Showing posts with label France. Show all posts
Showing posts with label France. Show all posts

Thursday, 27 October 2011

Who Will Win?-World Champions Once Again (Stage 5-The Grande Finale)

After 24 years and 5 Rugby World Cups New Zealand has once again lifted the Webb Ellis Cup on home ground but not without a big challenge from the French even before the game began when they dared to cross the 10 metre line during the Haka. At the start New Zealand were under big amounts of pressure but held on which led to a Tony Woodcock try which gave the All Blacks a 5-0 lead at halftime. After the break early in the second half Steven Donald kicked a penalty for a 8-0 lead only for the French captain to score a try which made the score 8-7 and after that half an hour of holding that lead the All Blacks kicked the ball out of touch to finally reclaim the title of World Champions. Below is an in depth report of the game.


France:

Path To The Final:

Wins: 4
Draws: 0
Losses: 3


New Zealand:

Path To The Final:

Wins: 7
Draws: 0
Losses: 0

IRB Rankings:(after cup)

IRB World Rankings - 24 October 2011
Position (last week) Member Union Rating Point
1(1) NZLNEW ZEALAND 91.43
2(2) AUSAUSTRALIA 87.42
3(3) FRAFRANCE 84.70
4(4) RSASOUTH AFRICA 84.34
5(5) ENGENGLAND 81.58
6(7) IREIRELAND 80.65
7(8) ARGARGENTINA 80.28
8(6) WALWALES 80.18
9(9) TGATONGA 76.63
10(10) SCOSCOTLAND 76.20
11(11) SAMSAMOA 75.81
12(12) ITAITALY 73.99
13(13) CANCANADA 72.92
14(14) GEOGEORGIA 71.09
15(15) JPNJAPAN 70.45
16(16) FJIFIJI 68.78
17(17) USAUSA 65.63
18(18) ROMROMANIA 63.98
19(19) NAMNAMIBIA 61.24
20(20) PORPORTUGAL 60.67


Final Preview:

