the planet right now and if you want your team to go forward you have to set up several rucks until you trap him in the bottom and if you can distract him from fetching the ball with some argy-bargy or slow him down by wounding him then you might actually get some go-forward.

Posted 00:40 21st October 2012

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