Monday, November 30, 2009

All Blacks demolish France in a beautiful display of running rugby...



The All Blacks demolish France in a beautiful display of running rugby - five tries to none. Who was the ignorant fool who claimed the the All Blacks aura had dimmed?

At the end the end of this great performance a capacity French crowd rose as one to give the All Blacks a standing ovation.

It was the least Richie McCaw and his team of bravehearts deserved as they put an exclamation point on their test match season with a quite special performance.

The All Blacks saved their best for last on this long northern tour, putting on a masterclass in Marseille today as they carved up the French in as expressive a display of rugby as they've produced all year.

Running in five quite magnificent tries, and outplaying the French team all over the park, Graham Henry's New Zealanders - playing beautiful rugby in an ugly combination of black shorts and white jerseys - won 39-12 with a display that was possibly even more commanding than the score indicated. At the end skipper McCaw was also named the IRB's Player of the Year - a just reward for a magnificent competitor whose standards have remained sky-high all year.

After the muddled mess that has been much of this autumn programme in the north, it was a delight to see rugby finally serve up a test match it could be proud of. The capacity crowd of mainly southern French oval ball diehards were completely won over by a New Zealand performance of the highest class, and they showed their appreciation when an at-times heated contest came to its end.

It was billed as the "Battle of the Hemispheres" as it pitted the form teams of the autumn carnival together in an unofficial final; and the All Blacks responded brilliantly as they finally unleashed the all-round package they've been desperate to serve up for the last five weeks.

It was a treat to watch as the All Black attacking game was finally unleashed. Allied with their trademark stout defence, which is now a given with this team, they had way too much class for a French team that had been heavily touted as the form team of the northern hemisphere. They led 22-12 at halftime and put the game away with two more second-half touchdowns, as they kept the French scoreless after the break. They also kept their line intact for a second straight tour in the north - which in itself is a remarkable achievement.

It was the All Blacks' 10th win of the year and regained the prized Dave Gallaher Trophy with the second victory of three over the French for the season.

The All Blacks backs had a field day in perfect conditions. Dan Carter finally unleashed one of those virtuoso displays that's been in the works for a while now, Ma'a Nonu and Conrad Smith were outstanding in midfield and the back three of Mils Muliaina and his two flying wings had way too much for the French to handle.

Up front the All Blacks found the French a handful at scrum time, but it mattered not. They won the lineout contest with something to spare and led by the incomparable McCaw were all over the French at the breakdown. Big Brad Thorn battled tirelessly to the end (and his well-earned early trip home), while Kieran Read produced another eye-catching display at No 8.

As is now to be expected, their defence was of the highest class, and you could see the determination in them right to the final whistle not to let their line be breached.

McCaw and his men will be rapt that they've been able to sign off so splendidly in a test they'd happily billed as defining. That was the messages out of the All Blacks camp pretty much from the minute they walked off Twickenham last weekend.

This was the match on which their season hung. With four defeats already, it could never be called a resounding success, but victory would at least make it a run of six straight test wins and a continuation of their remarkable record under Graham Henry on the northern autumn swing.

They have never lost up here under him (excepting, of course, that Cardiff World Cup aberration), and heading into this match they had not conceded a try either for the past two tours. There can be no questioning the will and determination of this group.

But defeat would not only have burst that bubble, but handed the season series to the French, surrendered the prized Dave Gallaher and placed a disappointing fifth tick in the loss column. That would not do at all.

The other big factor to bear in mind was the fatigue one. The All Blacks looked tired this week and their challenge was to shrug off those aching limbs and wandering minds, and find one more peak, one more big effort.

They certainly achieved that magnificently in the opening 40 minutes, producing probably their best half of football of the year... It was at times nearly perfect stuff from the All Blacks who attacked with precision, crossed for three fine tries - which even the 65,000 Marseille faithful had to applaud vigorously - and took a significant 22-12 led into the sheds.

The French, after a passionate pre-match, picked up on the electricity of the occasion and opened with a couple of big scrums and an early Julien Dupuy penalty. They looked ready for the rumble, all right, and early signs were ominous for the All Black 'n Whites.

But they then settled. And struck. Sitiveni Sivivatu had his 27th test try after just seven minutes, and what a beaut it was. Jimmy Cowan and Nonu - having a whale of a game - made the initial thrust off crisp lineout ball and Carter's pinpoint flat pass gave his wing the perfect hole to dance through for the 7-3 lead.

The French regained the lead via two more Dupuy penalties while continuing to win the scrum battle pretty conclusively, but Muliaina had the New Zealanders back in front just past the opening quarter with the try of the tour - the season, even.

Cowan sparked a sensational 90m try when he gathered an aimless French kick deep in his 22, and immediately sensed something was on. Muliaina took the wide pass, Smith shovelled it on to Sivivatu who left David Marty in his dust and then timed the inpass to Muliana beautifully for a clean run-on for the fullback.

By now the All Blacks were humming. After their attacking struggles on this trip, it was a treat to see the shackles finally unleashed.