All Blacks survive scare to clinch Cup


All Blacks survive scare to clinch Cup
All Blacks embrace each other after the narrowest of victories
AUCKLAND, 23 Oct. - Captain Richie McCaw paid tribute to his All Blacks after they survived the most nerve-racking of scares to end 24 years of pain and clinch their second Rugby World Cup title with an 8-7 win over France.
"We had to dig deeper than ever before and it's hard to get it to sink in, but I am so proud of every single one of them," said McCaw after Sunday's match at Eden Park.
"We couldn't have been under more pressure at times but we stuck to our guns and got there in the end."
In the end it was a second-half penalty by fourth-choice fly half Stephen Donald that proved decisive. McCaw, playing his 103rd Test, saluted the replacements who had been drafted into his injury-hit squad.
"When we had problems the next guy stood up and the next guy stood up, and I take my hat off to the guy (Donald, who replaced Aaron Cruden in the Final) but it's not about one guy, everybody played as well as they can."
In 1999 and 2007 Les Bleus had wrecked New Zealand’s dreams of glory with dramatic come-from-behind victories.
And they looked as if they might do so again as they battled to within a single point of McCaw's team with half an hour of Sunday’s match remaining.
Delirious crowd
But in this re-enactment of the inaugural RWC 1987 Final, the French once again came off second best as a Tony Woodcock try and Donald's penalty gave New Zealand the edge over a converted try by Thierry Dusautoir.
France were unrecognisable from the team that had struggled in the earlier rounds and the All Blacks had to dig deeper than they would ever have imagined to get their hands on the Webb Ellis Cup in front of a delirious home crowd.
France captain Dusautoir, who was voted man of the match, said: "We read a lot of stuff this week but I thought we showed we know how to play rugby.
"We are really disappointed. I am really proud of my boys and what they did in the World Cup."
With both teams playing their third RWC Final, it was clear it was going to be a passionate encounter from the moment the French advanced on the All Blacks' Haka.
The collisions were shuddering and both teams lost their fly halves before the interval, when only a single unconverted try by prop Woodcock separated the sides.
Kicking duties
France got their first penalty attempt on goal two minutes into the second half, when McCaw was caught handling in the ruck. But scrum half Dimitri Yachvili’s attempt was just wide.
New Zealand won a penalty in front of the posts two minutes later. Donald took over the kicking duties and nailed his attempt to put his team 8-0 ahead.
But Les Bleus struck back almost immediately. A break by replacement fly half François Trinh-Duc opened up the All Blacks defence and France made several attempts on the line before captain Dusautoir raced in to touch down beside the posts.
Trinh-Duc converted to make it 8-7 and when Donald put the restart out on the full, the All Blacks’ anxiety was palpable.
Coach Graham Henry went to his bench and the out-of-form Piri Weepu was replaced by Andy Ellis, hooker Keven Mealamu gave way to Andrew Hore and Ali Williams took Sam Whitelock’s place in the second row.
Les Bleus sensed another famous upset and took every opportunity to apply pressure. With 15 minutes remaining, the All Blacks were behind on territory and possession when Trinh-Duc had a chance to put the French in front on the scoreboard. But his 48m penalty attempt was also wide of the mark.
With seven minutes left France pressed again but New Zealand managed to withstand the assault and when Craig Joubert blew the final whistle on the lowest-scoring Final, the All Blacks and their fans were understandably overjoyed.
Frenetic first half
The first half had been frenetic.
France fly half Morgan Parra had to leave the field after 11 minutes looking groggy and slightly bloodied following a double impact from Ma'a Nonu and McCaw, although he returned six minutes later.
In his absence the All Blacks opened the scoring when a well-worked lineout move deep in the France 22 allowed Woodcock to charge though a gap in the France defence and sprint 10m to touch down for his first ever RWC try.
Scrum half Weepu, who had been New Zealand's principal kicker following the injury to Dan Carter in the pool stages, missed his second shot of the night with the conversion attempt.
Parra was again in the wars and, to his very visible disappointment, was replaced for good by Trinh-Duc.
When the All Blacks won another penalty after 25 minutes, more points went begging when Weepu again skewed his kick wide.
But there was nothing wrong with their running game and only resolute French defence kept them from breaching the line.
France centre Aurélien Rougerie had to dive on the ball in-goal after a deft chip through by All Blacks wing Richard Kahui on the half-hour.
But the New Zealand injury woes continued when third-choice fly half Cruden suffered a nasty knee injury and was replaced by Donald, making his RWC debut.
On 36 minutes a long-range Trinh-Duc drop-goal attempt sailed just to the right of the uprights and shortly afterwards only a Weepu tap tackle could stop his run to the line when he split the All Blacks defence.

Monday, 17 October 2011

Who Will Win?-The Bronze Finale and The Grande Finale (Stage 4-Grande Finale)

On 21 October 2011 Wales and Australia will play the bronze final on Eden Park after their losses left France and New Zealand left to battle out the last 80 minutes of the tournament on 23 October 2011. We talked to our horoscope master, Mr Ramditta Saily, on the France-Wales game. He said that france would win and they did but only by 1 point. On Sunday he said if New Zealand won they would win the final against France but if Australia won they would win the cup aswell. But the French dont trust the horoscopes and say that they can win without the help of horoscopes. Below the photos is a guide to France and New Zealand's new ranking, path to the final and a preview of their semi final.
The winner of the Rugby World Cup 2011 will be decided on the 23rd of October.
French captain Thierry Dusautoir.
All Blacks captain Richie Mccaw.

