'It is the defining rugby image of 2020' - World media reacts to Pumas upset win over All Blacks
UK rugby writer Stephen Jones – renowned for winding up New Zealand rugby fans – is at it again, suggesting the All Blacks need to spend time playing tier-2 rugby.
He tweeted that given the All Blacks’ “recent miserable record, culminating in today’s beasting” at the hands of the Pumas, it was only fair they should be recuperating against tier-2 nations, and that the Cook Islands should be promoted.
When legendary rugby commentator Keith Quinn pointed out that Jones’ team, Wales, hadn’t beaten the All Blacks since 1953, Jones responded: “Try to cop today a bit better than that mate.”
I believe given their recent miserable record culminating in today’s beasting at hands of Pumas that New Zealand spen recuperating time in Tier 2 and are replaced in TRC by Cook Islands. Only fair.
— Stephen Jones (@stephenjones9) November 14, 2020
The exchange came as the world’s media heaped praise on the Pumas and scorn on the All Blacks.
The Sydney Morning Herald said the All Blacks were “humiliated in a manner rarely seen”. The Times UK selected a pivotal moment that summed up the game. And The Daily Telegraph, also in Sydney, reported that most rugby fans will be smiling today.
Here’s how the world media reported Argentina pulling off one of the great test rugby upsets, stunning the All Blacks for the first time 25-15.
Upset for the Ages
“There won’t be a rugby fan in the world – at least outside of New Zealand – who didn’t get a kick out of seeing Argentina’s historic victory over the All Blacks at Bankwest Stadium on Saturday,” The Daily Telegraph’s match report said, with the website saying that every rugby fan – ‘well, maybe not the Kiwis” – would be smiling.
“The only thing better than the spontaneous celebrations of the Pumas when the final whistle blew was the glum look on the faces of the All Blacks.
“The Kiwis were spared the usual vitriol that follows their rare losses when they were narrowly beaten by the Wallabies last weekend – mainly because they had already wrapped up the Bledisloe Cup and fielded a weakened line-up.
“But the side that lost to the Pumas was arguably New Zealand’s best so the recriminations will be severe this time.”
Argentina beat All Blacks for first time in stunning boilover
“After 402 days without featuring in any international rugby, Argentina have beaten the All Blacks for the first time ever to secure the country’s greatest Test victory of all time,” the Sydney Morning Herald’s Tom Decent wrote.
The stunning 25-15 boilover will live long in the memory of those at Bankwest Stadium and Argentinians all over the world as Ian Foster’s All Blacks were humiliated in a manner rarely seen, orchestrated by Mario Ledesma and Michael Cheika.”
Sport24 in South Africa described the Pumas’ victory as “stunning”, while Australia’s news.com.au said the All Blacks have been “sentenced to a nine-year meltdown”.
In The Times UK, Stuart Barnes wrote: “No question, it is the defining rugby image of 2020. The All Blacks trailed Argentina in Parramatta, Sydney, by 12 points with six minutes remaining. Richie Mo’unga surged towards the Pumas’ tryline, only to find the rock that was the Argentina captain, Pablo Matera, over the ball. Immovable, winning the penalty to consign New Zealand to a second consecutive defeat for the first time since 2011.
Two weeks in a row now, the #AllBlacks have suffered surprise losses. What have the new head coach and captain got to say for themselves? #NZLvARGhttps://t.co/EOoUokTmbZ
— RugbyPass (@RugbyPass) November 14, 2020
“The cameras closed in on the stone-faced skipper, ball held tight in his massive arms. No hint of a smile, pure focus and the widest-eyed determination to see the remaining minutes to its conclusion. His team-mates congratulated him but his eyes were elsewhere. Maybe looking towards his coach, the soon-to-be-tearful Mario Ledesma.
“In these grey times around the world — Argentina has suffered more than its share from the pandemic — it is wonderful to be able to write about something truly great. The day Argentina beat the All Blacks and all that upbeat emotion summed up by the Puma leader and his wide-eyed stare through the ages.”
‘Great moment in Argentina sport history’
La Nacion in Argentina described the result as “the end of one of the last utopias of Argentinean sport”. Claudio Cerviño writes in today’s issue of La Nacion that Argentina will never have to say they’ve never seen their team win against the All Blacks, “the best in the world, the ones who are born with a rugby ball, who feel the sport like no other in the South Pacific”.
Cerviño says this victory last night rivals some of the greatest moments of sport for the nation – a moment many believed would never happen. He compares the Pumas performance last night to the country’s Davis Cup victory in Croatia in 2016, a trophy that many Argentinean greats had tried to grab and missed before.
Mariano Ryan writes in his analysis for Clarin that the Pumas were “strong against adversity” and called this victory one of the “highest impact” ones in the history of the sport. According to Ryan, the match proved that Argentina has put together a solid team.
