All Blacks best Springboks in one of rugby's greatest-ever matches

By Fili S Tupua / Roar Rookie

The All Blacks have once again demonstrated their unparalleled dominance with an incredible 38-27 triumph over the Springboks in Johannesburg.

From the magnificent Test match at Eden Park to the spectacular Ellis Park atmosphere producing a combined crowd of 100,000-plus, the All Blacks have lifted the bar to yet another level.

In an amazing see-sawing and torrid affair at high altitude, the visitors were still adept in suffocating the hosts in their own backyard to confirm their status as far and away the best team in the world.

New Zealand are once again the titleholders of The Rugby Championship, with an astounding record of being unbeaten two years’ straight.

It is an unbelievable achievement, continuing their streak with arduous travels from the rough underworld environments of Buenos Aires or Rosario, Argentina to the demanding and daunting mixture of gases be it in Cape Town, Bloemfontein or Durban, South Africa.

The return game – at the 1995 World Cup final venue – would probably rate as one of the greatest games ever.

It was played at a furious pace, with both sides determined to put on a blazing show to the point of exhaustion.

The relentless intensity, sheer passion and no-holds-barred from the number one and two ranked teams was absolutely phenomenal and neither gave an inch throughout.

Some wonderful running rugby made it a memorable game and both nations should be applauded for taking risks and constructing the kind of rugby that needs to be played.

Hard and physical, extremely tough but fair, and thoroughly entertaining.

After Springbok five-eighth Morne Steyn put his team on the scoreboard with his first penalty goal, New Zealand struck when quick hands delivered to the ever-improving Ben Smith, who spooked through like a ghost to beat four would-be tacklers and scorea beautiful individual try.

But evergreen Bryan Habana used his cool head, blinding speed and experience to reply with consecutive tries of his own, before a cruel hamstring injury effectively shut down his impact.

However, it would be difficult for the boisterous and over-exuberant Springboks’ fans to argue any doubts about their team’s loss.

They need to be reminded that premature celebrations should only be permitted until the 81st minute, when the game is sealed in the bag, not when their team is only one point ahead barely 20mins into the game.

Getting over-excited gets you nowhere, especially when the All Blacks are in town.

Unlike the debacle at Auckland, when an array of indiscretion cards were handed out by French referee Romain Poite, Welshman Nigel Owens this time could only find faults in the All Blacks, with the sin-binning of Liam Messam and Ben Franks during the second half, the latter via a dumb attempt of a swinging arm.

Coach Steve Hansen threw his radio mouth piece in disgust.

The South Africans could only smirk although hulking prop Tendai Mtawarira surprisingly escaped a harsher penalty when he rammed his shoulder into Richie McCaw – who wasn’t even looking – flush in the face at a ruck.

The ultra-tough and indestructible McCaw could only rise to his feet in bewilderment and carry on like only he does.

Nothing fazes the greatest All Blacks’ captain – he just can’t be bothered anymore – yet proves that he is certainly not a protected species as some naysayers continue to ramble on about.

McCaw even seized a would-be turnover that was ignored by Owens to award a penalty for not releasing. Half his luck.

To return from a knee injury that even younger players would surrender their whole season to, McCaw continues to defy belief in playing the full 80 minutes and ensuring a deserving win, courtesy of his indisputable leadership and presence.

Messam was superb not only in savouring two tries of his own, but the outstanding Chiefs’ skipper was also instrumental in twice destabilising the Springboks’ strength – the maul.

Kieran Read was fittingly man-of-the-match, with his usual bustling runs and powerful defence, stealing a couple of turnovers on top of an admirable all-round performance.

The tight five steadied the ship, with props Tony Woodcock and Charlie Faumuina even tackling like dobermans, while tall timbers Sam Whitelock and Brodie Retallick stood over their counterparts and diffused any situation that potentially could have led to mayhem.

Hooker Andrew Hore should re-read the new manual of the laws of rugby union, since he embarrassingly conceded silly penalties thinking he would out-smart the referee with his old-school tricks.

I must admit to being somewhat bemused that Keven Mealamu was not even considered, yet there was a controversial incident during actual play, when officials suddenly questioned his name being on the teamsheet (an inexcusable over-sight by New Zealand Manager Darren Shand, might I add).

Aaron Cruden was quiet by his standards and he will regret his unforced-error that led to one of Habana’s tries.

Beauden Barrett meanwhile came on and carried out another fantastic display, scoring a much-needed try at a crucial moment and also saving one, after he sprinted from a mile to run down the dangerous Willie le Roux who was heading for the corner unopposed.

Aaron Smith has improved his own game dramatically to overtake both Fourie du Preez and Will Genia to be the world’s best halfback.

As the ebony and ivory combination since Bernie Fraser and Stu Wilson, veterans Ma’a Nonu and Conrad Smith showed why they hold the world record of their midfield partnership with the hardcore values in the backline structure that they maintain with absolute calmness and composure.

Yet without the world’s best five-eighth in Dan Carter, halfback Smith, Nonu and fullback Israel Dagg shared the various kicking game with aplomb.

‘The Bus’ Julian Savea was in the thick of it all day and he would be satisfied with his input despite being the only winger on the field not to get over the try line.

The All Blacks juggernaut later this year will once again crush and demolish their awaiting European opponents, including a sojourn in Japan.

The England fixture in London is obviously marked down for revenge after last year’s humiliating defeat by the cocky Poms. It’s payback time.

