Awesome All Blacks make French toast

By KingsofCommentary / Roar Guru

All is forgiven. The miserable memories of 2007 erased in one foul swipe of All Blacks awesomeness.

For New Zealand’s First XV, this grand occasion was not just about settling the score. It was the opportunity to deliver Captain Richie McCaw his All Blacks century on a French platter.

And deliver they did.

But first Captain McCaw and his men were forced to weather a ferocious French storm that involved almost 100 percent of territory and possession stakes weighing in France’ favour.

It lasted for all of 10 minutes before the home side snapped into action through the most likely suspect, mighty Ma’a Nonu. The powerhouse No12 penetrated midfield French defenses to create Adam Thomson’s try out wide.

Thomson’s try, the fourth of his All Black career, was the catalyst for more carnage in the form of blistering wingman Cory Jane. Running short of Weepu’s shoulder, Jane scored a glorious try in the 16th minute.

The level of execution reflected years of backyard practice between the former Wellington teammates. Carter nailed the conversion, pushing the All Blacks out to a 12-0 lead.

Minutes later and the 60,800 fans were treated to another scintillating All Blacks try, sparked this time by ace first-five Dan Carter.

The recipient of quality front-foot ball, dynamic Dan stepped cleverly off his right foot to dash deep into French territory. Up loomed Israel Dagg to receive the benefits of Carter’s carry whilst embarrassing one lone French defender. Dagg banked the try and Carter ably converted.

For the All Blacks, the first substitution of the match occurred on the 34-minute mark, Cory Jane unable to shake the effects of a heavy collision earlier on. Enter that man – the man – Sonny Bill Williams.

Counting down to halftime, France hit back through a Dimitri Yachvili penalty-goal awarded against Jerome Kaino for obstruction. It was the glimmer of hope for a French revival as both sides went to the sheds, All Blacks leading 19-3.

The message from French Coach Marc Leivremont was obvious. Wind the clock back to Rugby World Cup 2007 and a halftime score of All Blacks 13 France 3. A nod of confidence from history for which the French had set the precedent.

That history was clearly not lost on the All Blacks either. Because no less than 60-seconds into the second stanza and irresistible Israel Dagg had scored again. The benefactor this time of a trademark Sonny Bill Williams offload that set Dagg’s wheels in motion. Carter added the two, and France’ second-half assignment just got that much harder.

Five minutes later and a collapsed French scrum offered Dan Carter a long-range 3-pointer which he ably converted, extending the All Blacks out to a 29-3 lead.

Carter would strike again. This time for all the wrong reasons. Eager to exploit French defenses out wide, Carter’s peripherals didn’t detect a loitering Maxime Mermoz. The French second-five latched onto Carter’s long-range pass and scampered away unmolested to secure the try France so desperately needed.

Halfback Yachvili added value to Mermoz’ efforts and the French had a new lease of life. All Blacks leading 29-10.

Coach Graham Henry duly responded. Dispatching Andy Ellis, Andrew Hore and Ali Williams into the fray to replace weary legs. Departing players Piri Weepu and Sam Whitelock had turned in stellar performances, the former proving to be a handful for his French foes around the ruck.

The combative nature of the fixture was beginning to take its toll. Richard Kahui hobbled sideline and was soon followed by Adam Thomson, who looked in serious discomfort in the lower-leg region.

Sensing French hopes rising, Dan Carter opted for a drop-goal instead of pushing wide on a promising phase, probably not wanting to risk another intercept. The option proved to be a good one.

New Zealand’s most prolific points-scorer nailed his fourth test-match drop-goal. All Blacks 32-10.

But the French were far from finished and appeared to up the intensity and physicality as the game went on. The All Blacks met the French resistance head on. Most notably through the incredible presence of Jerome Kaino, Auckland’s powerhouse No 6 was simply impenetrable.

The most controversial moment of the match unfolded close to the end. Tony Woodcock was penalized for collapsing a 5m defensive scrum, which resulted in a conference between referee, captain and player.

The cunning of the French was sufficiently attuned to detect a distracted New Zealand XV. A sneaky penalty-tap saw Francois Trinh-Duc cross in the corner. Not without receiving a decent Sonny Bill Williams forearm for his efforts.

Much to the All Blacks surprise and at least three quarters of the Eden Park crowd, referee Rolland awarded it. Yachvili converted and the French had found respectability on the scoreboard, but still well in deficit 32-17.

Carter’s kickoff found the open arms of Ali Williams who fed Kahui’s replacement, Colin Slade. Overhauled by the French, Slade set the ball nicely for the second phase that found its way out to Sonny Bill Williams who crossed in the corner to seal the match.

The try remained unconverted, the All Black running out convincing victors, 37-17.

