Quite a sight to see: Richie McCaw lifting that trophy. What a great player. What a warrior.
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Quite a sight to see: Richie McCaw lifting that trophy. What a great player. What a warrior.
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McCaw says it’s about who plays the best rugby.
So the All Blacks are not guaranteed to win the final vs France – despite they beating the put on Australia?
Guess that’s what he’s saying.
He’s probably right – I don’t imagine that France are just going to lie down at Eden Park and just let the All Blacks walk away with the Cup.
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Wales lost a heartbreaking semifinal match at Eden Park by a single point on Saturday. Playing 61 minutes of the match a man short after a controversial red card to captain Sam Warburton, the Welsh had a brilliant, courageous second half and came within centimeters of winning the game and moving on to next weekend’s final.
The BBC’s Tom Fordyce described the match beautifully – read his account here.
Congrats to winners France and to Wales as well. There are no losers today.
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With the Wallabies v the All Blacks match imminent, time to turn the Worst Hair lens back onto the rugby pitch. Here’s 21-year-old Australian utility James O’Connor.
James is an excellent and very popular star down under – and wherever top-level rugby is played. With his youthful charm, he’s a big hit with the ladies as well. Unfortunately, though, James’s official Wallabies pic highlights the resemblance between him and a certain teenybop Canadian pop star.
You’d never catch the Biebz anywhere near the Rugby World Cup. And James needs a new team photo. He doesn’t always look so Justinian – check out his official website.
Go get ‘em today, James – and after the World Cup, hit the photo booth, huh?
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Semi-final time and New Zealand is partying like it’s 1987. The semi-finalists back then, at the inaugural World Cup, were also New Zealand, Australia, France and Wales (although the match-ups were different). New Zealand went on to beat France in the final, a feat they (famously) have not achieved since, and are desperately hoping to repeat this time.
In doing so, they will be relying on the replacement for Dan Carter’s replacement, with Colin Slade, like Carter, having been ruled out of the remainder of the tournament with a groin strain (what is with NZ fly-halves and their nether regions?). The new kid is just that – a kid. Aaron Cruden is 23 (but looks 16) and has played 8 tests, including coming on a substitute in the quarter-final against Argentina with his knee bandaged to cover up the graze he got falling off his skateboard last week. I wish I were joking.
Cruden will, at least, be surrounded by familiar faces, notably Hurricanes teammates Piri Weepu inside him and Ma’a Nonu outside. Weepu has become the Mr. Fix-it of the All Blacks, leading the haka, starting at No. 9, covering No. 10, and even jumping out of bed to retrieve Cory Jane and Israel Dagg from a North Shore bar after curfew.
Cruden’s opposite number on Sunday, Quade Cooper, is looking to rebound from a pretty atrocious display in Australia’s quarter-final victory over South Africa. Maybe he was suffering from being booed every time he touches the ball (his status as Public Enemy No. 1 in New Zealand is not just because he’s a Kiwi playing for the enemy – Digby Ioane doesn’t cop the same sort of flak – but because he’s perceived as arrogant, and has taken a couple of cheap shots at Saint Richie). Or maybe South Africa just played him well. Either way, both sides will likely view the opposition’s Number 10 as a weak link defensively (but will be very wary of them with ball in hand).
The other big question mark for Australia is whether their bruising win over the Springboks will give them momentum or leave them exhausted. It is almost unbelievable that they came away as victors in that game, given the statistics – 76% of the game was spent in their half and they made 147 tackles to South Africa’s 53. But that sort of effort takes its toll, and a week suddenly seems like a short rest period. Whatever state they’re in, you can be sure that both sides will be up for it, and it should be an intense match. The long-awaited match-up between David Pocock (immense in the game against South Africa) and Richie McCaw (still nursing an injured foot) will be a key deciding factor.
Things should be no less intense on the northern hemisphere side of the draw, and possibly more entertaining. (For a Kiwi to say that about a match featuring two European teams, especially when the alternative is an ANZAC test, is high praise indeed.) Both France and Wales fully deserved their wins on Saturday, and look to be very evenly matched. Whether France can string two (or three) great performances together in a row is, as ever, an open question, but if they do, they will be a handful. Wales seem supremely focused, organized and fit, so France will have to be at their best. The Welsh kids (10 of them are 23 or under) are coming through with flying colours, although they will miss Rhys Priestland if he doesn’t recover from his shoulder injury.
From a neutral’s perspective, these are almost perfect semi-final match-ups, featuring the four most enterprising teams in the world in contests with rich historical resonance and for the highest stakes. I can’t wait for Saturday.
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Yes – you can still vote for Dan Carter even though he has been knocked out of the World Cup.
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