ANALYSIS: Kiwis fire Kangaroos warning shot as Fisher-Harris raises half century in Samoa smash up

By Mike Meehall Wood / Editor

New Zealand have thrown down the gauntlet ahead of their crunch Test with Australia next week by outclassing Samoa 50-0 at Eden Park in Auckland.

The Kiwis were dominant, with their fearsome forward pack to the fore to overwhelm a physical Samoan side that showed plenty of fight, but ultimately lacked in quality in attacking areas.

Michael Maguire’s team, on the other hand, had the strength and the skill.

James Fisher-Harris, in his first game as captain, raised the half century with a superb crash line try off the shoulder of Jahrome Hughes, while Briton Nikora and Nelson Asofa-Solomona scored similar tries with little regard for self-preservation.

“I was pleased with how they defended, that’s what we take forward,” said Maguire.

“We put a bit of pressure on ourselves in the first half, but the scramble that we had, the black jerseys coming into the picture, that’s probably the most pleasing thing.”

Hughes and Dylan Brown rekindled their World Cup partnership, Kieran Foran added guile after being elevated to starting hooker and in the centres, Joey Manu and Matt Timoko impressed.

Samoan boss Ben Gardiner was missing a few stars – Brian To’o, at the birth of his child, top of the list – and while he couldn’t fault the effort, was left rueing the lack of quality.

For the second week in a row, his team competed against the best but couldn’t generate the points. The final scoreline was certainly harsh, but the result was not.

“We weren’t good enough tonight,” said Gardiner.

“What we wanted to do was improve the start of the game, which I thought we did and competed there, but we just couldn’t go with them. 

“The quality they have in their team – nothing against the guys we have, they have some experienced international football players so have played a lot of games at the top level and it’s another lesson for our guys tonight.”

If you were looking for a metaphor regarding what this match meant, the set that led to the Kiwis’ second had it all. 

Timoko caught a kick and returned it was the utmost tenacity, then had the presence of mind to pass and send Jamayne Isaako flying down the wing. Sua Faalogo and Murray Taulagi had all the commitment in the world to chase him down.

Manu charged in, had the shirt ripped clean off his back, offloaded and, on the next play, charged it back again topless. To end, Tapine battered a Samoan defender out of the way, freed an arm and slipped a rampaging Hughes over.

It was a little bit razzle dazzle, plenty of heart and equal parts brutal and skillful.  

That kind of contest was signposted well before the kick-off. International footy does a strong line in national anthems and war dances, but this was emotional stuff even by that standard.

Once the game began, the hits followed with the respective middles intent on leaving their mark.

The intensity of the context never really subsided, but the class of the Kiwis ensured that the competitiveness did, with an 18-0 lead always likely to be enough.

The Kiwis are warming nicely for Australia

Madge will have got everything that he could have wanted out of this. Physically, any cobwebs that might have accumulated in the period between the NRL season and now have been dispensed with and mentally, any nerves among his younger cohort will have also been dispelled.

Creatively, the Kiwis had excellent moments from Hughes and Brown in the halves, Manu causing his regular chaos on the edge and Nicoll-Klokstad kicking in with creativity to go with his regulation defensive and yardage work.

They’ll see areas for improvement, of course, but the manner with which the spine worked collectively will please the coaching staff immensely.

Against Australia next week and the week after, it’s that invention that they’ll need. In the middle, the Kiwis are more than a match for the Kangaroos, and they gave a strong demonstration of it today.

The Penrith duo of Moses Leota and Fisher-Harris were exceptional and, when they’re tired, Nelson Asofa-Solomona comes on. Tapine at 13 is everything you’d want in a big-bodied, silky offloading lock. 

All New Zealand could do to put down a marker would be to top what the Kangaroos did last week. They’ve done that and more.

Samoa’s spine remains their Achilles heel

When the Kiwis took the lead in the 14th minute, it was against the run of play. They had been pinned back by the Samoans, who were dominating the ruck and the field position. Crucially, however, they hadn’t scored or, really, looked like scoring.

New Zealand had added an extra creative figure into their spine by starting Foran at dummy half, but the Toa didn’t have that luxury. 

Faalogo and Gordon Chan Kum Tong are talented but raw rookies, Daejarn Asi is a fringe first grader as a five eighth and a long way short of international class as a halfback.

Stephen Crichton was ranting and raving at every play, demanding the football, as if he knew that if something was going to happen, it would be him who was at the heart of it. Too often, it didn’t arrive and, by the end, he was back in the centres. 

Against a defence as experienced as the Kiwis, the lack of experience and top-end quality in the spine was the obvious area of weakness. Jarome Luai’s absence was felt more than ever.

Samoa could compete in most areas of the field, but without that creative spark, they were never going to trouble the Kiwis.

We might end up looking at this year’s spine as the start of something special. Faalogo and Chan Kum Tong, if they progress as expected in the NRL, will be guys that Ben Gardiner can rely upon for years to come. 

Ronald Volkman, who came off the bench here, is another with a lot of football in the top grade in front of him.

