Nowhere to go: Piri Weepu
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New Zealand were made to work very hard but got the job done by beating Argentina 33-10 on Sunday to advance to the Rugby World Cup semi-finals.
The All Blacks were far from their best but teams seldom are in knockout rugby. What may be a concern to them though was the loss of Colin Slade to injury. Dan Carter's fly-half replacement left the field during the first stanza with a leg injury, being replaced by third-choice Aaron Cruden.
It was a scrum-half who stole the headlines though at Eden Park as Piri Weepu kicked 21 points, missing just one attempt on the night.
Seen as the dead-cert of the quarter-finals, it was always going to be critical for the Pumas to repel any swift score from the All Blacks. Which was exactly what they did whilst forcing some early mishaps from a nervous playmaker Slade. Quickly, most of the crowd noise was Argentina's.
But on twelve minutes the early Pumas stampede was finally weathered and New Zealand posted their first calming points via the boot of Weepu. It arrived following a line-out indiscretion which allowed the nine, arguably chosen to take the kicking load off Slade, to slot from 40 metres.
In 1987, these two battled to a 46-15 scoreline in favour of the All Blacks. However, any sort of a repeat was always going to be unlikely with times markedly different in 2011. So much so that, despite an almost try from number eight Kieran Read in the left corner, Argentina were more than standing steady going into the second quarter. Only a couple of set-piece offences proved their downfall as again Weepu was successful, this time on 25 minutes.
Argentina had never been trailing by more than six points in the 2011 tournament and they soon demonstrated why with a superb break off the base of their scrum seeing number eight Leonardo Senatore pierce the All Black defence before recycled ball led to Julio Farias Cabello crashing over due to a lapse in the home guard system. Felipe Contepomi added the extra two points for a 6-7 advantage which coincided with Slade departing the action.
New Zealand needed to, and ultimately did, recompose as they captured some of that early territory they had enjoyed previously. Weepu again was on the mark from the kicking tee as the Pumas' lead was short-lived. The visitors had however silenced Eden Park and given themselves belief of the impossible. They would have to come back from 12-7 down though in the second-half following another penalty being awarded. Weepu was four from four.
Still though the Pumas would not roll over as they did not hang around with their task at hand. Marcelo Bosch it was who landed a long-range penalty that brought them back to within two points. New Zealand, who were without Test centurion Mils Muliaina for the second-half, again hit back soon after though in what was turning into a ding-dong battle. Very few had expected such a close-fought encounter to decide who would play Australia.
Nevertheless, the home side were beginning to take a grip on the game towards the hour mark and almost crossed the whitewash when Richie McCaw stretched for the post protector. Television match official Shaun Veldsman though otherwise however, in a passage that coincided with Nicolas Vergallo being shown a yellow card. Things were starting to look bleak for the Pumas, who were camped on their own line for long periods as New Zealand went for the kill. Consolation for the All Blacks was another advantage having been played during those aforementioned phases, which opened up a key two-score lead.
And that was the cushion the All Blacks needed as they continued to enjoy their territorial and phase dominance that saw Kieran Read left unattended to wide on the left wing. New Zealand were 23-10 to the good as the game approached its final ten minutes and Argentina's challenged neared its end. Weepu added another three to his personal tally in the closing stages before Thorn iced the nervous yet measured display. Australia next.
Man of the match: A near faultless kicking display from Piri Weepu sees him take the award. He marshalled well from the base and seems to have secured the nine jersey.
Moment of the match: It was tit for tat for long periods at Eden Park before Kieran Read put the game to bed with a try wide out. Argentina had a mountain to climb after that score.
Villain of the match: All clean and fair at Eden Park.
The scorers:
For Argentina:
Try: Cabello
Con: Contepomi
Pen: Bosch
For New Zealand:
Tries: Read, Thorn
Con: Cruden
Pens: Weepu 7
Yellow card: Vergallo (Argentina - 58th min - professional foul)
Argentina: 15 Martín Rodríguez, 14 Gonzalo Camacho, 13 Marcelo Bosch, 12 Felipe Contepomi (capt), 11 Horacio Agulla, 10 Santiago Fernández, 9 Nicolás Vergallo, 8 Leonardo Senatore, 7 Juan Manuel Leguizamón, 6 Julio Farias Cabello, 5 Patricio Albacete, 4 Manuel Carizza, 3 Juan Figallo, 2 Mario Ledesma, 1 Rodrigo Roncero.
