Where the All Blacks went wrong at Ellis Park, and how to fix it for Brisbane

By Roy Isbister / Roar Rookie

I am not shrugging my shoulders philosophically at the All Blacks’ loss to the Boks, as it seems much of the Shaky Isles is doing. I am fretful, irritable, and prone to sudden tears.

The only silver lining I can find in this cloud is that at least I can move on from the 2012 loss to the English.

Not that any panic buttons should be pressed, and to be sure things could be a lot worse (I could be a Wallaby supporter!), but there were a few troublesome elements to the Ellis Park performance that would benefit from some remedial action.

Perhaps chief among these was an inability to reorganise the defence until in the sheds at halftime. South Africa played with quick width, and the All Blacks’ defence was outflanked repeatedly. It is not clear why this came as quite such a surprise, as South Africa had used a similar approach at Ellis Park in 2013, with the All Blacks similarly vulnerable until half-time.

Given that defensive organiser par excellence Conrad Smith was running the shop from centre, this inability to adjust in real time was disappointing. In fact, we don’t really know if they did adjust, as in the second half South Africa did not present the same challenge, through what looked like a combination of running out of puff and shifting into defending-a-lead mode (which almost proved their undoing).

Compounding this, and indeed related to it, was that closer-in the All Blacks defended as if the South African halves were Ruan Peinaar and Morne Stein. Handre Pollard had a wonderful game for his country, but he was certainly helped by a passive defence apparently unable to respond to a Bok No. 10 taking the line on with ball in hand.

He was much assisted by having Francois Hougaard inside him – if it had been Ruan Piennar at halfback, Pollard would have had to generate all the pace himself, which would have been a much bigger ask.

If this game signals a bigger change to the way South Africa is going to play, then that should mean we’ve seen the last of Pienaar, and, dare I say it, Fourie du Preez. He may have been the best player at the 2007 World Cup, but seven years on, the faster the game the older du Preez looks. Hougaard might not quite be the answer, but South Africa needs to pick a halfback who fits with the way they want to play.

Moving from defence to attack, the All Blacks were not helped by Beauden Barrett’s transformation, in the space of a week, from Arrow to The Shoveller. Against Argentina he was excellent from the off, while time and again he has been spectacular when coming on late against tiring defences, but starting at No. 10 against the aggressive South Africans did not go so well. Barrett was tentative and especially in the first half was inclined to turn his outsides into little more than targets. He should consider himself fortunate to be starting again this Saturday.

The lateral nature of his play on the day was compounded by another problem: the increasingly predictable double-pass among the forwards in midfield. Brodie Retallick has been the main take-and-give forward through most of the Rugby Championship and in his absence, against South Africa, others took on the role.

It wasn’t pretty, but even before then it was all starting to look old – compare the last couple of games to the big win against Australia, and you are comparing a predetermined plan with forwards passing for passing’s sake, to forwards passing for a reason and the opposition being blown away.

Things did improve in the second half – when Dane Coles scored he was the fifth forward in a wonderfully precise six-man ‘backline’ (with the sixth man being a surplus-to-requirements Julian Savea flapping along on the outside). But looking across the whole match I was reminded of Manu Tuilagi’s comment after the England defeat in 2012, that he went for his intercept because he knew Kieran Read was going to throw the pass. (OK, so maybe I’m not quite over England 2012.)

In the loose forwards as well, things are not going quite to plan, with the Dream Team reunion (of Read, Richie McCaw and Jerome Kaino) not working as anticipated. Against South Africa the job was not made easier by the tight forward struggling for parity, but throughout the year Read and Kaino have struggled to reproduce their best form (think 2013 and 2011 respectively).

Kaino so far is serving as poster-boy for the perils of retreating to the soft-play area that is the domestic Japanese scene, with his 2011 brutality both on the tackle and with ball in hand appearing only in flashes. It may be that he is timing his run to perfection, and that by the time the World Cup rolls around he will be back to his fearsome best, but at the moment it’s hard to fault Steve Hansen’s decision to start in Brisbane with Liam Messam.

As for Read, whether or not he is still suffering the slings and arrows of outrageous concussions, he clearly was not the best number 8 in the Championship this year. Here’s hoping that by next year he is back firing on all cylinders; the idea of Read and Duane Vermeulen both at the top of their game going head to head, hammer and tongs, is enticing in the extreme.

Earlier in the year, I was one of those questioning whether McCaw still had what it takes, but as the Rugby Championship proceeded he just got better and better. Against South Africa he was magnificent. Can he make it to next year’s World Cup? Who knows, but for now I’ve modified my questioning; I’m only asking if he still has what it takes when his bones are broken.

What does all this mean for the game against The Shambles this Saturday? It is always possible that we will see a backs-to-the-wall miracle, but the fact that the All Blacks are coming off a loss is not going to help Australia’s cause. If the All Blacks’ tight forwards can play with a bit more venom than was managed by the selection at Ellis Park, then that should give the loosies a bit more licence to play a bit more rugby.

And if Barrett can put his Shovelling days behind him, and Conrad Smith is back on top organisational form, then it could be a long day at the office for the Wallabies.

The Crowd Says:

2014-10-18T11:38:33+00:00


Yep, it is the "old school" in us that value test series for what they used to represent, the younger generation I suspect love the instant results more, I might be wrong though.

