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'Great place to be': Wallabies ready to add more capital misery for All Blacks

By AAP
Wallabies-Wellington

Ask anyone in world rugby: beating the All Blacks in New Zealand is as hard as it gets.

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But if a chink of light exists for the beleaguered Wallabies, it could be the selection of Wellington as the venue for Saturday’s second Bledisloe Cup clash.

Australia have been spared the Eden Park cauldron this year, where the All Blacks stand unbeaten in an incredible 50 Tests.

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They will instead face New Zealand at Wellington’s harbourside Sky Stadium, known locally at the Cake Tin, where the All Blacks haven’t won in five Tests and six years.

That run includes one Bledisloe Test – Dave Rennie’s first outing as coach in 2020 – when Australia battled to a hugely commendable 16-16 draw, with Reece Hodge sending a 50m kick into the post after 80 minutes.

“It was an arm-wrestle of a match that one,” Lukhan Salakaia-Loto, a survivor from that clash, said.

“A tight contest but we’re hoping that this isn’t a tight contest, and hoping that we can get a result this week.

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“It’s good to be back here in Wellington … and hopefully we can turn it around.”

As well as the 16-16 draw with Australia, the All Blacks shared the same scoreline with South Africa in 2019.

Steve Hansen’s side were also beaten by the Proteas at Sky Stadium in 2018 in another thriller: a 36-34 loss.

Looking a lot further back, Wellington was also the venue involved in Australia’s last Bledisloe Cup sweep, in 2000.

The Wellington hoodoo is a big talking point in New Zealand this week, but Salakaia-Loto isn’t buying in.

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“I don’t read too much into that. Any team enjoys playing at home, and it’s the All Blacks in New Zealand, so it’s always going to be a tough match,” he said.

Dylan Pietsch is another with fond memories of the Kiwi capital, registering his international debut back in 2007 alongside Tate McDermott in the now-abandoned Wellington Sevens.

“Good memories, great field and a great place to be,” he said.

Pietsch could be in line for another first in Wellington, with a possible opening on the wing.

Given Australia cannot avoid the Rugby Championship wooden spoon, coach Joe Schmidt may feel it could be time to throw Pietsch in, given Marika Koroibete’s underwhelming form.

“I’d always love to start,” Pietsch said, before calling Koroibete “world class”.

“We gotta respect what he’s done in the past and what he does every week … I’m more than happy to start but I understand that Marika is there and is one of the best.”

NO CAPITAL RETURNS: NEW ZEALAND’S ORDINARY RUN IN WELLINGTON

2024 – All Blacks 30-38 Argentina

2022 – All Blacks 22-32 Ireland

2020 – All Blacks 16-16 Australia

2019 – All Blacks 16-16 South Africa

2018 – All Blacks 34-36 South Africa.

Enter now to stand a chance of winning tickets to all three British & Irish Lions Tests vs Australia

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Comments

4 Comments
M
MQ 17 days ago

Am sure we can do it-by which I mean score at all in the final 20

J
Jmann 17 days ago

ABs by 20+

B
BBT13 17 days ago

As a Wallaby tragic I hope I am wrong, but the usual series of events is a narrow win/loss for the Wallabies to NZ followed by a thrashing the week after.

T
Teddy 17 days ago

Set up nicely.


ABs can't buy a win in wellington or score in the last 20 mins. If Cane celebrates his 100th cap by getting sent off, the wallabies could nick it.

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E
EV 5 hours ago
Is this why Ireland and England struggle to win World Cups?

Rassie is an extremely shrewd PR operator but the hype and melodrama is a sideshow to take the attention from the real reason for the Boks dominance.


Utimately the Boks dominate because Rassie and his team are so scientific and so driven. His attention to detail and obsessive analysis smacks of Tom Brady's approach.


He has engineered a system to find and nurture talent from the best schools to the most desolate backwaters. That system has a culture and doctrine very similar to elite military units, it does not tolerate individuals at the expense of the collective.


That machine also churns out three to five world class players in every position. They are encouraged to play in Ireland, England, France and Japan where their performance continues to be monitored according to metrics that is well guarded IP.


Older players are begged to play in the less physical Japanese league as it extends their careers. No Saffa really wants to see Etzebeth or Peter Steph or Pollard play in France or British Isles. And especially not in South Africa, where you just have these big, physical young guns coming out of hyper competitive schools looking for blood.


Last but but no means the least is the rugby public's alignment with the Springbok agenda. We love it when they win between World Cups but there is zero drama if they lose a game or a string of games for the sake of squad depth.


It's taken time to put it together but it has just matured into a relentless machine.

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