Throw in Luai and a returning Chanel Harris-Tavita and this looks very different. They’re not going to run out of middles and outside backs – and the spine will certainly get better.

The Crowd Says:

2023-10-25T04:31:38+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


:laughing:

2023-10-23T20:47:43+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


Might come back as a 9?, Plenty of bending over and being pushed from behinds awaits him.

2023-10-23T15:13:54+00:00

Morz

Roar Rookie


Who set this tournament up with this draw? Kanga v Kiwi should have been the opening match. We now get two test matches in two weeks, but only one is a "Final". Bit silly.

2023-10-23T00:53:25+00:00

dogs

Roar Rookie


Does anyone know why Samoa didn't have Milford in the squad? Injured/unavailable? Or were they looking at the future, and figure he wouldn't be around by next world cup? I get he wasn't a regular starter for the Dolphins, and a defensive liability. But he did have some good games. And for mine offers more in the halves than the 3 they did pick.

2023-10-23T00:48:50+00:00

dogs

Roar Rookie


Yep, for all everyone says about our signing spree, they only "name" middle we have signed is in the last couple of years of his career. That said, I hope we get some vintage Taukaeaho (sp), I thought he was great at the Roosters, and they haven't been as good since he left. No idea how he went in the UK.

2023-10-22T21:28:39+00:00

Albo

Roar Rookie


Both should be playing in the centres if only they had some halfbacks ?

2023-10-22T11:25:16+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


I liked what Foz gave them, he took the pressure off Hughes & Brown. I also think Samoa started far better against the Kiwis than they did against the Kangaroos. But the Aussies are still favs, just.

2023-10-22T10:12:53+00:00

Short Memory

Roar Rookie


Fair questions BA. Even hopped up on adrenaline the Kiwis were only up 6 points after first quarter of the game. In the same period the Roos were up 22 points. The game was effectively over from that point and Aussies took their foot off the throat in the second half. Kiwis, on the other hand, went on with it and drove their dominance over the Samoans home. But do the comparative full time scores really tell us anything meaningful about the match up between the Kiwis and the Roos? Or does it just tell us how each of them responds to dominating a weaker team?

2023-10-22T07:46:10+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


Give it time :laughing:

2023-10-22T07:25:47+00:00

Ellie

Roar Rookie


Relatively unscathed this time Andrew.. :stoked:

2023-10-22T03:51:35+00:00

andrew

Roar Rookie


Careful there Ellie, you're bound to offend someone saying that :laughing:

2023-10-22T03:23:47+00:00

Greg

Roar Pro


Unless the Dogs can get more out of their forwards it doesn't matter where the likes of Burton and Crichton play.

2023-10-22T02:42:09+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


He made the same mistake that so many players make when the coach puts the 6 or 7 on their backs, they change from their strengths to what they think they should be doing. Critta is a bloody hound ball runner, just stick to that, don’t try to be Cliffy Lyons. Asi is the same. He’s also a centre thrown into a halves role at the Eels. His strength is running the ball. There were a couple of plays early yesterday when Samoa were on a roll and then Asi got the ball and his first thought was to look for someone else to run. Had he run himself they would’ve cracked the Kiwis, but he ended running backwards looking for someone else to run and it all broke down.

2023-10-22T02:34:21+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


I had them as favs for the WC, but they’ve got to show they can beat Australia unemotionally, clinically. Historically they’ve started games hopped up on adrenaline after the Haka, but faded when that energy dissipated, even when they won. Can they beat the Roos with superior execution ?

2023-10-22T02:30:07+00:00

Brett Allen

Roar Rookie


That says more about the Dragons than Amone, more specifically Hook. The kid is talented, unfortunately his future is obviously now uncertain. He’s more than talented enough for Tonga.

2023-10-22T02:00:26+00:00

Bill

Roar Rookie


Do Dogs reconsider making Critta a spine player after this? Maybe he warms into it but Burton has shown how tough it is to go from an outside back player having all th work done for you to a leadership role in the spine. He's a great player but yesterdays performance was pretty uninspiring.

2023-10-22T01:58:35+00:00

Tony

Roar Guru


"Hammer" Amone needs to be punted from the NRL

2023-10-22T01:34:12+00:00

Maxtruck

Roar Rookie


Amone could not hold down a spot in the halves for the Dragons. Rep player ?

2023-10-22T01:31:17+00:00

Short Memory

Roar Rookie


Great analysis. Kiwis are firing on all cylinders and clearly up for it. Teams are very evenly matched across the park - with Manu giving Kiwis the edge in the backs (he was unstoppable last series. And Turbo in Origin showed how much influence a roving centre can have on a game.) On the flip side, Roos have the edge in the crucial number 9 with Grant and Hunt streets ahead of the next best in that position. Aussies also have halves with a lot more experience playing together and winning tough games against opponents who were, on paper at least, apparently stronger. That said, I thought Kiwis tries against Samoa looked better constructed than Aussies' were.

2023-10-21T22:59:37+00:00

Renegade

Roar Guru


I had the Kiwis as favourites going into the tournament, the games over the next two weeks will be must see!

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar