ANALYSIS: Desperate, dangerous All Blacks roar back as Boks get cute and get caught

By Harry Jones / Expert

The first 20 minutes of a Springbok-All Black Test often tells all. Not today. The first 20 minutes were an entire match unto itself, but there was no score.

As Diggercane told me: this is the best 0-0 first quarter ever. But there were signs of a Bok problem. Issues which became clear, later. First, after a huge hooker edge in the first Test, the Bok brain trust just gave it up to New Zealand, sitting Man of the Match Malcolm Marx down for the crucial first 30y minutes.

Also, Duane Vermuelen was parachuted into Test rugby after a knee surgery rehabilitation and zero rugby played at any level. Finally, Jesse Kriel was at wing, with four or five proper South African wings left begging.

Ardie Savea and Sam Cane were freed up to play rugby by heavy cleaners, a dominant lineout (fed by a shaky Joseph Dweba, whose monstrous shoulders appeared to cripple his throwing action).

A yellow card to Damian Willemse left the Boks reeling early on, but they regrouped. Pieter-Steph du Toit intercepted a wayward Richie Mo’unga pass and very nearly scored (and would have had he looked left early), but for desperate defence by the All Blacks.

Desperate was the key word. The attitude. A 10-minute burst from the All Blacks reminded us of how dangerous they are, with Will Jordan finally prominent, the aerial game shored up, and the forwards rejuvenated at altitude (where few Boks now live).

Sam Whitelock rolled back the clock, Cane was everywhere, and Mo’unga rebounded from his error to solve the Bok high line. Two tries later and up 15-0, with Dweba demoralized, Kriel knocked out, and Vermuelen’s return underwhelming, New Zealand’s coaching box was full of smiles.

 (Photo by Lee Warren/Gallo Images/Getty Images)

But the last 10 minutes of the half tipped back the Bok way. Marx strode on to join Frans Malherbe on his 50th cap and immediately the Bok scrum and lineout was improved. Jasper Wiese replaced Vermuelen early as well, and we may not see the old No. 8 soon in Bok colours.

Willie le Roux ghosted on to a long flat pass by Handre Pollard and put Lukhanyo Am through Caleb Clarke’s weak tackle attempt, and it was 8-15 after Pollard’s sideline kick. Pollard has yet to miss in the Rugby Championship, and closed the half with a long three.

A 15-10 margin did not seem to fit the All Blacks’ dominance and their coaches’ frowns returned. Their team had run about a hundred more metres, passed and run twice as much, not lost a ruck or lineout, and looked the better side.

In the second half, the Bok renaissance continued with a new front row, and it was soon a 15-13 scoreline on the back of maul drives and direct running, but a typical Wiese overexuberance gave the Kiwis a chance to rebuild their 5-point margin (18-13).

Clarke did tackle Am finally to erase a Bok try, but lineout infringements kept the All Blacks pinned in their 22. A formal warning at 54 minutes and the Boks kicked to the corner again. It felt like a big moment when the All Blacks made a crucial steal after several sharp Bok phases. The All Black lineout just kept stealing Bok ball, but their loose kicking kept the Boks in it.

Am took the ball up the guts and found Makazole Mapimpi for an apparent beauty of a try, but it was called back for Jaden Hendrickse shielding Whitelock from a tackle that in truth he would never have made.

Mo’unga never looks like missing to make it 21-13, a 12-point swing.

But right away, the home side hit back to even the try count 2-2. Pollard struck it sweetly to make it 20-21 and 20 to play. A scrum penalty to SA at 62 allowed an easy exit, and Beauden Barrett seemed to bring panic on the pitch with him: he held Hendrickse back, but it was only a yellow card, not a penalty try.

With 15 minutes to play, the Boks held their first lead (23-21), but there was no rush in their rush defence.

Rieko Ioane’s big break from deep led to a David Havili try from the best player on the pitch (Savea) which put the All Blacks up 28-23.

The All Blacks seemed to play better without Beauden Barrett on, Whitelock continued his role as thief (not just at lineout, but at the breakdown) to put the Boks under pressure, and his Crusader captain Scott Barrett scored the winner.

A deserved winner because of their better start, New Zealand clawed back to 50-50 in territory and possession, and even if the Boks made more breaks (7 to 6) and metres (551-537), the All Blacks beat more defenders (20-17) and completed 12 more offloads, whilst evening up turnovers conceded (10-10).

For the All Blacks, Rieko had 10 carries, Samisoni Taukei’aho 12 and Savea 13. Cane made 11 hard tackles and Whitelock was omnipresent.

For the Boks, Willemse, Am (114 gliding metres on the wing), and Pieter-Steph du Toit were full of running. Pollard never missed at poles and made a lovely pass to set a drifting le Roux free. Malherbe made 12 tackles and Lood de Jager made 13 as well.