2014-10-18T11:24:04+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


Read is still the best 8 in the world. Yes Vermeulen probably outplayed him on both occasions this year but still Read has been more consistent in the greater timeline. But in saying that I dismiss the excuses of concussion as rubbish. He currently shows no negative side effects that you would usually see with a concussed player. Read just wasn't that good the past few games, period.

2014-10-18T08:34:43+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


Who really cares about 2014. It's 2015 that's the target

2014-10-18T07:44:36+00:00

almark

Guest


Good article, I felt the ABs made a lot of handling errors which cost them the game, the Springboks played well. In terms of the predictability there is a bit of short term winning this game versus long term setting them up for a surprise. I have always thought that the game (hopefully not in a semifinal) where the springboks forwards pass before the line they are going to surprise the hell out of someone. Surprises from us>> I would like to more line-out drives. I would like to see the ABs put more pressure (dominate, not scramble) on defensive scrums, I think generally we get a stable scrum when we feed it. Re: Read, last year he had a couple of huge plays in each game and did everything else solidly, this year very few big plays, but they will come.

2014-10-18T07:07:39+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


The Springboks lost two on the trot before beating Australia at Newlands and the Wallabies are on a two match losing streak. Why do we have to win every match to keep the wolf from the door?

2014-10-18T07:05:08+00:00

Firstxv

Guest


There is no panic button Martin. Game is gone when one of those is used. So why have one at all?

2014-10-18T06:56:19+00:00

Jibba Jabba

Guest


They pushed the ejector seat button - but for got to open the sunroof !!

2014-10-18T06:55:09+00:00

Jibba Jabba

Guest


We don;t panic Martin - we leave that for the chasing teams - win or lose we just get on with business - and normally have the troops to do it...

2014-10-18T06:53:33+00:00

Jibba Jabba

Guest


That will be Hooper you are talking about !

2014-10-18T05:41:05+00:00

Tui

Guest


Question for you convicts Martin when did you press the panic button?

2014-10-18T05:19:46+00:00

Lano

Roar Guru


What do you think is the future for Adam Thompson with his move to the Reds? Has he had his day in the ABs?

2014-10-18T03:42:53+00:00

Martin Deligasi

Guest


question for you kiwis... if this group of ridiculed wallabies stand up and win... when do you press the panic button? as a rugby tragic I dont want to jinx it but Brisbane has been good to us and many blokes will have a point to prove. Itd be 2 losses on the trot with a lucky escape in the draw in sydney as well with Piper ignoring a blatant scrum infringement under the sticks on the 80th minute. Suddenly things not looking so good, older players pushing the passes and knocking on, slipping tackles... do you dump these older blokes for the youth? Nonu out for the youthful Malakai Fekitowa? - Deligasi

2014-10-18T03:37:15+00:00

Martin Deligasi

Guest


listen what for me is inspiring is that the boks beat the all blacks with 14 players and a bloke playing flank who, lets face it, is undoubtedly not up to international or even super rugby standard. Im all for equality but when it comes to sport listen in my eyes you just need to pick the best and politcal interference just has no place in sport. That is why it is inspiring because if a bok side with only 14 players can do it then why not us? why not the men in gold? - Deligasi

2014-10-18T03:33:34+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


It doesn't maintain possession if the receiver is isolated and turns the ball over.

2014-10-18T02:47:51+00:00

Crazy Horse

Guest


Anyone complaining about the All Blacks loss has obviously not been to Ellis Park. I was there with the Wallabies. 60, 000 screaming Boks fans vs about a 100 for the visitors . A stadium designed as a cauldron. Very thin air that leave visitors going for breath. I've never experienced nothing like it.

2014-10-18T02:19:13+00:00

moaman

Guest


{ " ABs don’t seem to dominate matches anymore."} Depends how far back your memory goes. Did they doiminate England in the third Test?.. Yes. Did they dominate Australia last time out? .... Yes. Have you forgotten those games already? ........

2014-10-18T02:15:05+00:00

moaman

Guest


Great comment OJ..

2014-10-18T00:50:25+00:00

Rugby Tragic

Guest


A series biltongbek is what I believe creates the passion and interest when it is between side that are evenly matched. To some extent it 'removes luck' which can happen in a "one off". The key interest in any case will last at least 3 tests (of a 4 test series) as the winner cannot be determined until the 3rd. If it happens to be 3 zip after 3 matches, at least against proud rugby nations like South Africa and New Zealand, the vanquished will not want to be whitewashed and the series winner will need to fight complacency so is a challenge on its own. In the event of a drawn series, I think that is fair enough, allow the warriors the opportunity to reflect on their efforts and that of their opponents. Because of the history and other personal influencing factors, irrespective of the victors in any one year, the Springboks to me will always present the greatest challenge. I have no doubt that Boks fans think the same in reverse. In marketing they say ..."find out what the people want .... then give it to them" ... while the international calendar is so cramped I understand that that it is not possible but one can dream...

2014-10-18T00:44:49+00:00

Jibba Jabba

Guest


But the pop passes maintain possession and build pressure, moves the opposition around back and forth and builds slowly to momentum, ..then on the sixth pass the seas parted etc etc Can obviously be predicable but it comes down to execution... and the speed of the game - remember the 3 PPPs

2014-10-18T00:27:12+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


The pop pass is so annoying. They need to do it judiciously not on every carry. If they want to keep offloading like Argentina and South Africa have been doing against us then don't send a one off runner into a bunch of traffic. It's like a suicide mission at times.

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