Different country, same result: All Blacks sweep Bledisloe Game 3

By Oliver Matthews / Expert

The All Blacks have beaten the Wallabies 37-20 in Yokohama, Japan to wrap up the 2018 Bledisloe series 3-0.

The bookies and most fans had already decided that the All Blacks were a dead cert for the win, and while the final score makes the victory look comfortable, there was a lot to be positive about from an Aussie point of view at half-time. Sadly the Wallabies struggled to put together a full 80-minute performance, and as the clock ticked down, the All Blacks took advantage of opportunities and showed their clinical class to run away with the game.

In the opening 20 minutes or so both sides were fighting to get into some sort of rhythm. The Aussies had their fair share of the ball and put some good early pressure on the All Blacks, with Dane Haylett-Petty going very close to scoring in the corner. But it was the Kiwis who struck first, and where the Aussies were perhaps struggling to be effective in that final move, the All Blacks took their opportunities.

The first try saw the All Blacks stretch the Wallabies by using a number of phases to hit hard with the forwards and then stretch the defence with moves out to one wing and then back the other way. In the end Liam Squire got the ball and was head-to-head with Kurtley Beale. Beale came off second best and, to be fair, made a poor effort of stopping the back rower, who was then able to run in from ten metres out and score the opening points.

The Wallabies showed that they wanted to get the scoreboard ticking over by asking Beale to slot a long-range penalty instead of going for the lineout, and slot it he did. While the lead wasn’t big, there was a growing gap between the teams in terms of effectiveness. The Wallabies were full of adventure but arguably tried to do too much fancy stuff before they done any of the boring hard work.

Their skills were also shown to be a bit lacking at times – passes were forced and balls dropped or moves slowed down and the All Blacks made sure the Aussies couldn’t get going.

(Matt King/Getty Images)

The second All Blacks try was worrying for the Aussies. Kieran Reed picked up from a five-metre attacking scrum and almost walked over. That’s an exaggeration, but Ned Hanigan was slow to get off the scrum and attempt a tackle and Will Genia chose to leave him to it and cover the potential threat outside rather than the definite and immediate threat of Reed with ball in hand and a metre from the line.

It was these sorts of choices that highlight a key gap between the sides. The Wallabies have plenty of talent within their squad but they don’t always execute well enough and they make too many poor decisions.

To be fair to the Wallabies, they did shift tactics towards the end of the first half and had good results. Instead of running across the field and spinning it wide, they used their power players to hit the ball up and made good ground. They ran hard and straight and the All Blacks couldn’t stop them gaining metre after metre. This worked well and the Wallabies were able to turn plenty of phases into a good try for Sefanaia Naivalu just before half-time.

Aussie fans would have hoped that their team noticed how much more of an effect this direct approach was havingand would continue it in the second half, and in that key period after half-time the Wallabies made more ground, with Bernard Foley slotting another penalty to get the lead down to just four points with plenty of time.

The Wallabies had the momentum and had found a method of playing that the All Blacks were struggling to stop. Unfortunately the next 20 minutes saw the game totally fall away from the Wallabies as the All Blacks stepped up to another gear.

Ten points from Beauden Barrett, a try from Ben Smith and a yellow card to Tolu Latu and the game was done with 12 minutes still to go.

(Matt King/Getty Images)

The try from Barrett was impressive – the All Blacks had a scrum with a small blind side. The first pass from the scrum unsurprisingly went to the spacious open side and the Aussie defence went with it. But then in a flash the ball had been spun back to Rieko Ioane, who was screaming down the blind side. With the defence wrong-footed, Ioane used his pace and power to make good ground and then offloaded to Barrett, who had screamed up in support. The fastest No.10 in rugby was never going to be stopped from there as he ran in another try and highlighted another gap between the teams – the ability to make first phase set plays really count.

The yellow card to Latu was an overreaction from the referee. Codie Taylor and Latu were having a bit of a disagreement after a dominant scrum performance from the All Blacks. Taylor pushed Latu and Latu pushed back, but he pushed back on Taylor’s face.

