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All Blacks grind past Pumas

09th October 2011 06:54

New Zealand v Argentina - Piri Weepu

Nowhere to go: Piri Weepu

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

klnutcase says...

I thought I was watching England winning ugly (apart from the fact that Nigel Owen consistently ignored All Black transgressions). And that impression was reinforced by McCaw's unbelievably arrogant post match interview, all "I" and "we", with zero credit given to the opposition efforts.

It's not often I contemplate such foolhardiness as cheering for Australians, but perhaps next weekend I may be inclined to do so.

Posted 11:18 09th October 2011

S_Dog says...

Wow, on form you would have to say Wales are looking the best

Posted 11:14 09th October 2011

demo19 says...

I was expecting alot more from the All Blacks at knock-out stage ? Jittery , Unsure and no stand-out players ! Pocock and warburton are now the stand out players in the tournament. Wales are playing awesome and France are starting to hit form mmmm it is going to be interesting !

Posted 11:11 09th October 2011

gauca says...

Hard luck to Argentina, absolute warriors the lot.

ABs too good in the end but the pumas yet again prove they will be competition come 4 nations time. Any side that prevents NZ touching down for 65 mins or so deserve all the credit on offer.

I for one will miss seeing Mario Ledesma at this level, a true servant of the game still competing with the best at Hooker at 38yrs.

Posted 11:06 09th October 2011

lostguy101 says...

@ melkdave

Not sure who you support, but in all honesty, the loss of DC is insignificant. Piri Weepu showed that he is the first kicker, with at least 3 others that can support (slade, crudden, and muliana).

At first I thought that maybe Slade should come off and Cowen come on. Hence, replacing Weepu to 1st five, and Cowen to Halfback. But all in all, the changes made were suffice.

Posted 11:02 09th October 2011

martin_dp says...

Very proud about Pumas. Too many issues before and during the RWC. New challenges coming on next year. Congrats to AB, they really deserved it.

Posted 11:00 09th October 2011

rugby_phile says...

Pheeeeeewwwwwww!!!!!! That was close and scary at times. Job done, roll on next weekend, keep taking the heart pills.

Posted 10:44 09th October 2011

lostguy101 says...

Really!!!!!!!!!

The scoreline was more than I predicted, and to be honest, I believe the scoreline was pretty much on skew of how the game panned out.

Well done to Argentina though. Their scrum and lineout made sure to test the All Blacks, as did their passion to surpass the advantage line.

Perfect warmup for the Aussie semi-final. All Blacks by 15 :)

Posted 10:43 09th October 2011

Philly says...

NZ will definitely play more confidently against OZ.

Posted 10:42 09th October 2011

golden_stateNBA says...

They did the job

A win is a win well played to the Argentina the ABs needed this. I'm glad it was not an easy game they needed this for next weeks game.

The thing I like about the ABs is they are playing this like England in 2003 one game at a time.

Next week will be tough the best team will win and greatest will win the final.

Posted 10:40 09th October 2011

melkdave says...

Very unblacks victory.looked very uncertain of themseklves and no tempo.But hats off to Argentina got the ABs to play their game stopped them getting fast ruck ball ect.In the end though the sheer class of the ABs won it for them.Also it wasnt much of a spectacle to watch either the worst of the QFs to watch .but thats by the board AB-Wallaby SF can NZ find there tempo ect is now the question .The loss of DC might yet be an issue

Posted 10:30 09th October 2011

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