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All Blacks could set three world records

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The All Blacks have the potential to set three remarkable records as they pass the halfway point of their 2010 test season, and less than 12 months ago to suggest even one of them would be breached would have been madness.

 

The first opportunity will be to break a 63 year old record and potentially register ten wins on the trot against the Wallabies.

The All Blacks will not have Dan Carter available for that match, and potentially the team could feature changes as players who have featured for most of the season could make way to develop the second tier.

However the Wallabies, while match hardened, will play the All Blacks after two consecutive matches at altitude, and will be challenging for Robbie Deans and his men, who have not beaten New Zealand since their thumping 34-19 victory in Sydney in the ex-Crusaders coach first match against his countrymen.

The nine game losing streak set between 1936 and 1947 is a record, although in 1967 and 1978 the All Blacks did go 11 straight without defeat to the Wallabies, but there was a drawn match.

The Wallabies best hope is that five of their last six wins against the All Blacks have occurred at ANZ Stadium.

There is also the potential to go through the calendar year unbeaten.

Ireland did achieve this last year, but were blemished with their draw against the Wallabies. It was the closest a side has come to the achievement in the professional era.

In 1997 the All Blacks won 11 straight to kick off a magical year, before being held to a 26-26 draw by England at Twickenham to deny John Hart’s team a clean sweep.

A year later the Springboks nearly did the same, but lost their final match of their season, while in 2003 England went close, winning all and sundry that year, but lost to France in Marseille in a warm up match to give them a 16-1 record.

Finally there is the talk of the world record unbeaten streak.

The current record is 18, set over a five year period by Lithuania until May this year, losing to Georgia to break their dream run.

Of the major test nations, both the All Blacks of the sixties and the Springboks of the late nineties hold the joint record of 17.

From 1987 to 1990 the All Blacks did go 23 tests unbeaten, but drew to Australia 19-19 to interrupt the sequence, while from 2003 to 2008 the All Blacks achieved the world record unbeaten streak at home, winning 30 test matches.

 

Horan wants tournament-specific bans

July 28, 2010 - 6:37pm
Story by: AAP
Classic Wallaby Tim Horan

Tim Horan wants more consistent suspensions

Qantas Wallabies great Tim Horan has called for tournament-specific Rugby suspensions after Test playmaker Quade Cooper lost his appeal against a two-match ban that robs him of a eagerly-anticipated Bledisloe Cup debut.

Cooper copped a second blow in four days when a three-man appeals committee dismissed Australia's objection to his punishment for Saturday night's dangerous tackle on South African Morne Steyn.

The red-hot five-eighth will miss both Saturday night's clash against the All Blacks at Etihad Stadium and the return encounter in Christchurch the following weekend.

Cooper's punishment is effectively the most severe of three similar lifting tackles in consecutive Bundaberg Red Tri-Nations matches even though his offence was arguably the most tame.

His Australian Rugby Union legal counsel and coach Robbie Deans argued Springboks Jean de Villiers and Jaque Fourie were given more lenient bans as they could serve their time through missing provincial Currie Cup matches in South Africa.

While de Villiers' tackle on All Black Rene Ranger was viewed as the most dangerous and Fourie had a prior conviction, they both only have to miss one Tri-Nations Test.

Horan, who acts as a Rugby mentor for Cooper, also felt back-to-back Bledisloe Cup Tests was an overly harsh punishment for a lifting tackle that went wrong.

But the inconsistency of the sentence was the biggest issue for the 80-Test centre.

"It's just a shame that the two Test matches are week after week (against NZ)," Horan said.

"In a competition any bans handed out should be served within that competition.

"If you commit an offence playing Currie Cup you miss Currie Cup matches and if you commit it in the Tri-Nations you miss Tri-Nations matches."

Deans felt the same way after the appeal, which aimed as much for a reduction to a one match ban as a complete exoneration.

Asked if suspensions should served within the same competition, he said: "Yeah, ideally.

"That's obviously one manifestation if you like that hasn't been consistent, but it depends where you sit," Deans said.