Headlines don’t come much better
‘One of the biggest upsets’
The UK’s Daily Mail described Argentina’s win as “one of the biggest upsets in test rugby history”.
“The Argentinians were given almost no chance of registering their maiden victory over the All Blacks in their tournament opener after being kept off the pitch for almost the entire season by the global health crisis.”
“I honestly thought they would run out of juice”
All Blacks legend John Kirwan was quick to speak out about the loss, saying he was left “shocked”.
“I honestly thought they would run out of juice. Have we ever seen anything like this? They completely outplayed us all across the field. Our discipline in the first half was just silly. This was the most amazing, courageous performance I’ve seen in a long, long time,” he said.
“The Pumas were far hungrier and they will go down in history… there will be a party for a week.
“The decisive moment was Rieko [Ioane]’s knock on [in the final 10 minutes, with the All Blacks on the attack]. I thought we could have still won it till then.
“England showed the blueprint to beating the All Blacks in the World Cup. Get off your [defensive] line, make you tackles, put them under pressure. We saw that last week [in the defeat to Wallabies in Brisbane] and we saw it tonight. If you do that, the All Blacks have no backup plan.
“Am I dreaming – cause I just heard someone [Foster] say they played with more passion, more want. That’s usually what they say about us.
“Discipline… you can’t do that stuff. Coles slapped that guy in the face. Rieko dropped the ball.”
Meanwhile, Honey Hireme-Smiler on the influence of former Wallabies coach Michael Cheika, who is now an assistant with Pumas:
“You could see Michael Cheika’s influence in the defeat. The Pumas’ line-speed was brutal and their defence worked.”
Social Media reacts
Royal Commission about to be launched in NZ.
The @AllBlacks have just lost 2 in a row…
This time to @lospumas ??? #NZLvARG— Ben Davis (@BenDavis74) November 14, 2020
Hook every NZ media melt down piece straight into my veins #NZLvARG
— Sam Phillips (@samphillips06) November 14, 2020
‘Argentina’s performance today makes a mockery of the Springboks not wanting to travel for The Rugby Championship’ #NZLvARG https://t.co/6VAdjGioRg
— RugbyPass (@RugbyPass) November 14, 2020
They’ll be going into meltdown in New Zealand right now #NZLvARG
— Cameron Mee (@cameron_mee1) November 14, 2020
Pumas’ result removes the notion that you need stacks of top quality test matches to get up to speed.
Dont play for months.
Just play a couple of friendlies.
Then roll up and beat the All Blacks.— Paul Williams (@thepaulwilliams) November 14, 2020
The cohesion of this Argentina team – having not played together for a year – has been really brilliant.
— Brian O’Driscoll (@BrianODriscoll) November 14, 2020
Seeing Argentinians cry after winning at rugby make me sad that in New Zealand it only happens when we lose.
— Matt Nippert (@MattNippert) November 14, 2020
That’s the uplifting rugby story of a tumultuous 2020. Argentina hadn’t played for a year, rock up and beat the All Blacks for the first time ever. You gotta love sport.
— Owain Jones (@OwainJTJones) November 14, 2020
‘Horribly vulnerable and highly beatable’
NZME’s Gregor Paul didn’t hold back in last night’s premium column..
“Argentina have made history and the All Blacks have the sort of problems that suggest they are horribly vulnerable and highly beatable. It wasn’t that they lost to the Pumas, it was that they never really got anywhere near them.
“The All Blacks had nothing. Really nothing and rarely in the last 10 years, maybe even in the last 20, have they played with such a sense of being rattled and so badly outclassed.”
‘We’ve been through hell’
Argentinian coach Mario Ledesma – who played 84 tests for the Pumas – choked on tears as he tried to describe what the win meant.
“We’ve been through hell,” he said, in obvious reference to his team having been hit by Covid-19, and also being starved of rugby.
“After everything that has happened this year…if I told you what it meant I wouldn’t be able to talk.”
Ledesma said that through the tough year, his players “just kept ticking, making efforts, and staying positive.”
“It’s unreal, unreal after everything that has happened,” Ledesma said. “I’m just so proud of them, it’s incredible.”
The Pumas released a video on the morning of the match, revealing how their players had dealt with the COVID-19 lockdown. Some had spent as long as four months in isolation and more than a dozen contracted COVID-19 before they came to Australia.
From backyard scrum sessions, to defence drills in team rooms, to meals in hotel isolation, the group had gone through it all to make the truncated tournament possible.
Comments on RugbyPass
Owen Farrell is one of the most polarising figures in the game. His entire attitude on the field (and sometimes off of it) smacks of arrogance and he is about as brash as Donald Trump in a political debate. Yet behind that facade is a calculating, determined and powerful leader who drives any team forward with an Iron will. You are right in that he gets better in the heat of battle and in the face of overwhelming odds. He develops a narrow focus and he delivers his best in a way that few others can. He is one of Englands great performers who sacrificed alot for the team and who often bears the weight of responsibility of leadership alone on the field and in front of the media. Despite what many think of him he is a fantastic game manager with a good rugby brain. He will be sorely missed from the international stage
13 Go to commentsAlways proud of the effort, Sam. The All blacks never stop fighting, never just roll over. He didn’t get anywhere near the respect he earned, but that’s due to results, not commitment to the cause. Have fun dominating in Japan!
