Carter saves All Blacks from gutsy Irish
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A last-minute Daniel Carter drop goal spared the All Blacks’ blushes and edge out a resilient Ireland 22-19 in the second Test in Christchurch on Saturday night.
Carter had failed with two previous attempts, but at the third time of asking the star five-eighth was successful to steer the sub-par hosts home at the death in bitterly cold conditions.
Written off before the match after copping a 42-10 hiding in the first Test, the Irish led 10-9 at halftime and refused to yield on an emotion-charged night in the quake-ravaged city.
Roared on by dozens of Irish fans who have made Christchurch their home, Ireland threatened to snaffle their first-ever Test win over the All Blacks in their 26th attempt.
Jonathon Sexton’s fourth penalty had levelled the scores at 19-19 with just over 10 minutes left and when the All Blacks were reduced to 14 men after Israel Dagg was yellow-carded they sensed their winless drought may be about to end.
But Carter, who chalked up 17 points, kept his cool to reward the Christchurch fans, watching their first Test in the city since earthquakes wrecked the city.
The hosts lacked the precision they displayed in Auckland and the passionate Irish lifted their game to outplay the error-strewn world champions for much of the match.
The Irish had promised they would up the intensity after being run off the park a week ago and they were true to their word.
They denied Kieran Read in the corner early on and then opened the scoring with their first foray into the All Blacks’ quarter with a try to halfback Conor Murray.
Sexton’s conversion gave the tourists a 7-0 lead after 12 minutes and he extended their advantage with his first penalty before the All Blacks got on the board through a Carter three-pointer.
Two more Carter penalties closed the gap as Ireland resorted to infringing to stop the All Blacks getting a roll on and a fourth effort fell just short as the tourists went to the break with a 10-9 lead.
That lead lasted just two minutes after the resumption before livewire halfback Aaron Smith grabbed his first Test try after a burst from Sonny Bill Williams.
Any thoughts that the floodgates might open were dispelled by Sexton who closed the gap with his boot and then traded penalties with Carter before his fourth success of the night levelled the scores to set up a dramatic finale.
But fittingly Carter, a Canterbury local, held his nerve to break Irish hearts.
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June 16th 2012 @ 8:01pm
Frank O'Keeffe said | June 16th 2012 @ 8:01pm | Report comment
Mamba! That’s pretty huge when you think about it!
Ireland have never beaten New Zealand, let alone IN NEW ZEALAND!
Every All Black side is charged with the pedigree of continuing that dominance.
Credit to Carter for going for the drop goal.
Also credit to Ireland, who are always good for punching above their weight.
June 16th 2012 @ 8:10pm
ohtani's jacket said | June 16th 2012 @ 8:10pm | Report comment
Carter only got another shot at it because the Irish touched his first attempt. It was pretty lucky considering Carter is a poor drop goal exponent.
June 16th 2012 @ 11:43pm
Sylvester said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:43pm | Report comment
Meaning it possibly was going over barring the touch?
June 17th 2012 @ 5:39am
ohtani's jacket said | June 17th 2012 @ 5:39am | Report comment
Would you put money on it? We’re so poor at setting up drop goal attempts.
June 17th 2012 @ 12:23pm
ohtani's jacket said | June 17th 2012 @ 12:23pm | Report comment
Actually, watching the highlights Owens was completely in the way of the pass.
June 16th 2012 @ 9:21pm
abnutta said | June 16th 2012 @ 9:21pm | Report comment
This is the 50th time New Zealand has won a Test Match after trailing at Halftime. The 4th time against Ireland alone. The previous comebacks being in 2006, 2001 and 1963.
With that victory “Sir” Richard McCaw has been on the winning side in 93 of his 105 test matches equaling the World Record held by George Gregan who won 93 of 139.
June 16th 2012 @ 9:28pm
sposer said | June 16th 2012 @ 9:28pm | Report comment
Great to see nz grind out a tight win.One thing we have learnt is that a wins a win whether its by 1 point or 20.
June 16th 2012 @ 10:16pm
Damo said | June 16th 2012 @ 10:16pm | Report comment
Ireland can beat anyone on their day.