"The critical message out of this for Quade and any subsequent players who find themselves in this circumstance and you're in this predicament you lose control of your own destiny, so you're much better to avert being in this predicament in the first place."

Horan agreed.

"It (damage to Steyn) wasn't serious but it could have been and you can't have young kids seeing that and trying to imitate it,' Horan said.

"It's a shame but the Wallabies have a quality replacement in Berrick Barnes."

Born in New Zealand's Waikato province, Cooper must now hope he can break back into Australia's team to make his first-ever appearance against his homeland in Sydney in September.

"I'm obviously pretty disappointed but at the same time we had a fair appeal," he said.

"All I can do from here is work hard and concentrate on getting back out there at the due date.

"You have to learn from it. Hopefully I don't get into this position again so I have to work on my technique."

His loss remains a massive blow for the Wallabies as he has been their most dangerous player in their opening five Tests this year, winning two Man-of-the-Match awards.

It certainly reduces Australia's unpredictability against an All Black outfit looking to inflict an eighth straight win over their trans-Tasman rivals for their worst Bledisloe streak in 63 years.

To get your tickets for the Bledisloe Cup and Bundaberg Red Tri-Nationsclick here

 

By Jim Morton

 

Australia 30-13 South Africa

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via rte.ie

 

Australia left South Africa's Tri-Nations title defence in tatters with a 30-13 win over the ill-disciplined Springboks this morning.

Flyhalf Will Genia celebrated his return from a thumb injury with a 75th-minute try to seal victory after South Africa scored two second-half tries to claw to within 10 points.

Winger Drew Mitchell scored on the stroke of halftime and Matt Giteau slotted five penalties to maintain the Springboks' winless record at Lang Park and leave their Tri-Nations campaign on the brink of collapse after three straight losses.

 

The Springboks did themselves few favours, having a man sin-binned at the start of each half and conceding a raft of first-half penalties to allow the Wallabies to open a 17-3 lead at the break.

The loss takes South Africa's Tri-Nations title hopes out of their hands, and they will need favourable results from Australia and New Zealand to have a chance of retaining their crown.

'Gotta be happy with the performance. There was a lot of stuff to be proud of, particularly the defence,' Australia coach Robbie Deans told reporters.

Jacque Fourie and Gurthro Steenkamp scored South Africa's first tries in 13 years at Lang Park after an undisciplined first half in which they managed only three points from a Morne Steyn penalty.

Steenkamp's try put South Africa within 10 points eight minutes before time and sparked hopes of an unlikely comeback, but the Wallabies absorbed fierce pressure in their 22 in a performance Deans rated their best defensive effort in his tenure as Australia coach.

As with their two previous away defeats to New Zealand, the Springboks started miserably when outside centre Fourie was sinbinned in the third minute for lifting number eight Richard Brown in a tackle.

Fourie was the third South African player sinbinned early in three consecutive matches.

'I just couldn't believe it could happen again for the third week in a row. This can't keep happening, surely,' lamented Springboks captain John Smit.

The Wallabies appeared determined to squander the 10-minute advantage, however, with flyhalf Quade Cooper's laser passes proving too slick for team mates on occasions.

A number of promising attacks were botched with fumbles and passes missing their targets before a ruck infringement handed Giteau the first of his four penalty goals for the half.

Mitchell finally swooped on a messy pass flung out by a prostrate Giteau five metres from the goal-line, then juggled the ball three times while pirouetting over the line to give the Wallabies their first try on the stroke of halftime.

Giteau's fifth penalty two minutes after the break put the Wallabies up 20-3, shortly before BJ Botha was sin-binned for slowing the ball down at a ruck.

South Africa mounted a belated fightback when Cooper lifted Steyn in a tackle to be sent off, and the Springboks capitalised with a try to Fourie in the 62nd minute.

The Springboks pushed hard but were repelled with some fierce tackling in the 22, but were too sapped from playing with 14 men for 20 minutes of the match to prevent Genia from crossing for the winner.

