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Watch: Hansen hails 'special' Barrett and has message for Cheika critics

By Harry West
New Zealand star Beauden Barrett

Steve Hansen believes Beauden Barrett’s scintillating showing against Australia on Saturday was further evidence he deserved to hold off Richie Mo’unga as New Zealand’s first-choice fly-half.

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Barrett made history in the 40-12 Rugby Championship thrashing at Eden Park, becoming the first All Black to score four tries against the Wallabies as Hansen’s side retained the Bledisloe Cup in convincing fashion, following on from last week’s 38-13 win in Sydney.

Before the tournament, there were suggestions that Mo’unga – who won the Super Rugby title with the Crusaders – could usurp Barrett and gain a starting berth at 10.

However, Barrett was given the nod for both clashes against Australia and, after he contributed 30 points in Auckland, Hansen heaped praise on the two-time world player of the year.

“Beauden is a special player, we know that. He has been the world player of the year for the last two years,” the head coach told a media conference.

“I understand everyone getting exciting about Richie Mo’unga, because we’re excited about him, he’s an outstanding young man and an outstanding young player and going to be great as the years go by.

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“But you can’t buy experience and you can’t buy moments in the middle.

“Beauden’s had those and we saw what happens when they all click together, like tonight.

“I thought it was a pretty special performance by the team. One of the harder things in sport is to back up a scoreboard-dominant win, which we got in the first Test.

“Tonight we had to come back out and earn it again and we had to work hard. I thought Australia played well in patches and the boys got better and better as the night went on.”

Hansen also came out in support of the under-fire Michael Cheika, and blamed the “mischievous media” for their role in the furore and also pointed to social media, adding  “I don’t think it should put a coach under pressure losing to us.”

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Simon 10 hours ago
Fin Smith explains the Leinster 'chaos' that caught out Northampton

In the fine tradition of Irish rugby, Leinster cheat well and for some reason only known to whoever referees them, they are allowed to get away with it every single game. If teams have not got the physicality up front to stop them getting the ball, they will win every single game. They take out players beyond the ruck and often hold them on the ground. Those that are beyond the ruck and therefore offside, hover there to cause distraction but also to join the next ruck from the side thereby stopping the jackal. The lineout prior to the second try on Saturday. 3 Leinster players left the lineout before the ball was thrown and were driving the maul as soon as the player hit the ground and thereby getting that valuable momentum. They scrummage illegally, with the looshead turning in to stop the opposing tighthead from pushing straight and making it uncomfortable for the hooker. The tighthead takes a step and tries to get his opposite loosehead to drop the bind. Flankers often ‘move up’ and actually bind on the prop and not remain bound to the second row. It does cause chaos and is done quickly and efficiently so that referees are blinded by the illegal tactics. I am surprised opposition coaches when they meet referees before games don’t mention it. I am also surprised that they do not go to the referees group and ask them to look at the tactics used and referee them properly. If they are the better team and win, fair play but a lot of their momentum is gained illegally and therefore it is not a level playing field.

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