This caught the attention of the referee and television match official and then the ref went to his pocket. He didn’t need to – he could have seen that it wasn’t an overly aggressive retaliation from Latu and it deserved a strict talking to and not ten minutes on the bench.

To be clear, the yellow card didn’t decide the game. The All Blacks were 14 points ahead with 12 minutes to go and were not going to be caught. However, the yellow card definitely killed the game there and then.

Ironically the Wallabies scored while Latu was warming the naughty step as Folau danced over for another try, but it was too little too late. A final All Blacks try from Ioane wrapped up both the game and a very nice passage of play from the Kiwis, including a between-the-legs, Fiji Sevens-style final pass from Beauden Barrett that was pure rugby gold.

The All Blacks will have been very happy with the performance and the result. Damian McKenzie was good at fullback and Richie Mo’unga was very good coming on to play No.10 later in the game. Having him and Beauden Barrett on the field at the same time gives the Kiwis an alarming amount of playmaking potential and other sides are going to struggle to live with that.

In the end it was sort of the same old story – the Wallabies showed periods of potential but never had the skills or the tactics to live with the All Blacks for 80 minutes. Few can, to be fair.

So the Wallabies will now head to Europe, where they will play Wales on 11 November. The Roar will have live coverage of that game, but before that there is plenty of time to contemplate what will happen if this spring tour only results in a win against Italy and losses to Wales and England.

The Crowd Says:

2018-11-01T22:13:06+00:00

Sidestep9

Guest


Yep. And as the scrum came up Lotu gutlessly started the agro by slapping Taylor when he was still bound in the front row. Thats why Taylor pursued him and gave him a decent shove directed at his shoulder. Inexperienced Latu smacked Taylor on the chin. In Marshall arts the palm strike is effective offence. Latu deserved to go.

2018-11-01T22:07:23+00:00

Sidestep9

Guest


Yeah. I also got that impression. The All Blacks have been known to use some games as training runs and purposely putting themselves under pressure, Like the time the wouldnt kick out of their 22 but choose to play out with ball in hand. They even fielded a weaker team in a RC prior to 2015 WC to increase player depth and experience. They didnt win the RC that year with an eye on the bigger prize at WC.

2018-10-28T21:59:51+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Thanks Oliver I appreciate the reply. I will happily agree to disagree re the yellow card as i feel that the laws say that is the punishment for hitting someone in the face and if everyone starts doing it without consequence then it becomes ugly.

2018-10-28T21:02:59+00:00

Riccardo

Roar Rookie


It was a retaliation penalty only and Taylor should have been spoken to as well; he was getting a little heated. But... there is obviously a threshold mandate in place with officialdom, which they have made clear, which is what Hansen talks about. Either decision would have been correct then.

AUTHOR

2018-10-28T20:09:30+00:00

Oliver Matthews

Expert


Appreciate the feedback and will double check my spelling in future. Simple slip up this time. One thing though - if you are going to criticise passionately someone's ability to write then it's best to check your own wording in that critique. "ABs captains name" should probably have at least one apostrophe in there surely? In terms of the yellow card decision - I do think that it was an over reaction from the referee. I think it is perfectly justifiable decision from the ref and that it sits within an acceptable interpretation of the rules. However I also believe that rugby is a complex game where there is a great deal of nuance to the rules and the way they are policed. I think that the ref could have pulled Latu and Hopper (jokes - Hooper) to one side and said if this sort of thing happens again with any of your players then they are off. The game wasn't out of control at the time, a statement didn't need to be made from the ref, it wasn't a big dust up. It was a big of pushing and shoving. I'm not at all suggesting that we allow punching or kicking or chicken winging as has crept into NRL. But I think the referee didn't need to send Latu to the bin for this. The range of incidents which result in yellow and red cards is just too broad in my opinion. Fortunately in this instance the yellow card didn't really impact the result of the game but, like I say, in my opinion, the push from Latu didn't warrant a yellow. To say that allowing Latu to go un yellow carded is the same as allowing players to kick and punch might perhaps be a bit of an exaggeration but hey, this site is all about opinions.

