All Blacks make Rugby World Cup statement with dominant South Africa win

New Zealand 35-20 South Africa: The All Blacks produced a first-half blitz to all but secure the Rugby Championship trophy

Nick Mulvenney
Reuters
Saturday 15 July 2023 09:21 EDT
Comments
New Zealand impressed as the Springboks were brushed aside
New Zealand impressed as the Springboks were brushed aside (Getty Images)

Your support helps us to tell the story

This election is still a dead heat, according to most polls. In a fight with such wafer-thin margins, we need reporters on the ground talking to the people Trump and Harris are courting. Your support allows us to keep sending journalists to the story.

The Independent is trusted by 27 million Americans from across the entire political spectrum every month. Unlike many other quality news outlets, we choose not to lock you out of our reporting and analysis with paywalls. But quality journalism must still be paid for.

Help us keep bring these critical stories to light. Your support makes all the difference.

New Zealand rode another blistering start to a 35-20 victory over South Africa at Auckland’s Mt Smart Stadium, making a big statement in World Cup year and placing one hand on the Rugby Championship trophy.

Playing a high-octane brand of attacking rugby combined with immense physicality, the All Blacks scored early tries through Aaron Smith and Shannon Frizell before late scores from Will Jordan and Richie Mo’unga put a seal on the victory.

The world champions, starved of the ball and heavily penalised, looked shell-shocked by the early onslaught but recovered to score second-half tries through Malcolm Marx, Cheslin Kolbe and Kwagga Smith.

The victory made it two wins out of two in the truncated championship for the All Blacks after last week’s 41-12 victory over Argentina.

“We have a lot of respect for South Africa and to put that scoreline on them they turned it into a real arm-wrestle but I love the way we started, hung in there and then finished strong in the last quarter,” New Zealand coach Ian Foster told Sky Sports.

“It’s a great start for us this year, but it is just that (a start). We got a bit fidgety in the third quarter and went into our shell and they got back into it.

“But we then started to hold the ball well and make them make tackles, that tested their discipline.”

Richie Mo’unga starred for the All Blacks
Richie Mo’unga starred for the All Blacks (AFP via Getty Images)

The All Blacks shot out of the blocks and were rewarded in fifth minute when winger Jordan glided through the midfield and drew the last defender before releasing Smith to score.

Fly-half Mo’unga pushed the lead out to 10-0 with a penalty and the home side were soon over again with Jordan playing a key role as flanker Frizell finished off a sublime move featuring a whirlwind of offloads.

The Springboks were unable to get their hands on the ball in the opening quarter and it was not until the 26th minute that they got over the New Zealand line, only for the TMO to decide winger Kolbe had not grounded the ball.

They finally got on the board through a Faf de Klerk penalty in the 36th minute but Mo’unga replied quickly and the All Blacks held out a fierce assault on their try line to go into the break 20-3 up.

The game reverted to the sort of tight contest that had been expected in the second half but there was a worrying moment for the Springboks early on when scrum-half De Klerk went down clutching his knee and was replaced.

Shannon Frizell was among the try-scorers for New Zealand
Shannon Frizell was among the try-scorers for New Zealand (Getty Images)

South Africa’s “bomb squad” bench forwards entered the fray and had an immediate impact when the Springbok pack executed a rolling maul to send replacement hooker Marx over for a converted try and cut the deficit to 20-10.

Mo’unga kicked his third penalty from near the halfway line but the Springboks were in the ascendancy and superb inter-passing sent Kolbe over in the corner to cut the lead to 23-15.

That was as close as it got as Jordan got his reward for a superb display by latching onto a Beauden Barrett crosskick and Mo’unga, who kicked a total of 15 points from the tee, dived over the line for the fourth try.

There was still time for flanker Smith to bulldoze his way through the All Blacks defence for a fine individual try but the home fans were already celebrating the victory in the packed stands.

“There are positives we can take from this game, but also a lot of work-ons, things we need to improve,” Springbok centre Lukhanyo Am said.

Reuters

Join our commenting forum

Join thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their replies

Comments

Thank you for registering

Please refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged in