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Baby Blacks clinch best U20 Championship finish since 2017 title win

New Zealand's Matt Lowe goes on the attack versus Ireland (Photo by Carl Fourie/World Rugby)

New Zealand sealed their best finish at the World Rugby U20 Championship since their 2017 title win, clinching third place in the 2024 edition in South Africa with a five-try, 38-28 win over Ireland in the rankings play-off final in Cape Town.

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Both teams were soundly beaten in the semi-finals, New Zealand swatted aside 55-31 by French flair while Ireland were depowered 31-20 by a physical England who especially bullied their scrum. The Irish started much the better and were good value for their 11th-minute lead courtesy of pick-and-jam pressure on the line that ended with scrum-half Oliver Coffey nipping over.

Jack Murphy easily converted from in front of the posts and their early optimism was added to by New Zealand’s restart not travelling the requisite 10 metres and then at a later scrum in the 22 where they were given a penalty by referee Saba Abulashvili.

Tighthead Alex Mullan was proving a big addition to their front row while he also diligently got through a heap of tackles. He wasn’t the only one enjoying good moments; Hugo McLaughlin’s intercept and clearance kick when New Zealand finally visited the opposition 22 again was another confidence booster that was followed by a free at the scrum for not driving straight.

The hunch was that the Kiwis would eventually pay for this stream of errors and they did. They initially ran a decent shape off halfway lineout possession but Hugh Gavin did tremendously well in ripping Cooper Grant of possession and booting into the 22.

Attack

137
Passes
230
94
Ball Carries
152
249m
Post Contact Metres
390m
6
Line Breaks
5

The kick that was returned was lapped up by Ben O’Connor in his own half and off he sped, ghosting between Tom Allen and King Maxwell and giving a pass outside to Murphy who made the corner for the 33rd-minute try he converted from the touchline.

Twelve points was a decent advantage, but that comfort was short-lived. Bryn Ward was carded with his team suddenly under the pump on their line and from the tapped penalty, New Zealand skipper Vernon Bason was awarded the 38th minute converted try following a lengthy TMO review.

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The return of the teams for the second half was met by a deluge that sent people in the stands scattering for cover and the on-field numerical advantage that New Zealand had was quickly squandered by Frank Vaenuku’s needless clear-out on Stephen Smyth, who exited injured.

This card, though, didn’t wound the Kiwis in the slightest as they decisively ‘won’ the short 14-vs-14 period 12-0 to jump 17-12 in front. Fleet-footed midfielder Aki Tuivailala was the switch flicker, making a thunderous surge through the middle to set up Xavi Taele for the first try and then popping a pass to unleash the sprinting Bason from 30 metres out for the second.

“Let’s go” was the noisy cheer from the unused New Zealand squad players who had hunkered down for cover in the seats at the back of the lower bowl, and they was more high-pitch cheering to follow with the rain having now stopped.

Tighthead Joshua Smith had his finish chalked off for a knock-on in the lead-up but there was no doubt about Jeremiah Avei-Collins’ effort on 56 minutes, the battering ram sub back-rower beating four defenders to score the try that Rico Simpson converted for 24-12.

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As happened in last Sunday’s second half, Ireland had no answer on how to stem the opposition’s momentum and they were soon finished off by a Vaenuku brace. The first on 67 minutes was beautiful, the winger collecting a peach of a crosskick from Taele, and the second owed much to an unfortunate Irish deflection backwards from O’Connor five minutes later to push the margin out to 38-12.

Ireland did at least finish with some consolation scores, something they didn’t manage against the English who held them scoreless in the semi-final second half. Ethan Graham first got in at the corner and Sean Naughton then rounded off another sharply finished move.

  • Click here to sign up to RugbyPass TV for free live coverage of matches from the 2024 World Rugby U20 Championship in countries that don’t have an exclusive local host broadcaster deal

 

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cw 6 hours ago
The coaching conundrum part one: Is there a crisis Down Under?

Thanks JW for clarifying your point and totally agree. The ABs are still trying to find their mojo” - that spark of power that binds and defines them. Man the Boks certainly found theirs in Wellington! But I think it cannot be far off for ABs - my comment about two coaches was a bit glib. The key point for me is that they need first a coach or coaches that can unlock that power and for me that starts at getting the set piece right and especially the scrum and second a coach that can simplify the game plans. I am fortified in this view by NBs comment that most of the ABs tries come from the scrum or lineout - this is the structured power game we have been seeing all year. But it cannot work while the scrum is backpeddling. That has to be fixed ASAP if Robertson is going to stick to this formula. I also think it is too late in the cycle to reverse course and revert to a game based on speed and continuity. The second is just as important - keep it simple! Complex movements that require 196 cm 144 kg props to run around like 95kg flankers is never going to work over a sustained period. The 2024 Blues showed what a powerful yet simple formula can do. The 2025 Blues, with Beauden at 10 tried to be more expansive / complicated - and struggled for most of the season.

I also think that the split bench needs to reflect the game they “want” to play not follow some rote formula. For example the ABs impact bench has the biggest front row in the World with two props 195cm / 140 kg plus. But that bulk cannot succeed without the right power based second row (7, 4, 5, 6). That bulk becomes a disadvantage if they don’t have a rock solid base behind them - as both Boks showed at Eden Park and the English in London. Fresh powerful legs need to come on with them - thats why we need a 6-2 bench. And teams with this split can have players focused only on 40 minutes max of super high intensity play. Hence Robertson needs to design his team to accord with these basic physics.



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