Sport

New Zealand beat England to win women’s Rugby World Cup

New Zealand‘s running game trumped England‘s power to win a thrilling final of the women’s Rugby World Cup 34-31 in Auckland on Saturday and clinch a sixth world title.

It was a spectacular end to a tournament that has broken records for attendances and global interest.

Winger Ayesha Leti-I’iga put the Black Ferns ahead with their sixth try and they held on in a dramatic finish at Eden Park to halt England’s world-record winning streak at 30 matches.

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England played three-quarters of the game with 14 players after winger Lydia Thompson was shown a red card for a head-high tackle but they still nearly pulled off victory thanks to the ferocity of their forward play.

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Four of England’s five tries came from lineout drives, including a hat-trick to hooker Amy Cokayne, and they were handed a chance to snatch victory in the dying minutes.

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However, two lineout drives were repelled by the home team on their tryline and when England knocked-on, a record home crowd of 40,000 erupted in noise.

It completed a metamorphosis for New Zealand under veteran former All Blacks coach Wayne Smith, who was introduced this year after the Black Ferns were thrashed twice by England a year ago.

Smith had steered the Black Ferns to 11 straight wins but his team were still underdogs against a Red Roses side he labelled one of the best teams in the history of men’s or women’s rugby.

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His team stayed true to the breathless, attacking style they had used with success all tournament and it ultimately triumphed over England’s efficient, power-based game, roared on by a world-crowd for women’s rugby.

New Zealand captain Ruahei Demant said her team’s turnaround in fortunes was one the country should savour.

“It’s been really challenging. Last year we went on a northern tour and we got pumped,” Demant said.

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“The way that the players have turned themselves around, there’s a lot that’s unseen. We’ve sacrificed so much to get one chance in a lifetime to win a World Cup at home, and we did it.”

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By Agence France Presse