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Blood-soaked and full of pride

Blood-soaked and full of pride

This is one jersey going straight to the pool room.
And it may not even get washed.
Du'Plessis Kirifi shed blood for the cause as he made his debut for the All Blacks in Dunedin on Saturday night — and he had a white collar soaked red to prove it.
His 30-minute cameo off the bench included all the energy and bustle we have come to expect of the 93-game Hurricanes veteran, and spilling a touch of claret was a small price to pay for the greatest moment of his career.
"It's going to get framed, and it's probably going to go to my dad," Kirifi said when asked what he had planned for his first black jersey.
"Unwashed, too."
Kirifi was one of four players on debut for the All Blacks in the 31-27 win in the first test against France.
The rugby passed by in a blur, but he said he treasured everything about the experience.
"Just the whole night. The bus, getting changed in the official changing room for the first time, the national anthem.
"What a proud moment, you know. Being able to represent your country in front of your country is special.
"To be able to get out and perform the haka — that's something you used to do when you were 7, 8, 9 years old.
"So there were a heap of special moments to go with playing alongside some lifelong friends of mine, and winning, and being able to go into the crowd and see my mum and dad."
It had been an intense week leading up to the first test for Kirifi and fellow forwards Fabian Holland, Christian Lio-Willie and Ollie Norris.
But the 28-year-old openside flanker took everything in his stride.
"I guess one of my points of difference is I'm not 21, 22 anymore. I've been doing this for nine-odd years, so although it was my debut, and there was a little bit of nervousness, it comes with a lot of belief and confidence in my work ethic and my ability to just do my job.
"I've had plenty of texts and phone calls left unanswered. I will slowly get back to some people.
"I'm definitely feeling the love."
Kirifi said there was immense respect in the All Blacks for how the French challenged them.
While the game appeared in the balance for much of the second half, the home side had "massive belief" they were not going to let the test slip.
"We had confidence in our plan, and also just trust.
"When you're hard on defence, you look across the line, you can hear boys talking, you can see their body language and their eyes up — when you see that, it's hard not to be confident.
"You're not sure how it's going to end. They may end up scoring. But when you see the body language and the chat, it fills you with a lot of confidence."
Kirifi would treasure a start on his home ground in the second test in Wellington this weekend, and it will be interesting to see whether the All Blacks do any tinkering in the loose forwards.
Some sort of announcement is expected today on whether captain Scott Barrett could be out for some time after tweaking his Achilles in Dunedin.
If he is a goner, Ardie Savea will presumably be captain, and Holland can expect another start at lock.
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All Blacks player ratings: How they rated in second test win over France
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All Blacks player ratings: How they rated in second test win over France