Said the jubilant winning captain, Richie McCaw: “We realized we had to take a step up this week, obviously from history we knew they’d be good. We had to absorb their pressure earlier on. It’s being clinical when you get your opportunity. The boys held their cool and we took our opportunities when they came.”

So McCaw becomes the 19th player to achieve 100 caps in test rugby. But the first of any All Black, a profound achievement made special in this unique setting.

“To do it in front of a home crowd at a World Cup playing the French – I couldn’t think of anything better.”

Neither could we. Congratulations. And well done the All Blacks. Assignment three completed with distinction.

The Crowd Says:

2011-09-26T21:58:46+00:00

Jerry

Guest


How the hell would I know - it's KPM. Presumably he's pissed off you're not playing Hougard at 10 or something. But on the scale of things to argue about, describing a team as flawed seems pretty low - if any team had no flaws it'd be a pretty boring tournament watching them romp to the title.

2011-09-26T13:53:59+00:00

ThelmaWrites

Guest


Hi Katz! "...looking for more Pick and Go, for me especially at the start of the game". Why? Just curious. Thanks.

2011-09-26T09:09:35+00:00

Ralph

Guest


Yeah that's a skill worth having! :)

2011-09-26T09:02:01+00:00

Ralph

Guest


Being such a small country there is only one hair dresser you see. Seeing that she has a limited ability all the blokes cuts end up being very similar, so that accounts for it We shouldn't make such a big thing of it - poor kid, she's trying as hard as she can!

2011-09-26T08:44:53+00:00

stu

Guest


the AB team aty Suncorp were a b team?

2011-09-26T08:41:12+00:00

stu

Guest


hey nick - if all pans out the wallabies will meet the abs in the semi's - they can't both make the finals

2011-09-26T08:41:03+00:00

Ralph

Guest


Well you're either saying you know more than their coach, in which case he's not very smart. Or their coach knows more than you...

2011-09-26T08:30:28+00:00

bokka

Guest


So enlighten me Jerry, why are Wales and Bokke more flawed than Wallabies and the English? No one is disputing any team has flaws, I'm just curious why SA and Wales are more flawed than Australia and England. I can't spot it, so do tell.

2011-09-26T08:13:10+00:00

Jerry

Guest


You're right, he is a bit of a fat unfit tomato. Seriously, lighten up - you honestly reckon the Boks don't have any flaws?

2011-09-26T06:54:48+00:00

thesportsguy

Guest


can someone please write an article on kingplaymaker and his responses to these threads? i think it would be quite amusing. :)

2011-09-26T06:27:50+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


As opposed to fat, unfit TPN?

2011-09-26T06:25:01+00:00

Mungehead

Guest


On balance, I would say having the ability to turn opposition teams into terrified three-year-old girls more than makes up for being an imbecile.

2011-09-26T05:47:47+00:00

bokka

Guest


fat, unfit captain .. experienced, rwc winning captain tomato .. tomarto

2011-09-26T05:12:58+00:00

Seiran

Roar Guru


You could start with the fat, unfit Bok captain.

2011-09-26T05:06:29+00:00

bokka

Guest


"I wouldn’t write off SA and Wales in the same way, they just both look somewhat flawed." Flawed? In what way exactly? and please if you will, use your favoured Wallabies as the comparison. Cheers

2011-09-26T04:55:36+00:00

Riccardo

Guest


Nonsense KPM. The Boks are hitting their straps and will deliver the grown ups version of the same up front brutality the Irish did, except with a better kick and chase game to accompany it. I think it will be the Wallabies who will struggle actually, given their injury concerns. Wales appear to be playing the best rugby they have for years and they're shaping up to play the Irish, arguably the easiest opponent of the 8, next to the Pumas. I wouldn't write off the Poms yet just quietly, they've been here before. So has that imbecile coach (Johnson used to play provincial grade here - not only that but he's lifted Bill down here too). Other than that mate, spot on...

2011-09-26T04:32:27+00:00

Riccardo

Guest


Apparently we all look the same too...

2011-09-26T04:19:36+00:00

Sage

Guest


Again Chuck ? yawn

2011-09-26T04:15:34+00:00

Sage

Guest


I wish you wouldn't Sheek. I doubt the Walla's will get through now too and if we do happen to play the AB"s you will probably win it on current form but still, you haven't quite yet. In the Walla's absence I am right behind your boys but leave the talk until after you've lifted it. Thought you would have worked that out by now in a WC. Oh, and yes, the AB's looked the goods against the French, no doubt.

2011-09-26T04:09:48+00:00

Colin N

Guest


"That’s because France turn into terrified 3 year old girls when they play England. The coach is an imbecile." If that is the case, why are you predicting that France will make the semi-finals when they are likely to play England in the quarters?

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