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All Blacks claim tense win over France in first-ever Nations Championship Test


CHRISTCHURCH, NEW ZEALAND - JULY 04: Will Jordan of New Zealand celebrates scoring his team's first try with Jordie Barrett of New Zealand during the Nations Championship match between New Zealand All Blacks and France at One New Zealand Stadium, on July 04, 2026 in Christchurch, New Zealand. (Photo by Joe Allison - Nations Championship/Nations Championship via Getty Images)
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19 Comments

The first game of the inaugural Nations Championship was a seesaw battle in Christchurch, with the lead changing hands consistently throughout 80 minutes of fast rugby under the new roof of One New Zealand Stadium.

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A Will Jordan try in the 70th minute was the winner for New Zealand, who survived one final charge from the visitors to begin the Dave Rennie era with a hard-fought 34-32 win.

It was a dream start for France, with an early attack from 10 metres inside the New Zealand half seeing Damian Penaud make metres down the right edge, before the winger was taken high by Ruben Love. Almost instantly, the ball was swung left, and it was Penaud who burst through a gap that opened in centrefield and scored the opening try of the game after just 110 seconds.

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Following the conversion, the TMO was called into action, and Love’s tackle was deemed cyclical, with the No.10 handed a yellow card.

The one-man deficit didn’t stop the All Blacks‘ attacking endeavour, and the hosts kept the ball in hand, pushing for five points when three were on offer. An Ardie Savea breakdown steal made amends for a lost lineout, and the ball swung wide to Will Jordan, who won the race to the corner with a dive for the line.

A couple of Matthieu Jalibert grubbers got in behind the New Zealand defence when France next made their way into the 22, but Damian McKenzie covered back for the first, and the ball beat the players to the dead ball line the second time.

Defence

183
Tackles Made
192
25
Tackles Missed
26
88%
Tackle Completion %
88%

With the next penalty against the hosts, Maxime Lucu added three points from a comfortable position.

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France’s attack continued to make ground, but a knock-on deep into phase play saw New Zealand launch a response, and with Love back on the field, the All Blacks put some phases of their own together. Some swift ball-handling saw Peter Lakai and Caleb Clarke combine down the left edge, with the blindside flanker set free for his second Test try.

Quick recycles and faster hands saw France make more half-breaks and press steadily upfield on attack, and Lucu again opted for three points when within comfortable range.

France led 13-12 after 30 minutes, with New Zealand’s lineout looking shaky while the scrum remained even.

Play remained dynamic as halftime neared, and New Zealand had their sixth 22m entry of the opening stanza, making the most of it as Cam Roigard sold a dummy at the base of the ruck to dart through a gap and score.

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The converted try gave the hosts a 19-13 lead at the break. France ended the period with a lightning-quick ball rate of 81 per cent, while New Zealand recorded an even more remarkable LQB rate of 94 per cent.

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It was an inaccurate start to the second half for New Zealand, with the desire to play fast evident and the decision-making suffering as a result.

A steadier hand from the French got them within striking distance, and there was a clever, lobbed try assist from Theo Attissogbe that put Antoine Hastoy away and gave France a one-point lead.

New Zealand struck back through another to Cam Roigard after consecutive charges down the blindside, with Jordie Barrett delivering the try assist.

France almost had the third try of the half after a box kick saw the ball go loose and some swift attack got them under the posts, but their points were postponed until the 58th minute, when Attissogbe was put into space down the right edge and pinned his ears back to win the race. The score left France just one point behind on the scoreboard entering the final quarter.

22m Entries

Avg. Points Scored
3.7
9
Entries
Avg. Points Scored
3.2
9
Entries

France opted for contestable kicks at a much higher rate in the third quarter, placing them on a dime and contesting well.

New Zealand captain Ardie Savea wasn’t satisfied with his one-point lead when France gave away their next penalty deep in their own 22, and decided to go for three points for the first time in the match.

