REACTION: 'Like we didn't know each other' - Foster facing heat as Ireland stun All Blacks with famous series win

By Matt Cleary / Expert

A week after winning their first ever Test match in New Zealand, Ireland have won their second one and in the process sealed a famous series 2-1 over New Zealand.

It was an improbable, unprecedented victory. Nobody puts Baby in the corner and nobody dominates the All Blacks – particularly not in New Zealand.

But Ireland did at Wellington for most of Saturday night, out-muscling, out-thinking and out-playing the men in black.

It was a brave performance by Ireland. Wingers passed to wingers. Captain Johnny Sexton eschewed three points and kicked for the line. Their forwards threw themselves into the contest like crash test dummies on a bet and pressured the All Blacks into mistakes.

Ireland, in all facets, were just better. All Blacks captain Sam Cane was “extremely disappointed.”

Join The Roar experts Brett McKay, Harry Jones and Jim Tucker for their verdict on the third Test

“We didn’t pull out the performance that we wanted. But we can’t take anything away from Ireland. They’ve been outstanding these last couple of weeks,” he said.

“Massive respect for them. They’ve had a massive tour; three Tests and the Maori. They’ve been class. And deserve the win tonight.”

It was some game of rugby .In the third minute, after strong work by bustling No.8 Caelan Doris, Ireland won a penalty. It was in Sexton Range. Once upon a time Ireland would’ve gone for goal as if by rote. This time the captain kicked for the line.

Johnny Sexton, caption of Ireland (C) and the team celebrate during the International Test match between the New Zealand All Blacks and Ireland at Sky Stadium on July 16, 2022 in Wellington, New Zealand. (Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

Who are you people and what have you done with Ireland?

The lineout was pure. The rolling maul a force of nature. The try, to openside flier Josh van der Flier, almost formality.
Soon enough New Zealand won a penalty. And they did go for goal. Jordie Barrett pushed it. If the match was divided into ten-minute rounds, Ireland won the first one on points.

Ireland’s momentum was strong. A kick by Mack Hansen sluiced up the sideline and broke left into touch. They won a scrum from a held-up maul. The players roared like Lleyton Hewitt: Come on!

Their fans rang out “Iiirre-land” on repeat around the Wellington Cake Tin. Word was New Zealand was hosting the largest ever contingent of Irish media. They’d have been hard-pressed not to join in.

The All Blacks kicked off the drama with the traditional “Ka Mate” haka and not their signature “Kapa O Pango”, the one that seems to be wheeled out for especially important Test matches. Perhaps the deciding match of a three-Test series versus Ireland doesn’t cut it.

Yet the haka was no less passionate, Ireland’s steel-eyed response no less compelling. The challenge remains one of the best things in sport.

After 23 minutes the All Blacks were on the board through a Jordie Barrett penalty goal. The Test match had a Lions tour-like intensity. It was World Cup rehearsal. A big, big game of rugby.

Minute 28 and another fine try to Ireland: Backline move 35m out; two mauls; right wing Hansen hit left wing James Lowe with a flat cut-ball before it was passed inside to fullback Hugo Keenan who sluiced into space and iced the movement. Try-time.

Sexton converted from the sideline, the fans cheering his 1002nd point. They were in raptures shortly after when he landed a 45m penalty goal. It was all Ireland.

When outside centre Robbie Henshaw scored and Sexton’s conversion made it 22-3, they were dancing nude in the fields of Athenry.

It was the most points the All Blacks had been behind at half-time ever.

“That was some sort of 40 minutes for Ireland. Almost perfect,” exclaimed Jeff Wilson on Stan Sport. “Plenty of heart, plenty of firepower,” Mils Muliaina agreed.

After half-time the All Blacks, like the Empire, struck back.

After 23 phases on Ireland’s line Ardie Savea reached out an arm and scored. Jordie Barrett made it 22-10.

Ofa Tu’ungafasi trotted off, dazed, confused. He’d only just come on.

Waves of green streamed down field. Savea won a penalty; was mobbed. Savea crashed it up the middle. Savea was everywhere, Herculean, the All Blacks’ best.

Somehow Andrew Porter didn’t see red when the top of the prop’s head hit Brodie Retallick’s giant jaw. It was a red card last week for NZ’s Angus Ta’avao.

Then came Akira Ioane. Ireland hadn’t missed a tackle all match. Then four of them missed Ioane.

