Brace for Naholo as All Blacks outclass Wallabies
The world champions were slow out of the blocks in the Rugby Championship opener in Sydney but eventually turned on the heat.
New Zealand’s Waisake Naholo (back L) tackles Australia’s Israel Folau during the Rugby Championship Bledisloe Cup Test match in Sydney on August 18, 2018. / AFP PHOTO / Saeed KHAN / — IMAGE RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE – STRICTLY NO COMMERCIAL USE —
Winger Waisake Naholo scored a double as New Zealand recovered from a slow start to overrun Australia 38-13 Saturday and extend the Wallabies’ Bledisloe Cup jinx in Sydney.
The world champions scored six tries to one in the first Test, which also doubles as the Rugby Championship opener, for their third win at ANZ Stadium in as many years.
Australia’s hopes of claiming the Bledisloe for the first time since 2002 now rest on winning the second Test in the three-match series next week at Eden Park, where they have not tasted victory since 1986.
All Blacks captain Kieran Read admitted the Wallabies dominated the first half, with his team trailing 6-0 until Aaron Smith’s opening try in the 39th minute.
But he praised his team’s effort when they ran rampant with five tries after the break.
“It was a bloody tough Test match, credit to the Wallabies for what they came up with,” he said.
Australia’s makeshift pack struggled at the set piece, turning over the ball at the lineout and conceding penalties at scrum-time.
As expected, Australia unleashed their potent backline early, desperate to put on a show for the 66,000 crowd.
Naholo was fortunate not to be sinbinned for a lifting tackle on Israel Folau and the New Zealanders committed uncharacteristic handling errors under pressure from Australia’s rushed defence.
They held on to prevent the Wallabies crossing the line in the first half, restricting them to penalties for Reece Hodge and Bernard Foley.
The All Blacks did not seriously threaten until the half hour mark, when winger Dane Haylett-Petty denied Naholo with a try-saving tackle on the line.
Naholo then turned creator when his smartly taken inside pass set up Aaron Smith for the first try of the match.
However, fly-half Beauden Barrett missed the conversion and the Australians went into the break up 6-5.
He made no mistake adding the extras when Jack Goodhue scored the All Blacks second just after the restart, giving them the lead for the first time at 12-6.
New Zealand then threatened to run away with the match after Haylett-Petty dropped the ball in front of Barrett, who soccered it forward for a try then added the conversion.
Lock Brodie Retallick gave the All Blacks a fourth after a Barrett run put his team on the attack, with the hulking winger using a dummy pass to fool the Australian defence before crashing over the line.
Jack Maddocks scored a consolation try for Australia after making his international debut from the bench but Naholo responded with two tries in two minutes to settle the issue.
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