2018-10-28T08:41:40+00:00

KenoathCarnt

Roar Rookie


Banks should be permant fullback replacing DHP... Foley actually played alright he is much better when he gets his hands dirty and attacks the line, but ultimately I would like to see Toomua dom the no.10. Dempsey should also permanently replace Ned Hennigan.

2018-10-28T08:25:14+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Phil....As many others have said on other posts if you check the game tape between 65:40 and 65:44 you will see that as soon as the scrum stands up after the penalty is blown, Latu does a slap to taylors face...taylor then comes thru to latu and pushes Latu in the shoulder...latu then pushes taylor in the face...no Bias, just looking at the tape

2018-10-28T06:49:27+00:00

Phil

Guest


In your usual unbiased opinion then,why did Taylor instigate it?

2018-10-28T06:05:41+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Yes Rahrah...seriously!!!! Where do you believe he hit Taylor?

2018-10-28T04:58:44+00:00

RahRah

Roar Rookie


"hitting another player in the face", seriously?

2018-10-28T01:18:39+00:00

Jacko

Guest


Olivia your persistence with misspelling the ABs captains name is pathetic.....You are a reporter of rugby and should know how to check the spelling of a guy who has played around 115 tests yet you persist in using two Es in his name. Also if you believe...and you have written it in 2 articles this morning....that a player hitting another player in the face with enough force to knock his head back around 300mm is all good then perhaps Conor McGregor is your favorite rugby player.......

2018-10-28T00:45:45+00:00

Lannash

Guest


Did anybody else get the idea that the All Blacks weren't trying that hard?

2018-10-28T00:31:50+00:00

Simmo

Guest


So if we come back from the November tour with one win what will be the positives taken away from camp Wallaby? That leaves several games next winter to fine tune before the WC. Maybe RA assume the fans have been beaten into such low expectations and a finish out of the finals will be shrugged at. Then after that Larkham can work his magic.

2018-10-28T00:20:28+00:00

MaxW

Guest


Aus forwards just dont seem to have the ability to run holes, pass flat/quick shovel, offload. Yet even the ABs front row can do it. That's a huge difference.

2018-10-28T00:18:24+00:00

MaxW

Guest


With respect to Hanigan, there are club players in NZ going around who are better than him. That's not being spiteful to him nor is that an exaggeration..that's just what it is. Also just my 2 cents but I feel Foley stands way to deep/the backline on general. Australia tend to just shovel it out to their backline really deep. NZ eat so many meters with their ball running forwards because they utilise the flat pass brilliantly. How good are their forwards in running holes, catching and passing. Aus become predicable and with how deep they stand by the time Foley gets it he is 5 to 7m behind the advantage line

2018-10-27T21:56:17+00:00

krasnoff of noosa

Roar Rookie


Poor team selection (Hannigan too light and not at international level, Hooper not a seven and not a captain, Foley deep restarts every time?), poor execution and poor skills in broken play. Cheika’s boys headed for ground hog day everyday…everyday day…

2018-10-27T21:15:10+00:00

bigbaz

Roar Guru


We are using 1 3 3 1 but our cleaners are to slow to the pod , we are running too far apart

2018-10-27T20:42:03+00:00

Hugo

Guest


Followed your live report Oliver and it was first rate. Way better than the live report on Stuff. I'm afraid we can count on defeat against Wales and England. There's no way we can patch the dismal lack of basic ability.

2018-10-27T17:37:05+00:00

Flyman

Roar Rookie


It is beyond me why Cheika persists with this pod of slow moving forwards trying to hit it up the middle - it is so ponderous and every team knows what’s coming and then the ball handling skills are not quite there either.

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