June 16th 2012 @ 10:34pm
MattyP said | June 16th 2012 @ 10:34pm | Report comment
Apart from NZ, it seems.
June 16th 2012 @ 11:09pm
Mick said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:09pm | Report comment
haha, exactly. It was Ireland’s day today, but they still fell that tiny bit short.
June 16th 2012 @ 11:12pm
Justin2 said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:12pm | Report comment
Take off the halo Richie you dirty dog…
June 16th 2012 @ 11:17pm
allblackfan said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:17pm | Report comment
another mccaw supporter (not!!).
Go back to NRL, Justin2. You’re a broken record and few people want to listen.
June 16th 2012 @ 11:20pm
PeterK said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:20pm | Report comment
mccaw deserved a yellow for the knees to darcy back when darcy was catching a high ball, clearly dangerous. Very lucky to just be penalised.
June 17th 2012 @ 6:48am
Kuruki said | June 17th 2012 @ 6:48am | Report comment
Rubbish. McCaw had his eyes on the ball, the Irish player chose to impede his jump and that is exactly what he did, the result was unfortunate but McCaw had every right to attack the ball as he did. The Irish player made no attempt to take the ball he only intention was to block.
June 17th 2012 @ 7:14am
Justin2 said | June 17th 2012 @ 7:14am | Report comment
He was nowhere near the ball, looked at Darcy and went bang. I was watching with kiwis and they couldn’t believe what he did. It was intentional, crude and dangerous
June 17th 2012 @ 7:29am
Xiedazhou said | June 17th 2012 @ 7:29am | Report comment
Agreed, McCaw’s act was cynical and dangerous, and i hope the citing commisioners have a look at it (not likely though given they are majority Kiwi). And how poor was his handling? He dropped the ball numerous times, and was sllow and ineffective in general play. The end is nigh for McCaw, that much is obvious.
June 17th 2012 @ 7:49am
abnutta said | June 17th 2012 @ 7:49am | Report comment
Ineffective?
72m with ball in hand. The most of any player out there. SBW second with 51m. Thomson with 45m.
Top Irishman was Sexton with 39m then O’Brien with 33m.
McCaw hit 19 Rucks twice as many as second placed Whitelock with 9. The best Irishman in this department was Obrien and Healy with a distant 7.
He did lose the Ball 4 times but that was only 1 more than Kearney. The total turnover count was NZ 12 IRE 11.
Tis not “OBVIOUS” that the end is nigh for “Sir” Richard McCaw. On the other hand you seem to be “OBLIVIOUS” to the facts.
June 17th 2012 @ 8:16am
Justin2 said | June 17th 2012 @ 8:16am | Report comment
ABNutta – Outside of the drops from RM and his crude foul play I though he was having a cracker. He stole at least one ball at the breakdown and was tireless in his ball carrying.
Other on here have said he was ordinary but I thought he was pretty good outside the above. Countless times he took the ball up when it appeared no one else would. He led from the front. Cant deny that.
June 17th 2012 @ 9:49am
Kuruki said | June 17th 2012 @ 9:49am | Report comment
Maybe the reason he was not able to reach the ball was because Darcy stopped infront of him with no intention of taking the ball only of impeding McCaws run. Don’t stand in front of a bus and then blame the driver when you get run over.
June 17th 2012 @ 9:54am
Justin2 said | June 17th 2012 @ 9:54am | Report comment
He doesn’t need to move out of the way, your analogy is bizarre. McCaw knew what he was doing, he is a smart footballer. The lack of defense from the NZ crew on here would also suggest he was in the wrong…
June 17th 2012 @ 11:50am
abnutta said | June 17th 2012 @ 11:50am | Report comment
He was in the wrong and was justifiably penalised. No more than that needs to be said about it.
June 16th 2012 @ 11:24pm
Justin2 said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:24pm | Report comment
So you’re proud of that are you? NRL? What are you on about?
. Go home to NZ and take their jam roll please champ,
June 16th 2012 @ 11:15pm
Bazza all black said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:15pm | Report comment
I was at the game and my bottom puckered in the last ten minutes.
The Irish were great, we were shite and we’re lucky to win.