Although deflated, under-pressure coach Peter de Villiers remained defiant about the Springboks' flagging campaign.

'The competition isn't over yet ... It doesn't mean we're not part of the competition any more,' he said. 'The result doesn't matter to me as such.'

 

 

via rte.ie

 

Elsom admits there is work to do

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Wallabies fly-half Quade Cooper is congratulated on his try © Getty Images

 

Wallabies captain Rocky Elsom is all too aware that his side will have to raise their game if they are to challenge for this year's Tri-Nations crown.

The flanker admitted his side had plenty of work to do in the wake of their unconvincing 22-15 victory over Ireland at the Suncorp Stadium that ensured a return to winning ways following their defeat to England in Sydney a week ago.

''We've got a lot of work to do,'' Elsom told Fox Sports. ''The Tri-Nations is the most difficult tournament in world rugby so we have a lot of work to do. 'We just weren't sharp enough and not on the same page. I think when we played Ireland last year we played a hell of a lot better and came away with a draw.''

Coach Robbie Deans wad delighted to see his side close a big game out having failed to do so in the past - most recently against England in Sydney. "That's something we're trying to master, and didn't last week, so the boys worked their way through an awkward contest," he said."We played a lot of rugby and deserved to win, clearly we're frustrated we couldn't produce a little bit more."

The most pleasing aspect for Deans was the performance of his inexperienced front row who more than held their own to silence their critics. "It was a dominant scrum," said Deans. "Obviously it was an improvement and these blokes (rookie front-rowers) continue to grow."

Ireland coach Declan Kidney admitted that the better side had won the game and that his side only had themselves to blame after an error-laden performance. "We made too many errors, especially when we were attacking, and that was frustrating," said Kidney. "We defended stoutly but that left us short of energy at the end when we were trying to claw something back - in the end the result probably flattered us. There is now more competition for places and whoever plays well next season will get to wear the shirt.

"A lot of the possession they enjoyed was under our control as we gave them back the ball and, as a result, we were on the defensive a lot of the time," added Kidney.

Skipper Brian O'Driscoll also accepted the tour - that also included defeats to the All Blacks and the New Zealand Maori - had been a steep learning curve for some of the squad. "We had a number of players earning their first caps and it was all good experience - they will take a lot out of it.

"We haven't managed any victories on this tour and of course that is what you are judged on. We wanted to put a bit of pride back into our defensive game as we let ourselves down against New Zealand. Although we had a couple of lapses against Australia, we were fairly solid.

"The lads will now enjoy four or five weeks of holidays and try to freshen up for next year," he added.

More to follow.

© Scrum.com

Flannery '50-50' for Aussies

JERRY FLANNERY has a "50-50" chance of lining out in Saturday's Test against Australia at the Suncorp Stadium, according to Ireland forwards coach Gert Smal.

The Munster hooker was a late arrival on tour following problems with a calf injury, but rehabilitation on the injury is going well and a decision on Flannery's availability will be made tomorrow or possibly Wednesday.

"It's all going well," said Smal yesterday. "Over the next two days we'll see how he progresses and there's an option to maybe use him. (We'll decide) Tuesday or Wednesday."

Second-row Mick O'Driscoll is also expected to be available after suffering a back spasm in the defeat to New Zealand last Saturday week, while winger Shane Horgan is being monitored after taking a heavy blow to the neck area in last Friday's 31-28 loss to the Maori.

Meanwhile, Wallabies winger Digby Ioane will be out of action for four months after suffering a shoulder injury during Saturday's 21-20 second-Test loss to England.

Wallabies coach Robbie Deans said Ioane injured his shoulder when he fell heavily during the match in Sydney and needs a reconstruction.

Scrum-half Will Genia could also be out of action for up to four weeks after suffering a broken hand during Australia's first home loss to England since the 2003 World Cup final.

Deans said Genia would have X-rays to determine the seriousness of the injury but would definitely not be playing against Ireland.

- Hugh Farrelly

Irish Independent