New Zealand stayed firm at their Eden Park fortress to claim an attritional 24-17 win over South Africa in a heavyweight clash between the world’s top two rugby sides yesterday.
Under pressure after conceding a first-ever defeat on Argentine soil against the Pumas two weeks ago, the All Blacks responded with a performance of grit and discipline to stretch their unbeaten run at their Auckland stronghold to 51 matches.
Two well-taken tries by Emoni Narawa and Will Jordan set up a 14-3 lead at halftime before Quinn Tupaea grabbed a third five-pointer for the hosts 13 minutes from time.
Photo: AFP
Well-held for most of the night, the Springboks rallied with second-half tries by Malcolm Marx and Cobus Reinach to pull within a converted try.
However, they had not reckoned with Ardie Savea.
On the night of his 100th Test, the All Blacks’ back-row enforcer made a heroic turnover in the final minutes to thwart a South Africa raid on the try-line and help to seal the win.
“It was a gutsy performance, I’m just proud of the boys, we knew the Springboks were going to come here and give it to us,” Savea said. “I’m just proud of the way the boys turned up and fronted up.”
Fired up on the night of Savea’s milestone, the All Blacks started with pace and ferocity to score their first try in the second minute and shot to a 14-0 lead by the 18th.
Playmaker Beauden Barrett set up the opener, kicking cross-field to Narawa on the right wing.
Narawa slipped as he caught the ball, but had a clear run at the try-line when covering fullback Willie le Roux ran over the top of him.
While Narawa’s game was over with an apparent rib injury minutes later, the All Blacks rolled on.
Fullback Jordan burst clear from a line-out set play to cross by the posts, leaving bamboozled Boks in his wake.
There was no respite for the visitors until Handre Pollard knocked over a penalty in the 23rd minute and began dictating terms with his boot.
Although able to stop the All Blacks scoring, the Springboks wasted their own chances with skill and set-piece errors.
The arm-wrestle continued for 10 minutes into the second half until South Africa infringed at a ruck, falling further behind when Damian McKenzie booted the penalty.
It took a bullocking run by Kwagga Smith near the hour mark to finally unlock the All Blacks’ defense, with Marx grabbing the ball out of a ruck on the line to barge over and trim the margin to a converted try.
However, the rally was short-lived as Tupaea, fresh off the bench, sliced through three Springboks tacklers to cross at the right post.
Still, the Springboks came again to raise the tension, with Reinach following Smith’s blueprint with a run down the left channel for his try in the 74th minute.
With two minutes on the clock and with his team pinned on their try-line, Savea dug in his heels to claim the vital turnover and keep the All Blacks’ 31-year unbeaten run at Eden Park intact.
Wilyer Abreu watched the ball leave the park and tossed his bat high in the air. His Venezuela teammates streamed out of the dugout in celebration. The comeback was on and the win over the reigning World Baseball Classic (WBC) champion Japan was within reach. Japan, their 11-game WBC winning streak on the line, held a 5-4 lead in the sixth inning of Saturday’s thrilling quarter-final matchup when Abreu put his team ahead with the biggest swing of the game: a three-run shot off Hiromi Itoh that sent the loanDepot Park crowd into a passionate roar and helped seize Venezuela’s 8-5
A BREATHLESS BATTLE: France clinched the championship in a vicious back-and-forth match with England, denying Ireland the title by just a few points France won back-to-back Six Nations titles after beating England 48-46 on a last-second penalty-kick by Thomas Ramos in a thriller for the ages on Saturday. England scored their seventh try in the 77th minute and converted for 46-45. If the score held for a few more minutes, Ireland would have been crowned the champion. But France pressed yet again with 14 men, lost possession, regained it, and earned two simultaneous penalties after the fulltime siren. Captain Antoine Dupont debated with referee Nika Amashukeli where the penalty spots were. Ramos, who did not miss a goal-kick all night, finally lined up his seventh
Home runs are greeted with a celebratory shot of espresso and the donning of an Armani jacket. Victories are marked with bottles of red wine while the soaring voice of opera singer Andrea Bocelli echoes through the locker room. Welcome to baseball, Italian-style. Written off as 80-1 underdogs before the World Baseball Classic started, Italy’s fairytale tournament has carried them all the way to today’s (Taipei time) semi-finals in Miami against Venezuela. On Saturday, Italy — who scored a stunning upset of a star-studded US lineup during the pool phase — kept their unbeaten campaign alive with a nail-biting 8-6
Kimi Antonelli became Formula 1’s second-youngest race winner with a composed drive to victory for Mercedes in an eventful Chinese Grand Prix yesterday. The 19-year-old Italian was the youngest pole position starter and briefly lost the lead to Lewis Hamilton of Ferrari at the start, but retook it soon after and was in control after that. “We did it! We did it!” Antonelli shouted to his team on the radio amid laughs and whoops. It was another 1-2 finish for Mercedes to start the season as Antonelli’s teammate George Russell came through a battle with both Ferraris to finish second. Lewis Hamilton was