I have learned at one point is a win but following my comments over the first win to Aussie over woes, the abs should be embarrassed with the win…
June 17th 2012 @ 5:45am
ohtani's jacket said | June 17th 2012 @ 5:45am | Report comment
We didn’t have a lot of attacking opportunities as we’re not winning turnover ball at the breakdown and Ireland didn’t kick to us as much so there weren’t the same counter attacking opportunities as last week. Our handling really let us down (particularly McCaw), but it’s the loose forwards that are bothering me. They’re not playing well enough.
June 16th 2012 @ 11:16pm
Parisien said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:16pm | Report comment
Poor Ireland. They came close. One day they’ll win. O’ Driscoll won’t want to retire until then. The All Blacks maintain their winning aura.
June 16th 2012 @ 11:23pm
Pot Hale said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:23pm | Report comment
If they can bring the same game again next week…..
June 17th 2012 @ 3:52pm
katzilla said | June 17th 2012 @ 3:52pm | Report comment
The All Blacks or Irish? Or both?
June 16th 2012 @ 11:47pm
Sylvester said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:47pm | Report comment
All Blacks have in the past been accused of not wanting to win ugly. This was the stuff successful test teams are made of.
Irish were fantastic, All Blacks will def want to be better in the third test.
Anyone think Dagg was hard done by? Looked to me he was airborne by the time the kick was made, in which case how does he defy the laws of physics?
June 16th 2012 @ 11:52pm
allblackfan said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:52pm | Report comment
it was the right call, S. Shouldn’t have used his elbow which is why he was binned.
Y card yes, w card no
June 17th 2012 @ 12:06am
Sylvester said | June 17th 2012 @ 12:06am | Report comment
Looked like Dagg turned his body to brace for contact, which is a natural reaction. In that case, Kearney running into the arm/elbow would have been incidental. These incidents often seem worse at full speed which is why the refs should be cautious about going overboard with cards.
I also have to question Owens’ blocking call for the Smith box kick in the first half. That happens at almost every ruck. The ABs did it several times before and after that penalty as did the Irish.
It was almost as bizarre as Smith getting pinged for not feeding straight in the last test. Seemed abitrary given Smith fed one much wonkier immediately after right in front of Owens.
June 17th 2012 @ 12:15am
Original Ben S said | June 17th 2012 @ 12:15am | Report comment
Pretty much looked like Dagg purposefully left his elbow in.
June 17th 2012 @ 6:56am
Kuruki said | June 17th 2012 @ 6:56am | Report comment
I thought a penalty would have been good enough. Dagg was airborne as the player kicked the ball. In a situation like that what else are you supposed to do? body slam him? fly over his head? stop in mid air? bracing yourself for impact is a natural reaction, everyone does it.
June 17th 2012 @ 7:32am
Riccardo said | June 17th 2012 @ 7:32am | Report comment
Thought so too Kururki.
Penalty should have been enough.
June 17th 2012 @ 7:13am
abnutta said | June 17th 2012 @ 7:13am | Report comment
Yellow Card definitely. No arms. If you’re gonna be brave and contest the ball in the air you can’t just change your mind and in midair and brace yourself for impact without thought for safety of the defending player.
June 17th 2012 @ 9:08am
Kuruki said | June 17th 2012 @ 9:08am | Report comment
Had he used his arms he would have been pinged for a late tackle, Which he was not trying to achieve. He went for the charge down, missed his shot and braced for impact, he had no intention of tackling the player, i fail to see how anything would have changed had he not braced for impact other then probably having two injured players.
June 17th 2012 @ 11:52am
abnutta said | June 17th 2012 @ 11:52am | Report comment
He should have used his arms to continue the charge down attempt and thereafter put himself in danger of his return to earth going pear-shaped. He should not have as he did chickened out at the last second and think only of his own safety by bracing himself for impact with no regard for Kearney.
June 16th 2012 @ 11:51pm
bluerose said | June 16th 2012 @ 11:51pm | Report comment
i was screaming at the tv screen for O’Gara or Sexton to go the DG everytime they enter the AB’s territory, they could have come out with probably 3DGs, those opportunities will never come again.