1 Go to commentsNot sure why Papali’i thinks Scott Robertson needs his help to select the next All Black Captain. In my view, Papali’i would be well advised to have a good hard look at his own game, and to reflect on how fortunate he is to even wear the black jersey. Rather than shouting at his team mates at every set piece, standing in the mid-field pointing and holding his arms out and flopping to the ground at the back of every second or third ruck, may I suggest he would be far better employed actually doing something on the field. Seriously, watch him for 10 minutes during a game - not much happens. When was the last time he was first to a breakdown, or actually made a turnover? If Robertson is half the Coach I think he is, Papali’i will not be anywhere near the AB’s this season.
11 Go to commentsHiding coming up for Saders.
1 Go to commentsDagg really does go down some rabbit holes doesnt he? In the name I guess.
6 Go to commentsHey Brett I’m one who is looking forward to seeing JS back on the rugby field. I was under the impression that a large portion of his contract was via a third party so RA isn’t having to foot the bill My big concern is around the Tahs and what is happening there, why are so many players bailing. Is it the program, the coaches or the culture. Joe Schmidt recently said he had been at the Tahs all week and DC is a good coach. Something doesn’t gel , 10 front row forwards in a season that’s not bad luck
13 Go to commentsIncorrect title. He hasn’t said Furlong is one of the best scrummagers. He said he is one of the best props.
1 Go to comments“_It seems like a crazy thing that he was counting them_“ Are you stupid, mate? Anyone with more than half a brain understands that he meant “a lot” or something similar. Do you really think he was counting? “*Goode*: Told you, Jim!“ No, you banana. You said, explicitly, that the Irish players didn’t say what EE said they did. Even though you weren’t there. Even though you didn’t hear a word they said. M0r0n.
107 Go to commentsI am sure that Scott Robertson did do the courtesy of telling Sam Cane that he was not in his All Black plans and NZR would support him if he wished to sign a lucrative pension playing out his career in the cream puff rugby that is Japan’s Top League. I fail to see this as a negative as Israel Dagg is trying to spin it. Razor allowed Cane to leave with dignity rather than being unceremoniously dumped as was Buck Shelford.
6 Go to commentsHey rugbypass can I also get involved with writing rugby articles?
1 Go to commentsHey rugbypass can I also get involved with writing rugby articles?
1 Go to commentsAT THE END OF THE DAY THE TEAM WITH 4 WORLD CUPS WILL ALWAYS GET TO TELL THE OTHER NATION TO SUCK MY BALLS. THIS IS A SCIENTIFIC AND IRREFUTABLE FACT.
107 Go to commentsWish him and his family the best in his retirement from International rugby and into the future.
1 Go to commentsSelf proclaimed expert/pundit Andy Goode and his very personal views on referees…Why recalling them in such an article as if he were an undisputed authority on the subject ? Only because fellow writer ?
1 Go to commentsLate growth spurts are a common problem over here. I’m well over 30, and I just started having a growth spurt too. Could be a world class prop soon.
1 Go to commentsas much as the challenge cup is a bit of a nothing competition, winning it would still mean something. last year it was won by toulon, who are now something like 4th in the top 14? The year before it was won by Lyon a season before they finished 3rd in the league. The year before that the final was contested by Montpellier and Leicester - 12 months before they both became domestic champions. That should give Gloucester fans some hope.
1 Go to commentsgreat article - although I can’t help wonder whether the more relevant debate over coming years will be between Ford and Fin Smith!
13 Go to commentsMaking Scott Barrett captain might be a masterstroke….will calm him down & stop brain fades and also take pressure off Ardie, so he can just play his natural monster game. Lets see how that all pans out🧐
8 Go to commentsI’m surprised Scotland are planning to rest key players this summer - I don’t think any other tier 1 nation will be doing the same?
3 Go to commentsGreat analysis Brett and what a shame that RA haven't spent more on the tight five instead. BTW I see the latest 8-9 Combo has dropped, looking forward to that. It's incredible the amount of damage that Hamish and Eddie's egos did in such a short space of time. From memory Eddie drove the initial drive to poach league stars way back in the 00s, with community rugby paying the price in reduced funding. Australia went from 15% of its income being spent on community rugby in 2002 to 2.4% in 2015, sheer madness and look where they are now. Hamish reminds me of Scrappy Doo. Always mouthing off, spoiling for a fight with bigger dogs who'd eat him alive. Sadly RA didn't have a Scooby Doo to bail him out.
13 Go to comments