13 - Billy Proctor - 7 Another go at centre and a much stronger showing at both ends of the field. Won a big defensive turnover. Had eight carries in the first half but did look a bit gassed near the break. Big tackle led to a turnover in second half. Finished with second most carries (12). 12 - Jordie Barrett - 7 Saved two tries, one in first half with cover defence out wide and also held up a try. How many times has he done that now in tests? Forced a pass that wasn't needed hot on attack, but that was the same tackle that saw him dumped on his head leading to a yellow for France. Off load to Proctor almost led to try. Showed his versatility again as happy to slot in at 10 with his brother in the bin. 11 - Rieko Ioane - 7 Good chase pressure all night. A slick pass to Holland in the lead up to the Vaa'i try. Solid defence including an intercept which denied French try. Much better attacking effort in second half, finished with 10 carries total, including a line break and a decent finish to score in the corner. 10 - Beauden Barrett - 6 Not great night with the boot. One out on the full and a few chasing kicks too long. Did produce a crafty chip for Ardie which turned the French around. A harsh yellow card. One fumble under high ball which led to a penalty. Put Jordan in for try but rarely got the chance to run in a kick-heavy test. 9 - Cam Roigard - 8 A strong boot all game especially from deep own end and from kickoff exits. Finished off the trick play for opening try. Finished with 56 running metes, a solid chunk from the try run. He even won a lineout. Superb outing. 8 - Christian Lio-Willie - 7 Won a ruck penalty which we haven't seen enough of from the back three so far. Had nine carries but was off after 54 minutes for Kirifi. 7 - Ardie Savea - 9 A monster effort for the full 80. The best on the field. Had an early knock on after a lineout steal. Assist in the Roigard try. Well sold. Scored the second try from lineout - all on his own. Strong run out wide in lead up to third try. 6 - Tupou Vaa'i - 7 Need to see more at six as he has impressed so far. Was leading All Blacks tackler with 13 when he left the field. Had a charge down early on and finished a great team try. Replaced after accidental head knock in second half. 5 - Fabian Holland - 7 Another superb outing. Was busy on defence early and got a lineout steal. Put under pressure at kickoff time but mostly did a good job. Seven carries in the first half including assist for Vaa'i try. Finished with 16 tackles, most for the All Blacks. 4 - Patrick Tuipulotu - 7 A welcomed return to test rugby. Was a safe option at lineout and had a steal in the first half. Made an impact with ball in hand, seven carries in the first half. Replaced after 60 minutes. 3 - Fletcher Newell - 7 Made eight tackles in first half and finished with 10. Scrum went from strength to strength. Replaced after 50 minutes 2 - Codie Taylor - 8 Vintage Taylor. Forced early knockout with France on attack. Was near perfect at lineout time, one lost deep in French half. Crafty with the close throw to Holland before Savea's try and scored himself from lineout drive. Even had a lineout steal. Replaced after 54 minutes. 1 - Ethan de Groot - 6 Put under pressure at first scrum but improved as match went on. Lost ball in contact inside French half but called back for high shot. Not a massive tackle count. Reserves Samisoni Taukei'aho - 4 Ollie Norris - 5 Pasilio Tosi - 5 Samipeni Finau -5 Du'Plessis Kirifi -4 Cortez Ratima -4 Timoci Tavatavanawai -6 Damian McKenzie - 5

All Blacks find rhythm against France in Wellington
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Otago Daily Times

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All Blacks find rhythm against France in Wellington

By Joe Porter of RNZ The All Blacks have crushed France 43-17 in front of a sold out crowd in the second test in Wellington to take an unassailable 2-0 lead in the three match series. The All Blacks scored six tries to two against a French side that had 10 changes from the team that lost by just four points in the opening test in Dunedin. New Zealand scored the first try of the match from a line out move with the hosts fooling the French defence as halfback Cam Roigard went over untouched. The All Blacks were then reduced to 14 men for 10 minutes with first-five Beauden Barrett yellow carded for a deliberate knock on when France were on attack. The tourists kicked a penalty goal to cut the All Blacks lead to 10-3, but it was the hosts who would score the next try, with stand in captain Ardie Savea going over in the left corner on the back of a successful lineout maul. 17-3 to the All Blacks. France soon had a player of their own in the sin bin with lock Joshua Brennan yellow carded for a dangerous tackle on Jordie Barrett. The All Blacks went for a lineout from the resulting penalty and the driving maul again proved too strong for the French, with hooker Codie Taylor the tryscorer this time as the hosts went ahead 22-3 with ten minutes left in the first half. They weren't done yet, with blindside Tupou Vaa'i finishing an outstanding All Blacks team try that started in their own half to give the home side a 29-3 lead at halftime. France made a raft of substitutions early in the second half and it paid off with the tourists the first to score after the break through fullback Leo Barre. The All Blacks hit back soon after with fullback Will Jordan scoring near the posts several phases after an attacking lineout to help put the hosts ahead 36-10. Left wing Rieko Ioane was the next to score for New Zealand, with his converted try pushing the All Blacks lead out to 43-10. France scored a consolation try in the final few minutes of the match to restore some pride with the final score 43-17 to the All Blacks. The third and final test is in Hamilton next weekend.

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