New Zealand v England
- The Junior Kiwis lost to the Junior Kangaroos 16-24 in the curtain raiser to this match.
Kiwis see off England
Liam Napier in Wellington, Sportal
23/10/2010 8:04:11 PM
New Zealand lost strike weapon Manu Vatuvei for the tournament
but sealed a likely Four Nations final berth with a comprehensive 24-10
victory over England at Westpac Stadium on Saturday.
The
four-tries-to-two win was the perfect tonic for the 20,000-strong crowd,
who toasted the 100th anniversary of the Kiwis' first Test on home
soil. It also avenged their Wellington demons having been thumped 58-0
by Australia in 2007.
Vatuvei trudged off after two minutes,
suffering a fractured right forearm in his first tackle with English
centre Michael Shenton. It was a massive blow for the Kiwis who had
fancied their title chances, though, Roosters winger Sam Perrett is an
able replacement.
Kiwi captain Benji Marshall led from the front,
scoring a try, adding a penalty and three conversions for a 12 point
haul on the back of a dominate and aggressive forwards display.
New
Zealand, who could have scored at least four further tries, looked to
be cruising early in the second half at 18-0 but they went to sleep.
England hit back with two tries in three minutes to close within eight
points but they could not hold it together for sustained periods.
The
Beast was a sad sight. His departure caused a left-side reshuffle with
Simon Mannering moved from the back-row to centre and Junior Sa'u out
one to the wing, where he had immediate success.
Thomas Leuluai
jumped out of dummy-half and his skip ball found Sa'u for a simple
opening try five minutes in. Benji Marshall missed the extras but nailed
an easy penalty for a 6-0 lead, which could have been more if the Kiwis
converted their chances.
It took four players to hold charging
centre Shaun Kenny-Dowall up, Sa'u was denied a double by Mannering's
forward pass and second-rower Bronson Harrison threw a poor ball after
busting through with Jason Nightingale on his shoulder.
But six
minutes before the break the Kiwis produced a beauty. Prop Frank-Paul
Nuuausala's flick ball allowed Marshall to dance, the captain put
Nightingale threw a hole and the Dragons winger gave Lance Hohaia a
straight run to the line. Marshall made no mistake to take a 12-0 half
time advantage.
England barley threatened and mistakes were
killing their attack. Down 4-1 in the line breaks, having made 40 more
tackles and 300 less running metres – something had to change to prevent
a blowout in the second forty.
When Kenny-Dowall bushed off
Gareth Ellis and three other weak English defenders to score his third
try in two matches in black, that blowout seemed inevitable. Marshall's
conversion made it 18-0.
England hooker James Roby gave his side a
sniff of a comeback with a dab-kick and regather off the post for the
Poms first try. Fullback Gareth Widdop converted.
The visitor's
halfback Sam Tompkins inspired a breakout, linking with speedy Shenton
who put Widdop under the bar. But Widdop could not secure the crucial
two points, meaning his side trailed 18-10 with 20 minutes to play.
English
standoff Kevin Brown failed to ground the ball from a Tomkins chip, but
the Kiwis were awarded a penalty for a push in the in-goal.
Then,
with a hop, skip, dummy and a Nightingale offload – Marshall was in at
the corner. His sideline conversion put the Kiwis beyond reach.
New Zealand:
Tries: Sa'u, Hohaia, Kenny-Dowall, Marshall
Con: Marshall 3
Pen: Marshall
England:
Tries: Roby, Widdop
Con: Widdop
HT: 12-0