The problem for the Boks is it felt like a return to 2013 or 2018 where the Boks tried to play too much and got caught in an NBA style shootout.

Ian Foster is the big winner. What does that mean? He probably won himself a place in the box in France in 2023.

Jacques Nienaber out-thought himself. Keep Marx in the No 2 jersey, a wing on the wing, and a fit No 8 at the base. Maybe it’s a narrow win.

Welcome back, All Blacks!

The Crowd Says:

2022-09-18T04:25:47+00:00

Airleg63

Roar Rookie


What's the percentage of Taiwanese aboriginals in Taiwan's population now ? or consider themselves Aboriginal ? what's their opinion of of joining PRC or population post 1949....that's the mute point ...democracy vs communism...Taiwanese population determining their future.

2022-08-16T20:53:54+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


Looks great, and must create such an atmosphere live. Not sure I will ever get to a game there, but it’s on the short list of grounds I would love to go to.

2022-08-16T19:41:21+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


That’s not deliberate . Ellis Park was rebuilt from the old stadium . The stadium was close to the CBD and commercially many then thriving office blocks and commercial properties had encroached on it . Bakers Biscuits actually had benches on the roof of its premises so their staff could watch the matches for free . it would have been very difficult to expand the available space so it had to be designed this way to accommodate as large a crowd as possible and out of necessity they are pretty compacted in . Gives that feeling of the crowds being very close to the field . They are .

2022-08-16T18:55:17+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


Kinda feel the same for touring teams playing in Dunedin back in the day. Open air, in winter, the place was freezing. Now with the roof on, it’s almost comfortable. That crowd at Ellis park is definitely something else though. And the way the stands are set up.

2022-08-16T12:04:46+00:00

Just Nuisance

Roar Rookie


Well no . Obviously home support matters but the altitude advantage looks to be lessened by so many of our players now campaigning and living abroad . Also right now the 2 altitude teams Lions and Bulls only have about 4 players in the entire squad combined whereas past years they historically constituted the vast majority. The altitude as much of a challenge for our coastal players as it is for visitors. Always has been .

2022-08-16T11:38:20+00:00

Paulo

Roar Rookie


So it’s an even playing field then? Boks no longer have the ‘unfair’ altitude advantage?

2022-08-15T21:00:06+00:00

WEST

Roar Guru


Nothing to do with the pack fronting up and doing more grunt work? Just Mo’unga.. If B Barrett was at 10 he too would of had a great game. That was probably the best game I’ve seen from Mo’unga in black. Looong overdue

2022-08-15T20:12:38+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


:laughing: :laughing: :laughing: :laughing:

2022-08-15T12:21:02+00:00

Brendan NH Fan

Roar Rookie


It seems everything good was Ryan, maybe he should get the job. Reason NZ won was they didn't wait 30 mins to start playing and weren't 10-15 points behind before they got going, that is a player issue and not a Ryan fix.

2022-08-15T04:53:03+00:00

DCNZ

Guest


I saw a brief news clip on South African TV via YouTube. they interviewed an older man, post the game. He said "the AB's learned from their mistakes, and we didn't. congratulations All Blacks." Game over. the beauty of team sport - a team can evolve.

2022-08-15T04:07:53+00:00

Nick

Roar Rookie


I've noticed!!

2022-08-15T03:55:13+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


Nick, his man crush and infatuation has no levels when it comes to BB.. :shocked:

2022-08-15T03:43:51+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


I could not have said it better DDSmash.. :happy: :thumbup:

2022-08-15T03:41:53+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


Well said NotKev, once you do not agree he resorts to personal attacks like he has just done with Muzzo.

2022-08-15T03:19:03+00:00

Tim J

Roar Rookie


It is a great place to get away from the hustle of life. I am from Nelson, a terrific part of the country.. :happy: :thumbup:

2022-08-15T00:58:45+00:00

One Eye

Roar Rookie


No, we didn't play off 9. RMs distribution was a significant step up and the reason we were able to make so many breaks with both long passes and some magnificent double pumps allowing the defence to go past and then put the player in space - these are skills BB has never got and the more time in the saddle with Havili at this level the better it will get.

2022-08-15T00:55:35+00:00

One Eye

Roar Rookie


The problem was, the SB 9 was in front of Am when he got the ball and and therefore offside and he blocked SW twice ensuring there was no chance at it.

2022-08-14T22:52:02+00:00

NotKev

Roar Rookie


Agree. Alex Walters was biggest loss post World Cup!

2022-08-14T22:49:52+00:00

NotKev

Roar Rookie


I loved visiting South Island man. My best mate from Timaru lol now that was interesting trip lol but the whole place is spectacular! Totally spectacular. Could live there in a heart beat :)

2022-08-14T21:40:27+00:00

Jeff

Roar Rookie


But you were. not talking about whispers from out side. You were talking about a great coaching team. Funny sort of a coaching team at a RWC where one of the members is on the other side of the world.

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