All Blacks 34 Australia 17 Pandemonium at
Twickenham. The All Blacks have become the first nation to defend their
World Cup title by beating Australia in another tense and agonisingly
close final.
They did it not by running away with the game like
they threatened to do just after halftime when Ma'a Nonu scored his
stunning try from 40m out. No, they had to dig extremely deep in the
end, just as they suspected they would, against a Wallabies team that
refused to give up.
At 21-17 following Tevita Kuridrani's try, this game
looked to be slipping slightly despite the almost unprecedented support
from the 80,125 in attendance and the fact that almost everything was
going in the All Blacks' favour in the first half.
In the end it
was comfortable only due to Dan Carter's incredible last 10 minutes in
an All Blacks jersey in which he dropped a goal to push the score to
24-17, and then kicked a penalty from halfway to give his side some
proper breathing space.
Beauden Barrett's try from a kick by Ben Smith as the
Wallabies chased the game was a piece of opportunism that sealed the
match once and for and sent all of the black-clad supporters at this
magnificent stadium into raptures.
At the final whistle, the All
Blacks leapt for joy, skipper Richie McCaw deservedly mobbed by his
teammates. What a test for the 34-year-old - his 148th - to bow out on.
Asked if this was the proudest moment of his career, McCaw was absolutely adamant.
"We played damn good rugby there," McCaw beamed.
"We
lost a bit of momentum in the second half but we kept our composure and
came home strong. That's been the hallmark of this team for the last
four years."
Back home Kiwi fans back home were left squirming
when a spirited Wallabies comeback narrowed the score to four points,
but on the field the All Blacks captain said he always knew which way it
was going. "I wouldn't say I was anxious. We've been in those
situations before and it was a case of not panicking and doing the
simple things. Get the ball back and get in control," he said.
"We've done that a lot of times over the years, but to do it in a World Cup, that shows the calibre of men we've got."
And
still, McCaw refuses to say whether this will be a fitting swansong to
his All Blacks career - instead deflecting questions of retirement to
pay tribute to his team mates and "a great bunch of men."
"I still don't want it to end. At the moment, I'm still part of this team. How could you get enough of this?" he said.
"I'll
worry about that after today, I'm just going to enjoy having played a
great World Cup final with a great bunch of men - and having been able
to wear this jersey again.
"I don't think I could ever have enough of it."
The
All Blacks had heroes across the park and they needed them as the
Wallabies mounted their extraordinary comeback from 21-3 down.
They
wanted to attack to win this match, to win their title back, but in the
end they had to defend, and it was something to behold.
They
were in a hole with Ben Smith controversially sinbined for a lifting
tackle on Drew Mitchell. David Pocock's try from the subsequent rolling
maul put the Aussies on a roll and momentum was shifting and that gained
momentum when Kuridrani went over.
If Barrett's try was crucial -
so were the efforts of his fellow bench play Sonny Bill Williams. On
for Conrad Smith at halftime, he had two touches and made two offloads,
the second sent Nonu away, the second-five - another veteran bowing out -
stepping Kurtley Beale and pushing off Mitchell on way.
Willie
Apiata has been with the All Blacks at this tournament, just as he was
at the last one, and the "Who Dares, Wins" motto of his former SAS days
could have been applied to the men in black.
The started as they
meant to go on - with a relentless line-speed on attack and a
determination to test the Wallabies in every way they could. The impacts
in the early exchanges were brutal.
From the fury of the haka, with wing Julian Savea
looking particularly fired up (with the help of Aussie coach Michael
Cheika's notes indiscreetly shown on the eve of the test maybe?), the
All Blacks kicked off and immediately smashed fullback Israel Folau and
flanker Michael Hooper in short order. The battle lines were drawn. They
had all the ball and all the territory, and while their probes and
sorties were shut down by the excellent Wallabies defence, the
Australians, who had one less day to prepare for this showdown, had to
pay for their efforts at some stage.
Carter and Bernard Foley
swapped penalties, before the All Blacks No10 kicked another and then
another - the third following a suspiciously forward pass from Nehe
Milner-Skudder right in front of his country's former World Cup nemesis
Wayne Barnes on the sideline.
And then, the first dagger blow,
just before halftime. Commander and chief Richie McCaw got the ball in
his hands in his own half twice in succession and then the All Blacks
were on the attack, sweeping to the right where Conrad Smith, Aaron
Smith and McCaw again combined to put Milner-Skudder over in the corner,
a try superbly converted by Carter.
At 16-3 down at halftime, this was an almost impossible margin for the Wallabies to come back from.
They
had lost second-five Matt Giteau to concussion from a Brodie Retallick
charge, and lock Kane Douglas. But comeback they did and it just made
the All Blacks' efforts in defending their title more noteworthy.
Who dares wins, indeed. All Blacks 34 (Nehe Milner-Skudder, Ma'a Nonu, Beauden Barrett tries; Dan Carter 4 pens, 2 cons, dropped goal) Australia 17 (David Pocock, Tevita Kuridrani tries; Bernard Foley pen, 2 cons) Halftime: 16-3.
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