“The All Blacks are back,” caller Grant Nesbitt declared.

Retallick wouldn’t be, however. And Sexton could still kick goals. His penalty in front put the visitors up by eight points with 24 minutes to go.

When he hit the cross-bar from a penalty that began exactly 50 metres away, Ireland bombed in.

Savea, the man, hit Will Jordan with an inside ball and the flier scorched the earth for 70m to score. What a game of rugby. Gripping, even for the neutral.

Penalty, Ireland! Kickable. But Sexton again went to touch. Brumbies-ball – lineout and driving maul. Another try. Replacement hooker Rob Herring. Perhaps the greatest thing to ever happen in his life.

Sexton landed the conversion. Nerveless. Only five men have scored more Test points. Ten point game, 14 minutes to play. What a contest.

Savea continued his one-man bombardment of Ireland’s defence. He was immense, a force of nature.
Bundee Aki came off. Roger Tuivasa-Sheck came on. The All Blacks won a penalty metres out. They took a scrum, not points. Ireland won a penalty. And exalted like they’d won Powerball.

Ten to go. Both sides emptied benches. Herring’s lineout throw was not straight.

Savea came again. He was the Terminator. Turnover! Tadhg Beirne. His greatest moment in green.
Seven minutes.

Six minutes.

Five minutes. Penalty All Blacks in front. The All Blacks tapped and went. And Ireland turned it over. Four minutes.
Sexton did his hamstring.

Intercept Ireland! A great thumping kick. Pressure. It was all Ireland. All night. What a night.
Goal line drop out by New Zealand. Multiple phases by Ireland.
Three minutes.
Two minutes.
Ten point game.
It was surely Ireland’s.
And then it was.

“We have four million people at home, up for breakfast, probably having a couple of pints,” Sexton said post-match. “We wanted to make the them proud.

“The effort was incredible. We’re playing the very best in the world. To come down here and do it is very, very special.
“Well enjoy this tonight. And maybe for the next few days, too,” he added with a grin.

The recriminations have started already. Ian Foster will do well to hold his job.

“It looked as if we hadn’t been together for long enough,” said former ABs skipper Kieran Read.

“There’s no excuse for them but it was like just didn’t quite know each other. We weren’t in sync. The timing was out the balls were just behind our runners, knocking on the balls that we wouldn’t normally and I think that just shows that maybe we just haven’t got that combination that we needed, or have had in the past.”

The Crowd Says:

2022-07-23T13:43:57+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


Well you got it correct that game! A mate of mine was an scg member and always left early to beat the traffic. Missed the close of play where Steve Waugh scored a ton off the final delivery

2022-07-23T12:56:47+00:00

Rugbynutter

Roar Rookie


Personal choice. I did not exactly find it high quality game of rugby so I did not feel even if wallabies won was a big deal to miss that. Secondly my wife had early start to take my daughter to hockey next day so fact not a great game, and England got a penalty after wallabies attacking the line with minutes to go yep I bailed as doing that meant we flew home vs would have added extra 30 minutes plus getting out of scg car parking across the road. To avoid large crowds and trade off missing last 5 minutes can be worthwhile exercise for some. Not for you it is fine but really does not matter if does not make sense to you as only matters if makes sense to me. And yep it did.

2022-07-23T12:35:53+00:00

James in NZ

Roar Rookie


The guys form has never dropped from the last yr he was in NZ, and has only seemingly gotten better (from what I've seen) in Ire. Power to him. Sometimes feels like we can't win a trick, I keep hearing a main complaint of Foster is picking players out of position. The back three, with midfielders, locks to loosies. Whereas Ire are doing great with their specialists. Hansen seemed to have the same team of utilities obsession. Limited bench spots I suppose. But I'd back a team of specialists over a team of utilities.

2022-07-23T09:32:20+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


He's a great player,I used to love watching him play with Mackenzie for the Chiefs. Maybe the strategy of picking big AB wingers like Naholo and Savea isn't as good as picking all round footballers like Lowe?

2022-07-23T09:24:01+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


I never understand people who leave the game early. It worked out for you in that match but you couldn't know it at the time. The wallabies could have scored and won the game to a grandstand finish and you would have missed it. If traffic is your priority then why not watch from home?