France:

RWC 2011 Ranking



IRB World Rankings
TeamPos.(Prev.)Rtg.
New Zealand1(1) 91.34
Australia2(2) 86.49
France3(5) 84.79
South Africa4(3) 84.34
England5(6) 81.58

Path To The Final:
Pool Play (Pool A)
TeamPWDLPFPATFTABPPTS
New Zealand
New Zealand
440024049366420
France
France
420212496139311
Tonga
Tonga
4202809871319
Canada
Canada
41128216892006
Japan
Japan
40136918482502
QuaterFinals:
France bt England 19-12
HalfTime: France Leading England 16-0
SemiFinals:
France bt Wales 9-8
HalfTime: France Leading Wales 6-3

Parra punishes 14-man Wales


Parra punishes 14-man Wales
Morgan Parra kicks a penalty for France on their way to the final
AUCKLAND, 15 Oct. - France had to rely on all their experience and nous, along with three crucial penalties by Morgan Parra, to see off an emotion-driven 14-man Wales 9-8 at Eden Park on Saturday and reach their first Rugby World Cup final since 1999.
Against England in the quarter-finals it was France's sharp attack that made the difference with two tries, but in the semi-final it was an obdurate defence that allowed them to progress to a 23 October date with New Zealand or Australia.
Wales, despite having captain Sam Warburton sent off in the 18th minute, were in sight of the winning points with the clock running down. France were forced to defend in their own half for 27 phases without giving their desperate opponents the chance to sneak through.
Wales were repeatedly driven back in the tackle, their kickers were pushed out of drop-goal range and their hopes of a remarkable comeback were snuffed out.
"We did not start well, we lost confidence," France coach Marc Lièvremont said after the match. "When they went down to 14 and we had 15 we were still inhibited, but that does not matter; what matters is when they scored a try, we kept out composure.
"I will not brood or be unhappy because that was not our best match, what matters is we are going to the final."
Dangerous tackle
The match swung firmly in France's favour between the 10th and 18th minutes. First, Welsh prop Adam Jones was forced off with an injured ankle, then Warburton was sent off for a dangerous tackle on France wing Vincent Clerc.
It meant that Warren Gatland's team was forced to play for more than an hour with 14 men, and while they fought back in the second half through a Mike Phillips try, when the crunch came Wales did not have quite enough energy left to find a way through the French defence for a second time.
Warburton said he was surprised by his red card. "It felt that as soon as I hit him his body weight took control of what happened. I went to compete for the ball, thinking it was a normal tackle. The next thing I know I'm walking off into the stands.
"All the boys are gutted with the result but I thought the courage and bravery they showed was second to none."
Parra's display, if not quite a full vindication of Lièvremont's decision to continue with the scrum half at fly half, was enough to win the match for France.
Crucially he kicked the opening points of the second half in the 50th minute to give France a six-point lead.
His successes contrasted sharply with his Welsh counterpart James Hook, who was given the nod over veteran Stephen Jones when first-choice fly half Rhys Priestland was forced out with a shoulder injury.
Hook was on the mark with his first from out on the left touchline to open the scoring, but he missed two more direct kicks later in the first half that would have put Wales in front at half-time.
Eventually Gatland brought Stephen Jones on in the 46th minute and his cool head allowed Wales to grab a toehold as the match went into its closing stages.
"Parra was magnificent and defensively courageous," Lièvremont said. "He is the player who created the most breaks and he was successful with all his kicks."
Relieve pressure
France flanker Julien Bonnaire became the second France back row named man of the match in consecutive weeks after number 8 Imanol Harinordoquy received the accolade in the quarter-final victory over England.
Bonnaire's athleticism meant that he was able to steal five Wales lineouts and relieve pressure on the France line just as the Welsh were gaining momentum.
"I am happy that we won, but I am disappointed with the level we played and the defence saved us tonight," Bonnaire said.
"Our World Cup hasn't been so great and we let a lot of people down here and at home, but I hope we made up for that by reaching the final."
France will now play their second Rugby World Cup final at Eden Park, having lost the inaugural final in 1987 to New Zealand.
That match ended in anticlimax for Les Bleus after they had beaten Australia in the semi-finals. Twenty-four years on they know they cannot repeat such a flat attacking performance if they want to win the Webb Ellis Cup at the third time of asking.
"I think we had a guardian angel tonight," Lièvremont said. "I think there are a lot of people annoyed that we have qualified, but we played with our hearts."





