Not many people saw that result in Wellington coming yesterday. I know I
didn't. The All Blacks had won 15 consecutive Rugby Championship
fixtures heading into that clash with the Springboks, going two years
undefeated in the competition.
At home their record is even more impressive. New Zealand have been more
or less unbeatable on home soil for a decade now. If you exclude that
dramatic 24-21 defeat by the British & Irish Lions last summer, the
All Blacks had not lost any Tests in New Zealand since being beaten
32-29 by South Africa in Hamilton way back in 2009.
South Africa's 36-34 win was a timely reminder, then - almost exactly a
year out from the next World Cup - that everyone is beatable.
New Zealand are still far and away the best team in the world. One
defeat does not change that. Especially when the All Blacks scored six
tries to South Africa's five (a further reminder, incidentally, of the
general direction in which rugby is headed).
On another day - had Beauden Barrett been more accurate from the tee,
had they not thrown those two interceptions, had they gone for a drop
goal rather than a try at the end - they might well have won again.
But what South Africa's win does prove is that when you match them
physically, as the Boks did magnificently, putting in a huge defensive
shift, the All Blacks are not immune to pressure. And for all their
incredible try-scoring potential, they are perhaps not hugely
experienced at winning in tight finishes.
The Lions showed last summer how you have to play New Zealand. Warren
Gatland's team were caught out in the first Test so they had to change
tactically. They wanted to be more direct and play with a big man such
as Ben Te'o in midfield but they were beaten at the breakdown and
struggled to cross the gain line.
They realised they had to play with clever players, not just physical
ones, and the 9-10-12 combination of Conor Murray, Jonathan Sexton and
Owen Farrell in midfield in the second and third Tests meant Sean
O'Brien and Jonathan Davies in particular could get across the gain line
and put the Lions on the front foot.
You simply have to compete with New Zealand at the breakdown. It's
easier said than done. They are incredibly quick to reorganise and reset
for the next phase - maybe as much as three seconds quicker than any
other team at getting into the next attacking shape. And once on the
front foot, they stay there.
The All Blacks play at a pace others struggle to match. It is not
error-free. But that doesn't matter. They know if they keep the pace up,
99 per cent of the time their opposition will not survive beyond an
hour. South Africa did, because they remained competitive in the contact
area throughout the game and had two half-backs who hounded their
opposition. But they can be beaten.
South Africa's performance yesterday really reminded me of the Lions.
They competed at the breakdown. They forced New Zealand into errors with
the strength of their defence.
Their hits on first and second contact were outstanding. Some of their
defensive sets on their own five-metre line - where New Zealand would
expect to score - resulted in turnovers. The big momentum shifts went
their way; coming back to lead at half-time, getting the first score in
after the break.
The pressure told. New Zealand tried to force things, for example when
Jordi Barrett tried a quick line-out, which Willie Le Roux intercepted
for a score.
The result raises very interesting questions with 12 months remaining
until Japan 2019. This could be a real step change for Rassie Erasmus'
team, changing them as a group. They can really build from here.
For New Zealand there are question marks. Barrett is one of the most
naturally gifted 10s rugby has ever seen. But his goal kicking is not of
the calibre of Grant Fox, Andrew Mehrtens or Dan Carter. Big games can
be decided by those kicks and Barrett's ability from the tee has to be a
question mark for Steve Hansen.
As is New Zealand's tactical kicking, an area of the game which increases in importance in the final moments of tight matches.
New Zealand, for all their brilliance, are not all that used to winning
these types of games. Most of the time, they go through the gears and
have the match sewn up well before the end.
Their collective decision not to engineer a drop goal opportunity yesterday reminded me of the 2007 World Cup defeat by France.
Hansen will know if you're going to win these tight matches, you have to
be able to control the key moments, particularly in the last 20 minutes
with one score between the teams. That is when your tactical kicking
and your goal kicking really matter.
That is what he will be drilling into his players.
New Zealand have some absolutely huge games coming up - in Pretoria in
three weeks and at Twickenham and in Dublin later this autumn. It is
going to be fascinating to see how they respond to this.
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