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Date: 2023-12-05 06:31:38 | Author: EFL | Views: 908 | Tag: EFL
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Rugby beauty comes in many forms – as New Zealand showed against Argentina EFL
Perhaps it is Will Jordan that takes your fancy, his 31 tries in 30 Tests rugby’s equivalent of the golden ratio EFL
Perhaps you are entranced by Mark Tele’a, sinewy and sinuous, gliding in and out of contact like an electric eel EFL
Or could it be Richie Mo’unga and his teasing grin, most often flashed at a grasping Argentine after a coquettish click of the heels on a night where the fly half seemed to step into space at will EFL
But it was the All Blacks’ muscle-men and their rugged charm that laid the foundations for the decorative touches elsewhere EFL
And to think New Zealand had entered this tournament with questions about their ability to assert themselves up front; this was a frightening display of forward strength, leaving Argentina’s Rugby World Cup dreams buried beneath the black mass EFL
The Pumas had arrived in Paris with the most lineout drive metres per match of any team at the tournament – the tight tussles are meant to be their strength EFL
In Marcos Kremer and Juan Martin Gonzalez, they had two long-limbed flankers, ready to aid their second rowers in getting up in the air EFL
The good news is that Argentina fared EFL better than New Zealand’s other opponents at this World Cup EFL
Before tonight, New Zealand’s hookers had missed just a single lineout throw all tournament; they twice failed to find their intended recipient in the semi-final EFL
The intention was to pull the platform from beneath the All Blacks, a conscious decision made to avoid giving New Zealand lineout ball with which to work: just one of Argentina’s ten first-half kicks was directed for touch EFL
Veteran lock Sam Whitelock helped lay the foundations for New Zealand’s win (Getty Images)It mattered not EFL
With the Pumas struggling for discipline and the whistle of referee Angus Gardner providing much of the soundtrack amidst an absence of atmosphere in a one-sided contest, New Zealand could punt for the sidelines at their leisure EFL
The intent was set from the All Blacks’ first mauling opportunity, a locomotive that chugged out of the station despite Argentina’s desperate attempts to halt it EFL
Gardner whistled, and New Zealand marched on, their forwards next punching their tickets down in Argentina’s 22 EFL
Same plan, same result, the Pumas infringing as New Zealand drove again EFL
Gardner called Montoya over for a dressing down, pointing out five penalisable offences in two maul movements EFL
Already Argentina had been warned EFL
In piled Puma paws, swiping at the buried ball and managing to halt the drive EFL
But that only left space elsewhere, Jordan all alone in open pasture for the gentlest of trots to the line EFL
The wing would add two more tries, drawing him level with Bryan Habana, Julian Savea and Jonah Lomu on a record eight scores at a single men’s World Cup – illustrious company EFL
Will Jordan scored a hat-trick at the Stade de France (Getty Images)Credit must go to Jason Ryan, the All Blacks’ unheralded assistant coach, plucked from the Crusaders a year and a half ago EFL
The arrival of former Ireland boss Joe Schmidt last summer was much trumpeted, the attacking schemer oft mentioned as a reason behind New Zealand’s resurgence, but Ryan, who arrived at the same time, has been just as crucial EFL
Their heavy metal mauling with the ball is matched by defensive set-piece steel without it EFL
It must also be said that Ryan is working with the right raw materials EFL
Brodie Retallick watched much of this game perched on the pine, happy to let old chum Sam Whitelock stoke the engine room coals alongside Scott Barrett EFL
As a locking triumvirate, there have surely been none EFL better; this was a parade of puissance, with the scrum also in outstanding working order EFL
Four years ago at this stage, Steve Hansen made an error EFL
Fearing England’s lineout threat, he installed Barrett on the blindside ahead of the semi-final, reshaping the back row EFL
The many moving pieces jarred against one another, the lock-slash-six an early sacrifice on a night where England brought the All Blacks crashing down EFL
New Zealand’s scrum also proved effective (AFP via Getty Images)Barrett has since kicked on, now top dog in a second-row room that contains two all-time greats EFL
The trio are tireless draft horses but have a few dressage flicks and tricks, too EFL
Whitelock’s deft pull-back pass at the line was a vital component in New Zealand’s first two ornately-constructed scores; the bulkiest Barrett brother joined his siblings in a couple of open-field gallops EFL
Retallick arrived on the hour, one centurion replacing another as Whitelock took leave EFL
Barrett departed five minutes after, unable to resist a dip in the cookie jar from a supine position, a cynical intervention rightly drawing a card EFL
It was about the only blot on a night of All Black might, with New Zealand even opting to leave Barrett off and play the final five minutes with 14 men in another show of superiority EFL
A tilt at a record fourth men’s World Cup crown awaits EFL