2022-07-23T09:22:07+00:00

Sgt Pepperoni

Roar Rookie


It was really bizarre to see so many errors from an all black side. 4-5 knock ons at least. Even with that they got the score to 25-22 with 20 mins to go. Ireland won the breakdown and turnovers really got them out of trouble on multiple occasions. NZ also kicked a lot of ball away which looked odd as they declined to run the ball. The Irish attack outshone the AB attack

2022-07-20T02:18:30+00:00

GregM

Roar Rookie


yeah you'd think it was an afront to their manhood, that the only way that they can crack a boner is by watching a bunch of blokes do a dance on the footy field & how they live their life vicariously through the success - and failure, of a rugby team

2022-07-20T02:15:17+00:00

GregM

Roar Rookie


hey Muzzo, good to see KD learn about the haka from the video - did you watch any of it?

2022-07-19T10:28:12+00:00

Dublin Dave

Roar Rookie


Green beer? Are you for real? You don't know us at all. The best beer is the black stuff. Dark, cold, full of iron and the best in the world of its genre. You know? Like New Zealand rugby used to be. :silly:

2022-07-19T10:09:09+00:00

Dublin Dave

Roar Rookie


That was just on the starting XV. You could add Finlay Bealham (Australian) to that list from the bench and you might also point out that the replacements Rob Herring and Kieron Treadwell don't have the strongest of Irish accents, having been born and raised in South Africa and England respectively. But the remaining 16 of the match-day squad were all native varieties. We will see much fewer "project" players as the IRFU calls those like Aki, Lowe and Park and earlier examples like CJ Stander who were identified as being surplus to requirements in their native lands and recruited, first as squad players to the Irish provincial sides with the carrot of potential, no more than that, graduation to the national side on completion of the three years residency necessary to achieve the alchemy of converting base SH metal into Irish gold. Now that that period has been pushed out to five years, the IRFU will go back to the tried and trusted practice, common to all Irish international sports, of the "Granny Rule" whereby those with at least one Irish grandparent can declare immediately for the Irish team. Such were the means by which Hansen, Treadwell and Herring were obtained. If you have a promising young player like, say, a hooker with a name like Sean Fitzpatrick----keep a firm grip on him. :)

2022-07-18T06:58:11+00:00

Lara

Guest


Foster’s cancel interview…..what could have been said. The tour to SA against the World Champion Boks would be a great opportunity. We learnt lots against a fantastic Irish team. We plan to build on that. The coaching staff can’t wait to develop a Plan B n fine tune our Plan A . The players are all eager for the next chapter in AB rugby , as are our supporters. You can be assured that my team n I will not leave any stone unturned n our progress to the next RWC is clear . I am the man for this job n I have the full backing of NZR. We are a proud team having a unlucky run. It’s hard to put a finger on it, but I plan to use every inch of my body n soul to work it out…..it might take awhile.

2022-07-18T02:30:34+00:00

Hikanui

Roar Rookie


OK. The haka is the problem. OK.

2022-07-18T00:26:58+00:00

James in NZ

Roar Rookie


Yes was completely inconsistent. But I'd prefer we lose, than give Foster a paper over the cracks win.

2022-07-17T21:55:56+00:00

Kent Dorfman

Roar Rookie


amazed Razor wasn't selected as an AB assistant coach

2022-07-17T20:36:15+00:00

Malotru

Roar Rookie


Certainly one red, but in all likelihood should have been two James. The red card and two yellows in Dunedin certainly impacted the game and made life a lot easier for Ireland. My problem is the inconsistency between referees and TMOs.

2022-07-17T19:01:04+00:00

CUW

Roar Rookie


didnt see - but this is ridiculous on the one hand WR is going on a pr campaign abut head injury safety and what not. on the other hand its officials seem to think these are rugby collisions and passive actions and now i forgot what Barnes said !!! funny that in gallagher final which barnes reffed - Ford got injured and had to be taken out immediately TMO was on Branes' ear - " ive checked it - theres no foul play "!!! that was a leg injury FFS !!!! and OFA was taken off with a concussion - yet no review as far as i know or heard !!!

2022-07-17T11:10:38+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Cant be fans of his moves I guess

2022-07-17T10:30:36+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


Other than all the fake injuries to catch their breath.

2022-07-17T10:28:34+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


Play him at #12.

2022-07-17T10:22:55+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


And the tackle on Ardie after he scored.

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