With an already cluttered files of an extremely proud history, the extraordinary accomplishments of the All Blacks continues as they are well and truly on its’ way to being the first team to go through the entire year undefeated.

The Crowd Says:

2013-10-08T09:09:14+00:00

Rick Karaitiana

Guest


One of the Best games of Rugby I have watched,( Although the 1997 Boks vs AB's at Ellis Park ) for me was the Best, the Ref also gets top marks for letting the game flow, and we have to thank him for the game we watched, two truly great rugby teams showed the World how Rugby is played, other Rugby Nations will take a lot from that game.

2013-10-08T04:58:48+00:00

moaman

Guest


I must admit I was so pleasantly surprised that a Ref I can't stand did such a great job--that I overlooked the glaring short-comings and praised him to the heavens.

2013-10-08T04:57:07+00:00

moaman

Guest


Hardly overlooked Gavin; I have never seen a Ref so eulogised on the Roar!

2013-10-08T04:52:00+00:00

moaman

Guest


I don't always agree with Barnes but I quite like having him in the comm box-especially before and after the games.

2013-10-08T04:36:23+00:00

Crazy Grey

Guest


Ye ive now accepted that we aussies have the worst commentary team out of the three nations now. It's so partisan I don't know how other nations could stand to listen. Such a let down since the gordon bray glory days. I know he still exists but I hate ads.

2013-10-07T11:40:32+00:00

PC from Perth

Guest


That's a big call on Smith as the world's best half back. I agree he is good but he isn't there yet. Fourie got his hands at the base of the scrum too often for mine which caused him to fumble and very nearly give up a try.

2013-10-07T03:37:44+00:00

DubaiKiwi

Guest


Yes the ref had a great game, didnt send off the beast when he should have, was too,scared after Eden park. Let a try be awarded without restarting play. Sent off Messam for coming from the side, like that doesnt happen every ruck n maul. If that had happened to SA the calls baying for blood would have been heard, as well as the protected species the AB's . But since it happened to the AB's then it must be allright and the ref was great. Now dont get me wrong i thought the game was great, and it was a ok performance from the ref, but that only highlights how poor the refs have been.

2013-10-07T01:15:51+00:00

Gavin Fernie

Roar Pro


One man who made it possible for the epic at Ellis Park to restore one's faith in modern rugby has been overlooked. The referee; he did a bloody good job. Hats off to him.

2013-10-06T18:23:39+00:00

mania

Guest


how could the boks not be fit enough at high altitude in their home?

2013-10-06T16:41:56+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


Probably not a lot, I don't think England have anything to fear from these two teams. Oh hang on....

2013-10-06T15:47:48+00:00

Rotuma Island

Guest


agree a great Test but my all time favourite was the 2000 Bledisloe Cup.

2013-10-06T13:53:51+00:00

Wal the Hooker

Guest


Nice one Harry... May this great rivalry continue. Both teams splendid

2013-10-06T12:44:47+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Yes, it takes more than one great team to make a great Test. SA did a lot; but fell short on a few first-time tackles, failed to roll a serious maul, didn't finish 2 "certain" tries, and made untimely errors. NZ defended the maul brilliantly, was clinical in the finish (except Nonu v. Kolisi), and made red zone tackles. NZ fitter. More composed. Lovely match.

2013-10-06T11:34:42+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Grotto what I loved about Boks VS Lions 2nd test was, timing was perfect. Both sides were such good teams. Boks were the world champs and Lions had a talented squad better than the 2013 version, and somewhere on the veldt like Pretoria was awsome. My only regret was it didn't go to game 3, at Ellis Park which is also on the high veldt, would have been of the charts if it did.

2013-10-06T10:46:00+00:00

Grotto

Guest


Up there with the boks vs Lions 2nd test, and the ab's v Wallabies at the Olympic stadium in 2000 (?). An absolute belter, great advertisement for rugby, haven't been able to stop talking about it all day. So much respect for the players, especially the 2 captains, coaches, crowd and the outstanding performance by nigel owens. Rugby at its very best!

2013-10-06T09:42:17+00:00

Johnno

Guest


Good games 2.

2013-10-06T09:34:03+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


Paul, I'm not a fan of Stuart Barnes, but I can't see what your issue was with his commentary on this occasion, he positively eulogised about the rugby from both sides. Matt, Barnes was a very talented player back in the day to suggest otherwise is churlish. He is a fairly ordinary bloke, but he certainly wasn't a bad player. His hatred for Rob Andrew and England is barely concealed, it amuses me that Kiwis think he hated NZ, his admiration for them is fairly obvious to anyone who watches Sky regularly.

2013-10-06T09:08:15+00:00

Bigbaz

Guest


Makes it up as he goes mate. No frigen idea.

2013-10-06T07:50:42+00:00

AWCMONREF

Guest


Johnno you really might want to add ABs v Lions 2005 1st and 2nd Tests imo......

2013-10-06T06:24:34+00:00

Johnno

Guest


for pure tension in a soccer game chan wee for mine 1 stands out. Chelsea VS Barcelona semi-final 2nd leg at stamford Bridge Hiddink VS Guadiola, that was tense, Barcelona were on the up, and Man United awaited the winner, both were super hungry to win, chelsea wanted revenge for 2008 champs loss to Man United in Moscow. Controversy would be an understatment, then right at the end Barca got a goal to make it 1-1, it was a good game, so tense, and so emotional game of club soccer I have scene in my lifetime. NZ VS France 1999 was so good as it was so unexpected. In international soccer, Euro 96 England VS Germany semi-final at old Wembley was as tense as it got.

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