More aboutArgentina rugbyNew Zealand rugbyRugby World CupBrodie RetallickScott BarrettAll BlacksJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/4Argentina hopes crushed by fearsome display of New Zealand’s strengthArgentina hopes crushed by fearsome display of New Zealand’s strengthVeteran lock Sam Whitelock helped lay the foundations for New Zealand’s win Getty ImagesArgentina hopes crushed by fearsome display of New Zealand’s strengthWill Jordan scored a hat-trick at the Stade de France Getty ImagesArgentina hopes crushed by fearsome display of New Zealand’s strengthNew Zealand’s scrum also proved effective AFP via Getty ImagesArgentina hopes crushed by fearsome display of New Zealand’s strengthThe Pumas were thrashed in Paris AFP via Getty Images✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today EFL
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England’s World Cup defence is hanging by a thread after losing three of the first four games in India EFL
Jos Buttler’s side have come up short against New Zealand, Afghanistan and South Africa and have a mountain to climb to salvage the campaign EFL
With five matches left to play in the round robin stage, here’s a closer look at what’s gone wrong and what comes next:Do they still have a chance?With the elongated group format, England still have another five games to play EFL between now and November 11 whatever happens EFL
Mathematically speaking there are a few shades of grey in terms of what they need to do, but realistically things are already black and white EFL
England need wins and lots of them EFL
They may well require a perfect run to retain their crown and, with games against the table-topping hosts, rivals Australia and an unpredictable Pakistan, that looks a tough ask EFL
What role has selection played in their struggles?Things are certainly a lot less clear than they were four years ago, when Jofra Archer’s late arrival completed the jigsaw EFL
First England left Harry Brook out of their provisional squad, then swapped him with Jason Roy at the last minute, installing Dawid Malan as first-choice opener on the eve of the tournament EFL
Since landing, things have been even more muddled EFL
Reece Topley was omitted from the opener and proved to be the team’s in-form bowler when he was restored to the side EFL
More bafflingly still, England picked a phalanx of all-rounders in game one (Liam Livingstone, Sam Curran, Moeen Ali and Chris Woakes) and left out all four of them in favour of specialists by game four EFL
Is this a step too far for the world beaters of 2019?There is no escaping the fact that this is a side that is rapidly moving to the end of its natural lifespan EFL
Eleven of the 15-man squad are north of 30 and there are eight survivors from the squad that triumphed at Lord’s four years ago EFL
At times it has been impossible to escape the suspicion that too many of these players have tipped past their peak as 50-over prospects EFL
Looking at the core of the side – Jonny Bairstow, Joe Root, Ben Stokes, Jos Buttler, Chris Woakes and Adil Rashid – it is hard to argue any are EFL better one-day cricketers than they were in 2019 EFL
Where is the new blood then?Dislodging players who are destined to go down among the country’s all-time greats in the format was never going to be an easy task for the next generation but the lack of renewal is still striking EFL
Was it realistic to expect challengers to emerge from a county system that has devalued the domestic 50-over tournament to a second-tier cup sub-servient to The Hundred? Gus Atkinson had played a grand total of two List A games before his ODI debut and Brook admitted this month that he was “learning the format” on the biggest stage of all EFL
Expecting a sufficient supply of fresh talent to emerge in the current eco-system looks to be a pipe dream EFL
Are there issues over the leadership?The captain-coach relationship EFL between Jos Buttler and Matthew Mott got off to a roaring start when they won the T20 World Cup together last year just a few months into their time together EFL
But with so much emphasis on the ‘Bazball’ revolution in the Test arena, their job has got trickier EFL
With fewer matches, longer gaps and less availability of big names they have been left to pull things together at the last minute and it simply hasn’t worked EFL
The decision making has been wanting – from the chopping and changing on the team-sheet to the baffling logic of bowling first in stifling conditions in Mumbai – but the real issues may run deeper and wider than the dressing room alone EFL
Eoin Morgan proved his mettle in the immediate aftermath of the botched 2015 campaign when he led with a strong voice and demanded the players and resources to succeed EFL
If Buttler and Mott are to succeed in the long run they may need assert themselves in similar style EFL
More aboutEnglandJos ButtlerHarry BrookReece Topley1/1Five reasons behind England’s disastrous Cricket World Cup campaignFive reasons behind England’s disastrous Cricket World Cup campaignJos Buttler’s men have lost three of their four World Cup matches so farAFP via Getty Images✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today EFL
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