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Beauden Barrett and Richie Mo’unga: How the All Blacks pieced the jigsaw together at Loftus

9th October, 2018
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Richie Mo'unga (Photo by Anthony Au-Yeung/Getty Images)
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9th October, 2018
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Make no mistake, it is a war. The resumption of an ancient rivalry, hopefully signalled by the Springboks’ shock win in Wellington, was confirmed at Loftus Versveld in Pretoria on Saturday afternoon.

66-66 in points over two games, and ten tries to eight do not lie. The devil in South African rugby is back, and there is every sign it is here to stay.

There was a primeval feeling in the air as Springbok supporters rose from their sky-blue seats – the debentures of the die blou bulle – and all but drowned out ‘Kapa O Pango’ just before kick-off. This was a true clash of rugby steel, of nation against nation, blood against blood.

For an hour or so, it looked like South Africa could do the unthinkable, and achieve a seasonal double over the All Blacks, winning games back-to-back.

Again their big men dominated, the Eben Etzebeths, Malcolm Marxes and Pieter-Steph du Toits so prized in this corner of the rugby world, held sway. The waves of sheer physicality felt irresistible.

Under a real threat to their supremacy in the Rugby Championship, New Zealand did what they do best – staying blue head cool and finding a way to solve the puzzle in the one quarter of the game they could control.

They achieved an unlikely comeback with the power of their bench and by shifting the pieces of their backline into a new shape which may well prove to be the pathway to the future, long term.

In the 51st minute, Richie Mo’unga came on to the field to replace not Beauden Barrett – as might have been expected – but winger Waisake Naholo. This meant Barrett dropped to fullback and Ben Smith shifted over to the right wing, with Mo’unga playing the pivotal role at 10.

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It is the arrangement I first suggested in this article at the start of August. With the All Blacks under the pump and experiencing more pressure than at any time since the series against the British and Irish Lions back in 2017, the new backline came through with flying colours.

Within one minute of Mo’unga’s arrival on the field, South Africa had extended their lead to 23-6 and the All Blacks had a big mountain to climb. Their ability to make the ascent was largely determined by a second monumental contribution in two weeks by Ardie Savea in the back row, and by the new structure at 10 and 15 behind him.

New Zealand’s route back into the game opened up from a kick return following on directly from South Africa’s second try. The try itself can be seen here (at 2:25 on the reel):

The missing part is also the most essential piece in the jigsaw, and that is Beauden Barrett’s positioning at fullback to receive the box-kick off Faf de Klerk. Put the two together, and you have the true story of the Kiwi try:

Barrett sidesteps both of the main kick chasers, winger Aphiwe Dyantyi and Siya Kolisi, and the extra metres he makes on the return are critical to the success of the pickup by Codie Taylor afterwards. Kolisi is still trying to recover from his miss on Barrett, and is five metres behind the play when Taylor goes through the space (at shortside guard) that Kolisi would have been defending.

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After Mo’unga came on, Barrett looked very comfortable in the increased space and time afforded by his backfield duties. He kicked better from there than he did from first receiver:

In the first example, after taking the ball at fullback Barrett has the time to measure a superb 50-metre touch-finder, end over end, from a very narrow angle.

In the second, he is playing at first receiver and the Bokke frontline defence is that much closer to him. The result is a clear win for South Africa, with Barrett lobbing the ball gently down Damian Willemse’s throat, and the latter’s electric feet do the rest on the return.

Barrett’s move to fullback was also an undoubted plus in frontline defence. His speed from a standing start on the end of the line saved one try-scoring situation and could easily have saved another:

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When he receives the ball near the left sideline, all the cards are stacked in favour of the new Springboks wunderkind Aphiwe Dyantyi. He has the momentum to kick through into an empty backfield and runs past the starting New Zealand fullback, Ben Smith, as if he isn’t there at all.

Despite having to stop, turn and spot the South African flyer a two- or three-metre start, Barrett gets back to overhaul him and prevent the try.

It is a remarkable piece of defensive recovery work, and only Barrett could have done it. Damian McKenzie? Forget it.

Barrett almost repeated the same trick to stop Cheslin Kolbe scoring in the 59th minute (at 2:55 on the reel). He gets off the line incredibly quickly to hit Kolbe before he reaches the goalline, but the referee and TMO between them awarded a score that was, I believe, never proven beyond reasonable doubt.

In attack, the combination of Mo’unga and Barrett at second and third receiver worked smoothly to create a try for Rieko Ioane in the 62nd minute (at 4:00 on the reel).

It is worth examining the score in detail, from the best view behind the posts:

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After Ryan Crotty swings the ball onto Mo’unga, the true value of the Crusaders number 10 to New Zealand’s attack is distilled in the face of the Springboks’ fierce rush defence.

Mo’unga takes all the pressure coming from different directions – Jesse Kriel driving up square on and Kolbe jamming in hard from the outside – onto his own shoulders, while remaining square to the defence. He takes all the pressure off of Barrett, allowing him to make a beautiful long delivery to Ioane out on the left:

richie mo'unga attacking analysis

Mo’unga’s ability to run straight and square at the defence and force tacklers to ‘plant’, while holding the ball in two hands and therefore able to pass it across his body, made a big difference to the New Zealand attack:

The All Blacks scrum is being shunted and they have lost the battle on the loosehead side of the set-piece, but Mo’unga rescues the situation with the angle of his run right on the gain-line. It takes him past the inside shoulder of Handre Pollard and through Embrose Papier and restores the advantage in favour of the offence.

There is a lot to like about Richie Mo’unga’s blue-collar work ethic too. There is little of the prima donna in him.

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After instigating a counter-attack from the All Blacks goalline, he follows the ball and cleans out breakdown beast Malcolm Marx, who caused New Zealand so many problems over the course of the game:

Mo’unga knows his own limitations and after Marx gets to the tackle first, he peels him away with a perfectly executed roll cleanout to the side. He gets my vote just because of that one play!

Above all else, Richie Mo’unga was not afraid to take command as the tide of affairs in the match rose to point break. It was his penalty kick, unseen by the cameraman, which landed infield and rolled into touch only a few metres from the South African goalline:

We can see only the back of Ardie Savea’s curly mop, but it is Richie Mo’unga who has driven the All Blacks forward into the game-winning position which had seemed so unlikely only 20 minutes before.

Summary
South Africa are back, there can be no doubt about it. The physicality of their big men up front and their tactical control in the halves were the dominant features which ‘won’ the first hour of the match and helped them to what should have been a winning 17-point lead.

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But New Zealand won the last quarter – and it was those last 20-25 minutes that mattered the most. It was no coincidence that the All Blacks’ reorganised backline was on the field during that period of game. With Richie Mo’unga at 10, Beauden Barrett dropping to fullback and Ben Smith on the right wing, the All Blacks were at their most cohesive in the backs, both with and without the ball.

Mo’unga has now shown that he can be effective at Test level in one of the most hostile rugby environments in the world. He has also shown a glimpse of the future – and that future is not Barrett and McKenzie, it is Mo’unga and Barrett.

Steve Hansen and his coaches have broken the mould by selecting Mo’unga ahead of Damian McKenzie on the bench. With the European tour to come, and two momentous matches on successive weekends against England and Ireland on the horizon, will they go one step further and make Richie the main man right from the start?

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