Replacements: 16 Agustín Creevy, 17 Martín Scelzo, 18 Marcos Ayerza, 19 Alejandro Campos, 20 Alfredo Lalanne, 21 Lucas Gonzalez Amorosino, 22 Juan Jose Imhoff.
New Zealand: 15 Mils Muliaina, 14 Cory Jane, 13 Conrad Smith, 12 Ma'a Nonu, 11 Sonny Bill Williams, 10 Colin Slade, 9 Piri Weepu, 8 Kieran Read, 7 Richie McCaw (c), 6 Jerome Kaino, 5 Brad Thorn, 4 Samuel Whitelock, 3 Owen Franks, 2 Keven Mealamu, 1 Tony Woodcock.
Replacements: 16 Andrew Hore, 17 Ben Franks, 18 Ali Williams, 19 Victor Vito, 20 Jimmy Cowan, 21 Aaron Cruden, 22 Isaia Toeava.
Venue: Eden Park, Auckland
Referee: Nigel Owens
Assistant referees: Jonathan Kaplan, George Clancy
Television match official: Shaun Veldsman
By Adam Kyriacou at Eden Park






Comments
shaneboks2011 says...
Argentina Excellent, very good defense.
It is shameful what new zealand, arbitration conspires with any equipment that may embarrass them in their world, why not give them the title now, so you continue with the farce.The arbitrators awarded to any team that will dispute the whiners of all blacks, embarrassing!
McCaw is the dirtiest players around the world, there do not played an offense.
Posted 16:59 09th October 2011
Storm says...
@atg77 - good question!
Posted 16:53 09th October 2011
Ramage says...
@davodiablo Really did the Sunday Times really say that about Henry. That paper whose journalists have been so vitriolic over the years about NZ and NZ rugby. My oh my this has to be pure gold or an admission of their hypocrisy.
Totally agree with your comments about Hammett. One of them, Hore, is good enough to Captain the team. Once in a starting role against Canada and twice when he came on to the field and took over the Captaincy against Japan and now Argentina. Perhaps we could offer Hammett to the Poms and hire a real coach for the Hurricanes.
Posted 15:32 09th October 2011
jonesy2 says...
good effort from argentina.
clinical win, never in doubt. argentina were lucky they didnt get more chaps binned.
Posted 15:23 09th October 2011
shsvs says...
Was it Muliaina 100th test?
If so did he get a cap to match McCaw's??
Posted 14:39 09th October 2011
kahui says...
Kiwi rooster shut up!! u rly dont know what ur on about! there is a reason NZ has such a good record at home!!
Posted 13:59 09th October 2011
Daibok says...
@Kiwirooster, did you watch the Aussie/Boks game? Cooper was dire. NZ have no worries there. In fact, play Nonu at 10 and Cooper will spend the game on the dead ball line.
Posted 13:59 09th October 2011
davodiablo says...
How assured did Cruden look coming on for Slade. Interesting as it was the other way round last year in Australia.
Mark Hamnett must being feeling a bit dumb seeing how well his discarded ABs are doing under another coach, it was nearly a hurricanes back line but for SBW and Mils.
Interesting reading the Sunday Times . The journos are calling for Henry to coach England. I really can't understand these guys ,one minute we're arrogant Kiwis who play basketball rugby and the next they want us to show them how to play.
Oh yeah . 4 semi finalists and 3 NZ coaches. We must improve our French in future. Not gloating just very proud.
Posted 13:57 09th October 2011
hayj05 says...
@kiwirooster = while you are generally right about NZers holding their feelings in surely you can't say that they don't create the 16th man effect, the AB's have now won 25 in a row at Eden Park over the last 17 years & that's where all the big test matches are played.