In some ways the New Zealanders' third try of their half might have been their most satisfying. It came eight minutes from the break and was served up via - of all places - the scrum.

Kieran Read probably could have scored when he steamed on to a break opened up by a Carter chip-kick that sat up perfectly for Nonu, but when he slipped the pass to Tom Donnelly the big lock couldn't quite hang on in the tackle.

Never mind. From the resultant scrum the All Blacks caught the French napping, Neemia Tialata put a huge hit on and when ball popped loose Jeroma Kaino was on hand to grab the score.

Only a late Francois Trinh-Duc dropped goal cut the deficit to 10 by the break; but it was hard to shake the feeling that the French were just hanging on.

After only a Carter penalty to show for the third quarter, Cory Jane put the issue beyond doubt when he scored a fabulous individual try to take the margin to 20.

He scooped up a bounced Cowan pass, fended off his marker, then put in a pinpoint kick that he won the chase to like it was a Sunday stroll.

That left just time for Smith to grab try No 5 - the first time this season they've amassed more than three touchdowns - off a superb McCaw turnover, and for a couple of melees to erupt that showed how much feeling was in the contest.

And then the All Blacks trudged off to take their bows, their trophy and no doubt to toast the most perfect of ends to their test programme. Tres magnifique!

France 12 (Julien Dupuy 3 pens; Francois Trinh-Duc - drop goal),

New Zealand 39 (Sitiveni Sivivatu, Mils Muliaina, Jerome Kaino, Cory Jane, Conrad Smith tries; Dan Carter 2 pens, 4 cons).

Ht: 12-22

Next week the 'dirt trackers' will be let loose against the Barbarians in what is the only non-test match of this tour. These second stringers and development players will have their chance in the sun to prove they are worthy of future selection in the AB's squad.

Acknowledgements: Stuff.com

Tuesday, November 10, 2009

All Blacks beat Wales at Millennium Stadium 2009...


The All Blacks take on Wales at Millennium Stadium in Cardiff in the start of their northern hemisphere campaign. All Blacks beat Wales. Wales claim refs intimidated by All Blacks. All Blacks more desperate in win over Wales Brad Thorn at the top of his game. Relevant offers

Drama. Passion. Intensity. And a hell of a finish. This was one test match that lived up to its billing as the All Blacks had to dig deep to continue their stranglehold over Wales at the Millennium Stadium today.

Warren Gatland's Wales couldn't quite manage the upset their coach had suggested was on the cards this week, but they gave it one heck of a try, taking the All Blacks to the brink as they held on for a 19-12 victory that preserves their 56-year, 21-test winning streak against this proud rugby nation.

But you have to say if the Welsh keep turning up with this sort of attitude and aptitude, surely their day will come sooner rather than later.

And this time they even hung in the contest in the second half as the All Blacks, playing much to the script of last year's similarly stirring encounter, took their game up a gear after halftime to wrest control of a contest that had looked to be slipping from their grasp.

In fact, with the match winding down into its final minutes, the Welsh had looked as though they might have snatched a dramatic draw, when big lock Alun-Wyn Jones snaffled a Jimmy Cowan pass and dashed off 60 metres upfield in a run that nearly lifted the roof off this magnificent packed stadium.

He was eventually hauled in by Zac Guildford, who had a fine test debut, and the All Blacks were able to scramble back on defence and avert the crisis.

Still, they spent the last couple of minutes in batten-down-the-hatches mode as the Welsh camped in their red zone. Alas there was to be no late try to snatch, if not a famous victory, a probably meritorious draw.

The All Blacks hung on and banked the win to keep their seven year unbeaten run in these autumn internationals intact, but boy did they know they had been in a test match by the final whistle.

Big Brad Thorn, that ageless wonder, had a magnificent match for the All Blacks as he once again turned back the clock, and behind him the black pack took their game to the level they needed to in the second spell. Hooker Andrew Hore also toiled mightily.

Conrad Smith and Guildford were probably the pick of the backs, though Mils Muliaina had one of his better matches of the year at the back. Still, it was to Wales' immense credit that they kept the New Zealanders to just the single try as they attacked them with a venom in the second half.

Three times the New Zealanders looked to have crossed the line in the second spell, and three times the TMO ruled that desperate Welsh defence had denied them. It was magnificent stuff.

Ad Feedback Wales gave it their best shot, all right, and in the end were worthy of their coach's brave words in the buildup. This is some team Gatland is building, and the canny Kiwi is right to talk them up.

And Graham Henry's All Blacks will also take some satisfaction in this rollercoaster year of theirs that they stared adversity in the face, and didn't blink.

It was a case of déjà-vu as another furious first-half effort from the Welsh had them well in this contest after 40 minutes, with the scores locked at 6-6 (two penalties apiece) and Gatland's men having very much the better of the opening skirmishes.

Of course a year ago the Welsh had led the All Blacks 9-6 at halftime at this very stadium, only to be outscored 23-0 over the second stanza. Would history repeat for a side desperate to end 56 years of test match agony at the hands of the New Zealanders?