The All Blacks’ bench started to make an impact in the final 15 minutes, with debutants Xavier Numia and Fehi Fineanganofo impressing and contributing well to a try to Will Jordan that pushed the lead to nine. Luke Jacobson delivered the try assist after a strong counterruck from Billy Proctor won New Zealand the ball.

France weren’t going to die wondering, reverting to playing with the ball in hand and pressing deep into New Zealand territory. Mickael Guillard’s carrying added plenty of muscle off the bench, and Jalibert wriggled through a gap and had the strength to score.

Tense moments ensued, but New Zealand clung to their two-point lead for the dying moments. Final score: 34-32.

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Comments

19 Comments
S
Soliloquin 15 mins ago

The ABs were the better team today, no doubt for me.

But still, it got very close.

What kept the French team ashore were the handling errors by the Blacks, and what helped the ABs was the lack of power up front. Every >2 seconds ruck was contested hard by Savea & all.

A bit sad Brau-Boirie’s try didn’t stand as I love the player, but the knock-on was there.

I would have liked to see more of the original backline (Penaud/Attissogbé/Spring), but with injuries and changes it did not. And having Hastoy play for so long was probably not planned. Guillard’s early entry after Bochaton’s HIA also prevented les Bleus from having a bigger momentum with his impact in the 2nd half.

u
unknown 23 mins ago

A great game of Rugby probably decided by the match officials !

B
BH 4 mins ago

Yep too many penalties against the NZ loosies and midfield, and not enough penalties against the French front rowers and locks for deliberately slowing the ball down.

G
GRB13 13 mins ago

Watching the soccer world cup I am wondering how long it is before they bring VAR into rugby. It is crazy.

C
Conrad 25 mins ago

Enjoyable match and the scoreboard got it right. ABs better team by a shade.


Pearce is becoming one the best refs around.

c
cnw 34 mins ago

I thought this game might be a Hit Man Hearns v Marvelous Marvin Hagler - and so it was. Punishing rugby played at speed for the entire game - 78-83% < 3 second ruck speed. Bodes well for France and ABs.

L
LiamBerlin 26 mins ago

I was concerned that with France being a little under strength and with NZ home advantage pumped by being back in Christchurch, it might be a bit one sided to NZ. Glad I was wrong. It was a great test match on its own, and a great start to the new comp. Really enjoyed the rugby of both teams.

P
PB 41 mins ago

A win for the AB’ s and looking good.

The result though should be viewed as a step in the right direction. Very much an under strength French team. No Jean Baptiste Gros, Marchand, Meauvaka, Flament, Ollivon, Meafu, du Pont, LLB, and Aldgjeri.


So pretty much a B team

B
BH 0 mins ago

NZ B team as well.


No Scott Barrett, Holland, Vaa’i, Tosi, Tamaiti Williams, Tuipolotu, Fainga’anuku, and Taukei’aho.

S
Soliloquin 21 mins ago

Indeed! A good game, but the ABs were too strong up front.


(Quite fun butchering of the French names 🥲)

c
cnw 26 mins ago

France nearly won playing a brand of rugby that absolutely suited this group of players. Fast highly skilled attacking rugby. And Jalibert take a bow.

u
unknown 33 mins ago

Yes but tbf the French B team is much closer to the quality of their A team than any other nation. They just have so many more pro players than any other nation and such amazing depth.

J
JW 41 mins ago

I’d love to know what the 100 points where Rennie though the ABs should be doing better.


I didn’t pay attention to the socks..

I
Icefarrow 11 mins ago

Well, he mentioned not going through the middle enough phases and a lack of line speed as two work-ons.

C
Conrad 23 mins ago

Giving Roigard 80 mins should be top of the list. It briefly looked like they might miss his game management in the last 5 mins.

O
Otagoman II 47 mins ago

A lot of good rugby played at speed.

u
unknown 49 mins ago

Joyous, utterly joyous rugby

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