New Zealand:

RWC 2011 Ranking:

IRB World Rankings
TeamPos.(Prev.)Rtg.
New Zealand1(1) 91.34
Australia2(2) 86.49
France3(5) 84.79
South Africa4(3) 84.34
England5(6) 81.58


Path To The Final:


Pool Play (Pool A)

TeamPWDLPFPATFTABPPTS
New Zealand
New Zealand
440024049366420
France
France
420212496139311
Tonga
Tonga
4202809871319
Canada
Canada
41128216892006
Japan
Japan
40136918482502

QuaterFinal:

New Zealand Bt Argentina 33-10
HalfTime: New Zealand Leading Argentina 12-7

SemiFinal:

New Zealand Bt Australia 20-6
Halftime: New Zealand Leading Australia 14-6


Awesome All Blacks power to 1987 rematch


Awesome All Blacks power to 1987 rematch
All Blacks captain Richie McCaw fends off opposite number David Pocock
AUCKLAND, 16 Oct. - The chance to repeat history awaits the All Blacks following their dominant 20-6 semi-final victory over Australia at Eden Park on Sunday night.

A try by centre Ma’a Nonu, four penalties by Piri Weepu and a cool drop goal from Aaron Cruden secured New Zealand a place in the Rugby World Cup 2011 final against France, the team they beat the last time they lifted the Webb Ellis Cup, in 1987.

"It's awesome," captain Richie McCaw said. "We realised that we were going to have to front up and be on the job for 80 minutes.

"The intensity was there. Every single man out there did their bit tonight. That's what you have to do in World Cup rugby."

New Zealand’s ferocious play left the Australians scrambling to respond for much of the match, with the Wallabies now set to face Wales in the play-off for bronze.

"There's not much to say," wing James O’Connor said. "They beat us in every facet. They used the ball well and the physicality was up there. I guess that's what you need to win a Rugby World Cup semi-final and the All Blacks had it.
"They deserved that win. They lifted their physicality and we've never met physicality like that before."
Set the tone

The All Blacks were quick to take control of the match, while Australian fly half Quade Cooper set the tone for his game with his first touch. He kicked the ball out on the full from kick-off, much to the delight of a vocal crowd wearing mostly black.

"It was a tough night for all the boys. Nobody likes coming second," Wallabies coach Robbie Deans said.
New Zealand set the pace early by playing with tempo and the early charge forward paid dividends in the sixth minute when Nonu crossed the line after good work by Israel Dagg.

"We came out and played with spirit and great control," All Blacks number 8 Kieran Read said. "It was outstanding work from our forwards and they really put us on the front foot."

Referee Craig Joubert kept a careful eye on the breakdown, with Australia flanker David Pocock conceding two penalties in quick succession for leaving his feet at the ruck.

At the other end of the pitch a penalty against Pocock's opposite number McCaw gave Australia their first points courtesy of O’Connor’s boot.

As Cooper struggled to find his rhythm, the pressure of the famous All Blacks number 10 jersey did not get to young fly half Cruden, who joined the New Zealand squad two weeks ago following Dan Carter’s exit from the tournament through injury.
Surreal introduction

"It has been a pretty surreal couple of weeks,” the 22-year-old said. “It was great to get the late call-up and great to get called up to a World Cup semi-final. We really stepped up tonight and had a fantastic 80 minutes.
"Australia really tested us, especially in those first 30 minutes. We stood up to it and scored points when we could."

The All Blacks continued their high-tempo play in the second half and Weepu’s successful penalty kick after two minutes brought up New Zealand’s 2,000th RWC point.

Australia’s best chance came late in the match but the All Blacks defence stood firm in the final minutes, despite being reducted to 14 men after replacement Sonny Bill Williams was sent to the sin bin for a shoulder charge on Cooper.

As the clock wound down, chants of "four more years" rang out around Eden Park with the bulk of the 60,087 crowd revelling in the chance to finally return Australian legend George Gregan’s famous taunt from RWC 2003.