You had to say by the break, the Welsh had set themselves up perfectly. They had managed to lure the All Blacks into a one-dimensional contest of kick-and-chase football that saw the New Zealanders unable to establish any continuity of possession.

With the home team, buoyed by the capacity crowd of 74,330 in full voice as per usual, clearly winning the possession battle - if not the breakdown one - it became a case of the All Blacks hanging in rather than dictating anything.

Instead it was the Welsh who looked the more likely with ball in hand and the All Blacks who were called on to make some big tackles against some promising attacking forays. To their credit, New Zealand's defence was as secure as it was severe, a succession of Welsh sorties halted in their tracks in furious fashion.

After Carter had edged the All Blacks in front with an early second-half penalty, hooker Hore drove across for the key try just past the quarter-hour mark.

It was classic Hore. The All Blacks had attacked the left flank and Thorn and Guildford had found some space, with Hore picking up off the deck and bulldozing over. Carter's conversion took the All Blacks out to 16-6, and it was then that they threatened to blow the game open.

But the Welsh held on. Somehow. Carter extended the lead to 13, then Stephen Jones slotted a couple of three-pointers himself to get his side back within striking distance.

That they couldn't quite get there should not detract from a fabulous Welsh effort. The coach can be proud of his men.

New Zealand 19 (Andrew Hore try; Dan Carter 4 pen, con)

Wales 12 (Stephen Jones 4 pen). Halftime: 6-6.

Monkey King wins 2009 New Zealand Trotting Cup at Addington Raceway, Christchurch...


Favourite Monkey King won the $1 million New Zealand Trotting Cup at Addington today, mounting a big late finish in the 3200m race.

The protest siren sounded moments after Monkey King roped in the pace-setting Australian Smoken Up close to home, then held the fast finishing Bettor's Strike off by a neck.

Monkey King posted the second-fastest time in the history of the Christchurch race. Smoken Up, which went clear at the turn, was provisionally third.

The protest was against Bettor's Strike, who may have interfered with second favourite Kiwi Ingenuity at the turn.

Australian pacers Smoken Up and Karloo Mick set much of the early running.

- NZPA

The Melbourne Cup great - The mighty Kiwi...


The Melbourne Cup:

Kiwi - one of the all time greats. The Melbourne Cup is Australia's major annual thoroughbred horse race. Billed as 'the race that stops a nation', it is for three-year-olds and over, and covers a distance of 3200 metres. The event has been held on the first Tuesday in November since 1861 by the Victoria Racing Club, at Flemington Park in Melbourne. It is generally regarded as the most prestigious "two-mile" handicap in the world.

The race was originally held over two miles, about 3,218 metres, but following Australia's adoption of the metric system in 1972 the current distance of 3200 metres was adopted. This reduced the distance by 61ft 6in, and Rain Lover's 1968 race record of 3min.19.1sec was accordingly adjusted to 3min.17.9sec. The present record holder is the 1990 winner Kingston Rule with a time of 3min 16.3sec.

New Zealand success:Since the race was first run; New Zealand-breds have won 41 Melbourne Cups starting in 1883 with Martini Henry. In recent years their success has been remarkable with NZ breds taking 28 of the past 50 Melbourne Cups.

Famous NZ-breds to land the famous race in recent years include Ethereal (2001), Might and Power (1997) and Doriemus (1995), all of whom also won Australia's famous Caulfield Cup.

However possibly the most famous New Zealand bred Melbourne Cup Winner was a horse named Kiwi. Kiwi was a race horse who in 1983 won the Wellington Cup and the Melbourne Cup.

Kiwi raced from 1980 to 1987, and he was purchased by Waverley sheep farmer Snow Lupton for only NZ$1000, originally to be used as a stock horse on the farm, and was never intended to be tried as a thoroughbred racing galloper.

Legend has it that as Kiwi proved to be a fast horse with plenty of stamina around the Lupton farm, Lupton was convinced by his friends to enter Kiwi in the Derby at nearby Wanganui, to see how he ran under race conditions. He instantly showed promise, especially over longer distances. He was an unknown quantity at the two mile distance when he was entered in the 1983 Wellington Cup, and won handily.

Despite having won over the two mile distance, he was still a distant long shot with the bookmakers and punters alike on race day, and started at 10/1. Yet he managed to come from last in the final straight to take the victory and capture the hearts of racing aficionados.

He was retired to the Lupton's farm.


Melbourne Cup Day Racing in New Zealand:

The first Tuesday in November is generally a day where even here in New Zealand the entire nation stops to watch the great race. This day is also known for office sweepstakes, and for many New Zealanders the one day of the year where they will venture down to the TAB to make an investment on the big race.

Domestically there are three thoroughbred meetings conducted on this day for the Auckland Racing Club at Ellerslie, the Wellington Racing Club at Trentham, and the Otago Racing Club at Wingatui. For the Otago Racing Club the day mirrors Flemington and has a glamorous image and a noticeable fashion theme highlighted by the 'Fashions on the Field' competition. The day is extremely popular with Otago businesses who utilize the event to entertain clients and staff.