Posted 13:56 09th October 2011
oldflanker says...
ABs better team than Pumas? Not a secret for sure. So they don't need referees helping them as today. Hated seeing that ref never punishing all the not releasing ball after tackle the black men did today.
Posted 12:58 09th October 2011
RealRugby says...
Well done Argentina for scaring the pants off 4 millions kiwis for 60 minutes.
Well done Cruden for slipping into the fist five role seamlessly
Well done Piri for an exceptional game with the boot.
And well done to Cooper for playing for Austalia
Posted 12:56 09th October 2011
melkdave says...
@lostguy101
My comment about DC was more about the undeciveisness of the AB play and their lack of tempo.DC was surly missed in giving direction and tempo to the AB play you cant deny that
Posted 12:48 09th October 2011
Ramage says...
@Internationalxv I take it you are South African and your comments about playing the referee and his interpretations is spot on as this is what it is all about. Pity so many of your countrymen don't share your opinion.The Irish fans have shown how to be gracious in defeat much more than the Bokke fans.To attack the referee as being biased to me just doesn't cut the cake especially when the reasons given are wrong in law. I could go on and say that Owens is the worst referee I've ever seen but this would be incorrect as Clancy of the 10 would be in my mind. Neither Lawrence or Owens had good games but to brand them cheats is deplorable. Referees are like players they have their off days. McCaw is not playing that well at the moment as he is injured but by some of the Bokke comments about Lawrence you would think McCaw was refereeing their gam.as I thought McCaw was the cheat. Funny isn't it that Australia were supposed to be cheating yet it was the referee who was accused of being the cheat. I too thought Owens missed so much at the breakdown and that is why I consider Joubert to be the best referee and I expect him to referee the final it will be a travesty if he doesnt. Unfortunately for South Africa they cant have him, so they must adapt to how the referee controls the game. This is part of what NZ had to do and after a few setbacks they did and prospered accordingly. The fact NZ have lost the best fly half in the world and the best NO7 in the world is injured means NZ have an uphill task on Sunday however I do believe they have the ability to pull it off against Australia. Pocock had a field day today once Brussouw left the field and remember how insipid the Aussies were without him against Ireland. As for your comments knutcase your name says it all I rest my case.
Posted 12:48 09th October 2011
hayj05 says...
@klnutcase - Seriously? Argentina got away with a lot more than the AB's did. Wondering why the AB's didn't look their usual fluent self? Because Argentina slowed down the ball all night baby. Fair play to them because they played to the ref but please don't come on here & say the AB's had the ref to thank.
Posted 12:26 09th October 2011
ruggaluva says...
after watching the other QF's you gotta say that the AB's are a bit off the mark still. I reckon either one of Wales, the Boks and possibly even the Irish would have taken a win off of them today ( french can beat anyone if they are up for it)
The Force is with NZ still because playing a combative and niggly team like the Pumas without facing any real pressure and danger is an ideal way to go into the next match.
Wobblies looked exactly that after being manhandled by the Boks - think they will be pretty tired after that.
Posted 12:06 09th October 2011
atg77 says...
If slade gets injured who gets the call up- Would it be Donald?
Posted 11:49 09th October 2011
coronach says...
lostguy101 - a little late for Mils Muliaina to begin his kicking career - 100 tests for 170 points - 34 tries. No kicks.
Posted 11:45 09th October 2011
lbtross says...
Well that's confirmed it for me: Colin Slade is like a "space saver" wheel on a car
1. You cant go at peak performance with it
2. You don't want anyone to see you
3. Only in use for short emergency periods
4. There are no guarantee's from management
5. Buyer beware
Posted 11:44 09th October 2011
rugby_phile says...
@BradS. Have you been drinking, or are you on some sort of medication?
Posted 11:43 09th October 2011
InternationalXV says...
Argentina stayed in the game purely due to their ability to slow the pace to a trickle. A less forgiving ref would of/could of blown them off the park.
Shows the value of playing the referee and his interpretations. An approach the Bokke should have taken in the earlier semi.
Posted 11:37 09th October 2011