"It's sort of hard to summarise the feeling after a loss like this,” Wallaby second row Dan Vickerman said. “Unfortunately there's not a next week for us. The group is pretty low. It's devastating. Any Test you play for your country is special. It's just unfortunate it's against Wales next week.”

Sunday, 9 October 2011

Who Will Win?-Left With the Awesome foursomes (Stage 3-SemiFinals)

France, Wales, Australia and New Zealand are preparing to battle it out in the Semi Finals with the winner going to the final at Eden Park while the losers fight it out for third place honours. Let's see their quaterfinal game preview from the official RWC 2011 website and RWC Stats starting in order with Wales:

Wales:

RWC 2011 Rating:
IRB World Rankings
TeamPos.(Prev.)Rtg.
England4(4) 84.54
Ireland5(6) 83.14
Wales6(7) 80.73
Argentina7(8) 80.28
France8(5) 79.72

QuaterFinal-1 Match Preview:

Fearless Wales repel Irish battering

Fearless Wales repel Irish battering

Wales's Alun Wyn Jones and Luke Charteris stop another Ireland attack
WELLINGTON, 8 Oct. - A Wales side playing "without fear" defended their way to a Rugby World Cup semi-final by standing up to a muscular Ireland to win the first quarter-final 22-10 on Saturday.
Wales coach Warren Gatland said the younger players in his side were unaffected by the past and benefited from the solid foundation of hard work laid down in the pre-season.
"They have no baggage and there's no fear factor," Gatland said. "We are in New Zealand and not in the bubble of Wales and listening to any of the negativity that is sometimes generated back home.
"We've worked so hard in the last three, four months. We aren't ready to go home yet."
Wales's three tries to Ireland's one was a true reflection of the attacking abilities of the two sides, although not of Ireland's first-half dominance of territory and possession at Wellington Regional Stadium.
Three times they shunned early penalty shots at goal to look for tries, but Wales were equal to them.
"We spent a lot of time in that first half in their 22 and we only came up with three points in the half," said Ireland captain Brian O'Driscoll.
"It hurts a bit when you're going in at half-time having the opportunities and knocking on the door but not really getting any points out of the territory."
Caught napping
Ireland had 60 per cent of the territory and 57 per cent of possession in the first half but their bludgeoning and battering of the Wales defence produced a solitary penalty goal after Wales had opened the match with a spectacular Shane Williams winger's try.
Ireland drew level early in the second half when wing Keith Earls somehow managed to keep his feet in play while sliding over in the corner.
But the match turned Wales's way when man-of-the-match Mike Phillips caught Ireland napping down the blindside of a ruck - a trademark of the France-based scrum half's play.
When Wales outside centre Jonathan Davies scored by first eluding some tiring forwards in front of him and then clapping on the pace to outstrip the cover defence, the match - and a place in the semi-finals for the first time since 1987 - was theirs.
The try had in part been created by a typically powerful run further infield by Davies's centre partner Jamie Roberts, who soaked up defenders all night.
In the second half, the territory evened out at 50-50 and Ireland's control of possession was pared back to 54 per cent, but by then the Irish had run out of time and ideas and been let down too often by their handling.
Typically gracious
Wales had to make 141 tackles in the match and missed only 11, while Ireland made 93 but missed 14. Ireland's lineout also faltered at crucial times, losing three on their own throw.
Shane Williams was bullish about Wales's chances of further progression, saying: "Some people thought I was being funny when I said we were coming here to win it, but I wasn't."
A majority of the crowd of 35,787 were solidly behind Ireland, but their support was not enough to stave off a fifth defeat in five quarter-final appearances at Rugby World Cups.
O'Driscoll was typically gracious in defeat, acknowledging that Wales had taken their opportunities where his side did not.
"It was a great opportunity for us winning the group, but they showed they are worthy semi-finalists, good luck to them.
"We needed to deliver a performance similar to the one against Australia or the one against Italy last week. We didn't do that today, we knocked on way too much ball.
"Collectively and personally I won't get this opportunity again and that really sucks. But you know, life goes on."


