New Zealandâs media could have been forgiven for having their end of year tour reports in the bag even before kick-off so great were the perceived differences between the two sides that took the pitch at the Aviva Stadium yesterday.
Murray. Best. Kearney the elder â the men in black 19-0 down at a point a minute. Rip it up and start again was the order of the day for the southern hemisphere scribes.
Roll on another 60 minutes and the All Blacks are pounding at the Irish defence, with Ryan Crotty breaking hearts with his late try to tie things on the scoreboard. Second time around Aaron Cruden makes the kick and the perfect year is sealed for the worldâs best rugby team.
Nerve
Writing in TheNew Zealand Herald Patrick McKendry was effusive in his praise of Joe Schmidtâs side, but also for Crudenâs nerve when it mattered and the quality of the All Blacksâ bench.
âWhere to start? The Irish would be an appropriate place, for they were inspired and they needed to be to turn more than a century of history on its head,â wrote McKendry.
âThe final 24-22 scoreline didnât seem possible at halftime with the visitors down by 15 points.
âWhat for days will seem a most unlikely victory given the hole the All Blacks fell into was a credit to Aaron Crudenâs mental strength and, again, the work of the replacements who have shone in the late drama of the past three weeks.
â A remarkable finish, almost five minutes after time was up. It was so cruel on Ireland, a most unlikely of victories for the All Blacks. A perfect season but not a perfect performance.â
Sympathy
Writing in the same newspaper, Gregor Paul also had plenty of sympathy for Ireland on a barely believable afternoon.
âNo one does heartbreak like Ireland. Too cruel. Too cruel. This didnât really happen, did it? New Zealand, 22-17 down with time up on the clock, won,â Paulâs report starts.
Later on he writes: âBut as always fate conspired against Ireland. Never have they been closer. Never have they done more. Never have they so comprehensively outplayed the All Blacks. But hereâs the thing . . . 79 minutes isnât enough against this crew. They didnât quite shut the door and slam, before they knew it the All Blacks were inside the house and celebrating.â
Marc Hinton of The Press group summed up the All Blacksâ historic victory, writing: âOn a gloriously imperfect night for them, theyâd achieved perfection.
âIt was not the complete performance the All Blacks had been seeking. Nowhere near it. But you had to admire their pluck, courage and execution when it mattered.
âThey found a way to win, when they looked gone for all money. They came back from 15 points down at the half to once again break Irish hearts.
âThe home team were magnificent. They won most of the battles this afternoon, except the one that counted.â
âTheir forwards, led by the mighty Munster man Paul OâConnell, outplayed their vaunted opposites, and the backs, with Conor Murray superb at No 9, tackled themselves to standstill after a dazzling first 40.â
Article source: http://www.skysports.com/rugbyunion/match_report/0,,11069_62476_1,00.html
"No one does heartbreak like Ireland"
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