It was another fiercely fought contest between the two rivals, but New Zealand, and it is strange to say this about them after what they have achieved over the years, lacked a steady hand on the tiller. They were rushed into decisions and when they needed a calm authority as the heat of the game intensified, no one stood up.
For the fourth match in four this tournament New Zealand opened the scoring but conceded last. Head coach Scott Robertson’s ploy of putting the experienced half-backs TJ Perenara and Beauden Barrett on the bench to bring knowhow in the pivotal moments made no difference: their three defeats in the last month have all followed interval leads.
Robertson did not use all his bench, a contrast to his opposite number Rassie Erasmus who brought on his five forward replacements before an hour was up. They made a difference as South Africa, who in the first half were wayward in the lineout, pushed around in the scrum after an assertive start and outnumbered at the breakdown, got on top after the introduction of hooker Malcom Marx on 45 minutes.
Their lineout and scrum improved immediately Marx came on and within five minutes they were ahead having trailed 9-3 at the interval to three Damien McKenzie penalties with Handre Pollard landing one. The Springboks had had more of the game but were too often isolated in possession by Ardie Savea and Sam Cane and forced to hold on.
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber ? Sign In
This story is from the {{IssueName}} edition of {{MagazineName}}.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
Already a subscriber? Sign In
Edwards gives Gatland a little to think about
A TERRIFIC effort from Ospreys should have seen victory and it was rough justice that high-flying Cardiff escaped with an undeserved draw.
Cowan-Dickie: I'm back and buzzing
LUKE Cowan-Dickie's journey back to the pinnacle of rugby is nothing short of extraordinary.
Clow keeps Rams in touch at the top
RAMS inward approach is paying dividends with the club involved in another title race thanks in part to free scoring flyer Zachary Clow.
Powell powers over to take Quins home
PLAYMAKER Kayleigh Powell powered past four defenders to score the eighth Harlequins try and narrowly edge out a spirited Trailfinders side to secure a late comeback win in a 15-try derby thriller.
Hathaway can follow Zam Skivington
GEORGE Skivington has backed Josh Hathaway to continue to go from strength to strength as the young winger attempts to follow in the slipstream of Louis Rees-Zammit and be a big hit for club and country.
Hybrid Hash will tie Borthwick in knots
THE description 'Hybrid Central Contracts' does not inspire confidence. Hybrid usually means a bit of this, and a bit of that — and 'Hybrid Hash' would be a more apt term for the RFU contracts given to 17 England players just before the autumn series slump.
Quins leave it late to power past Falcons
MARCUS Smith showed his class on Friday night, being an imperious creator and finisher as Harlequins romped to an emphatic five-try victory on Tyneside.
We need to see a complete shake-up
A NEW year and change is on the way across many aspects of the game, not least with the possibility of an SGM creating a complete change at the RFU.
Cool McBryde steals it for RGC
BILLY McBryde held his nerve to land a last kick of the match conversion to snatch a stunning 4139 win for RGC over leaders Ebbw Vale at Parc Eirias.
Century of highs for La Rochelle
AN IMPRESSIVE milestone at Stade Marcel Deflandre was reached last night, where La Rochelle hosted their 100th sell-out match in a row – either side of the period of pandemic restrictions – a run stretching back to January 2, 2016.