France:

RWC 2011 Ratings:









IRB World Rankings
TeamPos.(Prev.)Rtg.
Wales6(7) 80.73
Argentina7(8) 80.28
France8(5) 79.72
Tonga9(13) 76.63
Scotland10(9) 76.20

QuaterFinal-2 Match Preview:

France secure semi spot with flair and power


Imanol Harinordoquy battles through the England defence
AUCKLAND, 8 Oct. - Imanol Harinordoquy gave a barnstorming display to earn the man-of-the-match award as France reached the Rugby World Cup semi-finals with a 19-12 win against England on Saturday.
Les Bleus avoided a third straight RWC loss to England with a classic performance that married France's twin traditions of backline flair and forward power.
Number 8 Harinordoquy and back-row colleagues Thierry Dusautoir and Julien Bonnaire bossed their English counterparts and gave creative players Jonny Wilkinson and Toby Flood a torrid time.
This dominance ensured England were unable to gain a toehold in the match until it was too late.
"They were magnificent," France coach Marc Lièvremont said of the back row. "I know Imanol quite well and at the beginning of the tournament he wasn't playing as well as I hoped.
"Imanol is a great competitor and so I left him on the bench so that he would be ready to start this match against his favourite rivals."
Lack of discipline
Lièvremont's side roared to a 16-0 half-time lead that they battled hard to protect in the second half, even though it took them until the 73rd minute to score their first points after the break with a drop goal from replacement Francois Trinh-Duc.
It was England’s lack of discipline that allowed France to build the platform on which they secured their half-time lead.
First Flood failed to release in the tackle to allow Dimitri Yachvili to slot the first points of the night after 11 minutes.
Then, when prop Matt Stevens was penalised for bringing down the scrum five minutes later, the diminutive scrum half added his second penalty for a 6-0 advantage.
"We controlled the match well at the beginning," Lièvremont said. "After they put pressure on us, we were able to relieve that pressure with our kicking game and that allowed us to get our game in order.
"I was very happy with the first half and it was a very good half in terms of discipline. The second half wasn't so good, but maybe it wouldn't have been the same feeling if England hadn't made it more difficult for us."
Pulled the strings
In only his third match at fly half for Les Bleus, Morgan Parra pulled the strings to great effect and played a hand in both of his side's tries.
The result made a mockery of claims the French were a side riddled with divisions and in disarray after losing heavily to New Zealand and surprisingly to Tonga in their final two pool matches.
"It's fantastic," backs coach Emile Ntamack said. "I am very proud of the boys tonight and the game they played.
"A week has passed since the very bad game against Tonga. Tonight was an incredible game. We have the potential and now we know that we can realise it."
England’s attack was based primarily on getting the ball to powerhouse centre Manu Tuilagi and while the young centre was able to break through the French defence all too often he was left isolated or unable to keep play going.
Even after full back Ben Foden finally got his team on the scoreboard after 55 minutes with his third try in as many matches against France, England still failed to come to life.
Chasing the game
"We created more chances to score than they did," England manager Martin Johnson said. "We probably had three or four chances that went missing.
"They took theirs and took theirs early, so it left us chasing the game. Today we let it out of our grasp too early."
Left wing Mark Cueto’s try with three minutes remaining gave England some hope. By then, though, France had done enough to become the second side not to finish top of their pool to reach the semi-finals after Wales knocked out Pool C winners Ireland earlier in the day in Wellington.
France and Wales now meet in the first semi-final at Eden Park on Saturday, 15 October.
"Most of us realised that we were missing out on the opportunity to play in a World Cup for our country and some may only have that chance once in a lifetime," skipper Dusautoir said.
"I don't know if we played wonderful rugby, but we had 22 players who want to go on and now we must concentrate on the semi-finals."




