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 Rugby Union News 
Saturday, August 26 2023
How the world media reacted to All Blacks record defeat

How the world media responded to the All Blacks’ record 35-7 defeat against South Africa at Twickenham this morning.

It was a horror show as nothing went right for Ian Foster’s side in London. Two yellow cards, an early injury and then a second yellow to Scott Barrett – resulting in a red – meant they played more than half the match with 14 players or fewer. Not great as the Springboks outpowered them up front, helped by their seven forwards off the bench.

Dominant Springboks make massive World Cup statement

Leighton Koopman, iol.co.za

The Springboks stuck to their word and pummelled New Zealand into submission at Twickenham in their final warm-up match before their defence of the World Cup starts.

South Africa, who were dominant from the start, scored a 35-7 (halftime 14-0) win in an inspiring performance before they take on Scotland, Romania, Ireland and Tonga in the pool stages of France 2023.

Springbok captain Siya Kolisi promised on Thursday they would go all out, and boy did they turn the screws on the All Blacks from the kickoff. They delivered on their promise, and a powerful 80-minute performance by the forwards and backline kept New Zealand under severe pressure throughout.

There wasn’t a facet that the Boks did not dominate for the entire game, and this performance will stand them in good stead in terms of momentum heading into the World Cup.

South Africa inflict worst-ever defeat

Stuart Barnes, The Times UK

Talk about Test-match pedigree. Talk about statements. New Zealand’s record defeat was an echoing endorsement of South Africa, Scott Barrett’s red card and possible ban a cause for concern.

It was an awful day for Ian Foster’s All Blacks, who face France in their opening World Cup match, but a cracking day for English neutrals. France will feel a lot better than Ireland and Scotland, who take on South Africa in pool B next month.

As for Twickenham, it had the privilege of hosting the world’s two great rugby superpowers. It was good to be at the stadium. I haven’t been able to write that for a while.

An early South African scrum penalty against a reputable Kiwi scrum was a strong start. The pack were powerful at close range, the back three fizzed at pace and the All Blacks were hanging on, but hang on they did, against the early odds. There was more sizzle and bite in the opening six minutes than England have generated in 240 minutes of warm-up rugby. This was red-hot stuff.

Posted by: AT 02:00 am   |  Permalink   |  Email
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