Australia:

RWC 2011 Ratings:


IRB World Rankings
TeamPos.(Prev.)Rtg.
New Zealand1(1) 90.62
Australia2(3) 87.21
South Africa3(2) 84.34
Wales4(6) 83.21
France5(8) 82.68

QuaterFinal-3 Match Preview:

Pocock at the heart of Wallabies win
Waves of South African attacks were repelled by the Wallabies defence
WELLINGTON, 9 Oct. - Australia somehow turned a spluttering lineout, an embattled scrum and minimal territory into an 11-9 win over South Africa and a place in the semi-finals of Rugby World Cup 2011.
When referee Bryce Lawrence blew for full-time the Wallabies had their error-forcing defence and especially man-of-the-match David Pocock to thank for dethroning the defending champions. The flanker's heroic work at the breakdown saved them time after time when South Africa were on the attack.
Wallabies coach Robbie Deans described Pocock's contribution as "immense".
"His game was remarkable and it was bigger than he got credit for," added Deans.
The Australians were forced to make 147 tackles to South Africa's 53 as the Springboks sent wave after wave of big, powerful runners at their line.
"I'm really, really proud with the way the guys fought. It was a huge effort that took everything we needed. I'm just really stoked," said their captain and sole try scorer James Horwill.
"We got the result we deserved on the back of a massive effort from the whole group. Moving forward that's what it's going to take."
Handling errors
Aside from Pocock's crucial turnovers, South Africa were hampered by making too many mistakes in potential try-scoring situations under defensive pressure and will rue their 11 handling errors in the match. They also missed their main breakdown warrior, Heinrich Brüssow, who came off after 20 minutes.
South Africa had 84 per cent of the territory in the first half and 55 per cent of possession but still managed to trail 8-3 at the interval after Horwill scored from a Springboks mistake 11 minutes in and James O'Connor and Morné Steyn landed penalties at either end.
By full-time the possession pendulum had swung slightly in Australia's favour but the Springboks had still enjoyed 76 per cent of the territory for the match for no reward.
Springboks coach Peter de Villiers, who announced he was standing down after four years in charge, described the mood in the South Africa dressing room as "three notches lower than a funeral".
"The guys are quiet. We never expected this," he said.
"Quarter-finals, semi-finals, finals, you have got to take your chances. It didn't go our way, we didn't take all our chances. Well done to them, the few they got they took and beat us fairly on the scoreboard."
Dominant performance
Springboks captain John Smit, retiring from rugby after 111 Tests, said losing after such a dominant performance was a "sad way to end it".
"It's the first time I have lost a game on the scoreboard and won it every other way from a stats point of view so it makes it even harder to accept," he added.
"We did enough to win this game but we just were not good enough."
Australia's lineout was at the root of much of their problems. The Wallabies lost five of their 13 throws, usually to that wily interpreter of opposition tactics at the set piece, Victor Matfield.
Matfield is also hanging up his boots after 110 Tests and he was also hugely disappointed at how it all ended for his team.
"There were so many opportunities it was heartbreaking," he said.
Despite their superiority it was a penalty awarded for a South African infringement at a lineout that enabled Wallabies wing O'Connor to kick the winning goal.
Australia's scrum was often under pressure and it was only good work at the back by number 8 Radike Samo that enabled them to clear the ball. But it did not provide a solid enough platform for the backs.
Epic encounter
Nevertheless, the Wallabies eight restricted the damage to a single penalty at the scrum, in contrast to the huge problems Ireland had caused them in the pool phase.
Wallabies fly half Quade Cooper had a tentative match and the team's kicking in general play was often poor, putting the pressure back on themselves.
Deans agreed Cooper did not have one of his best nights but said he and the whole team would be better for the experience.
The match was no free-flowing try fest for the 34,914 crowd but Deans insisted they had been treated to a spectacle all the same.
"We saw an epic World Cup encounter. Different, but that's what makes this game what it is," the coach said.
"What you saw was the most experienced World Cup side in the world really turn the screws on the youngest. So, as James (Horwill) said, the boys came of age in terms of the way they accepted that challenge and stood up to it.
"I've got no doubt that the next couple of weeks will be the best World Cup rugby we've ever seen because the bar just keeps going up in terms of the capability of the sides."
Australia full back Kurtley Beale (hamstring) and inside centre Pat McCabe (shoulder) both came off but Deans said their condition would be easier to assess in another 48 hours.


New Zealand:
RWC 2011 Ratings:
IRB World Rankings
TeamPos.(Prev.)Rtg.
New Zealand1(1) 90.62
Australia2(3) 87.21
South Africa3(2) 84.34
Wales4(6) 83.21
France5(8) 82.68
QuaterFinal-4 Match Preview:


McCaw praises All Blacks' chance-taking


McCaw praises All Blacks' chance-taking

All Black Kieran Read crashes over to score his side's first try
AUCKLAND, 9 Oct. - New Zealand captain Richie McCaw believes the big difference between his side and Argentina in Sunday's quarter-final match was the All Blacks' ability to capitalise on their scoring opportunities.
With the All Blacks winning the try count just 2-1, scrum half Piri Weepu kept the scoreboard ticking, kicking seven out of seven penalties to guide his team to a 33-10 over the Pumas at Eden Park.
"I think it's what we expected," McCaw said. "We realise, come knockout time, it may take 80 minutes.
"Even though it came close a few times, we realised we had to stick to it and take chances and that's the way it turned out."
Graham Henry's side will now face Australia in a semi-final next Sunday after the Wallabies beat South Africa earlier on Sunday in Wellington.
Phenomenal pace
The last-eight clash was played at a phenomenal pace from start to finish and was packed full of big hits and tough tackling as the Pumas showed some incredible defensive play.
Argentina notched the first try on 31 minutes when flanker Julio Farías Cabello touched down in the right corner, but the All Blacks hit back through second-half tries from Kieran Read and Brad Thorn.
New Zealand led 12-7 at half-time, but Pumas centre Marcelo Bosch scored the first points of the second half with a 46th-minute penalty after a Conrad Smith obstruction to cut the All Blacks' lead to 12-10.
However, the hosts restored their five-point advantage just three minutes later when Weepu slotted his fifth successive penalty.
Welsh referee Nigel Owens went to the video referee after 58 minutes as New Zealand came close to scoring a try, but Richie McCaw was held up when making a dive for the line at the base of the right post.
Owens then took play back for an earlier penalty, which Weepu converted for 18-10 to the All Blacks.
Yellow card
Pumas scrum half Nicolás Vergallo was given a yellow card before Owens again called for the video referee's input.
Number 8 Read collected a pass from flanker Jerome Kaino to touch down in the left corner after 66 minutes for a 23-10 lead, Weepu failing with his conversion attempt.
But a 72nd-minute penalty by Weepu took the All Blacks 16 points clear.
Thorn crossed the line in the 77th minute for the All Blacks' second try to finish off the Pumas' resistance. Aaron Cruden, a replacement for Colin Slade, hit the extras for 33-10.
Argentina had almost been handed a try in the seventh minute when Slade fumbled from a simple Weepu pass, allowing Bosch to kick on. The outside centre chased his kick, but his All Blacks counterpart Smith recovered the ball.
The first points were not long in coming, Weepu's 12th-minute penalty giving the All Blacks a 3-0 lead after Argentina prop Rodrigo Roncero was caught off side.
Dragged into touch
Slade came close to touching down for the first try of the clash in the left corner on 18 minutes, but his left leg was dragged into touch from Santiago Fernández's tackle.
The All Blacks won a penalty six minutes later when Roncero collapsed the front row, and Weepu made it 6-0 from wide on the right.
The Pumas touched down in the 31st minute in the right corner through flanker Cabello following a flowing backline move, Felipe Contepomi kicking the conversion to give Argentina a 7-6 lead.
In the 36th minute, Contepomi was penalised for a high tackle on Cruden and Weepu slotted the kick over for 9-7 to the All Blacks.
Weepu made it four penalties from four in the 39th minute to hand New Zealand a five-point advantage at the break.


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Next Time on Who Will Win?
SemiFinal Results, The Bronze Finale and The Grande Finale