logo
All Blacks thump France to win series with game to spare

All Blacks thump France to win series with game to spare

BBC News19 hours ago
New Zealand (29) 43Tries: Roigard, Savea, Taylor, Jordan, Vaa'i, Ioane Cons: B Barrett 4, J Barrett Pen: B BarrettFrance (3) 17Tries: Barre, Brennan Cons: Le Garrec, Hastoy Pen: Le Garrec
Hosts New Zealand thumped France 43-17 to win the second Test in Wellington and clinch the series with a game to spare.The All Blacks laboured to a 31-27 win over France in Dunedin last week but were comfortable winners on Saturday, running in six tries at Sky Stadium.Scott Robertson's side led 29-3 at half-time before Six Nations champions France, who travelled south without most of their first-choice players, claimed two tries in the second half.Fly-half Beauden Barrett kicked an early penalty for the All Blacks before the first three tries came from attacking line-outs, with scrum-half Cam Roigard flashing down the blind-side to open the scoring on 14 minutes.Barrett was sent to the sin-bin for a deliberate knock-on but the hosts continued to attack and captain Ardie Savea pounced on a line-out ball to wrestle his way over for his 29th Test try, meaning he has overtaken Richie McCaw as New Zealand's most prolific try-scoring forward.Hooker Codie Taylor crossed on 29 minutes on the back of a more traditional rolling maul, with France's pack short-handed after debutant lock Josh Brennan - the Toulouse-raised son of former Ireland forward Trevor Brennan - had been sin-binned for a tip tackle.Offloads by Savea, Rieko Ioane and Netherlands-born lock Fabian Holland then set flanker Tupou Vaa'i free up the middle to score the pick of the tries and put the hosts firmly in charge at the break.France replied with full-back Leo Barre taking advantage of an All Blacks error to score a 47th-minute try, although New Zealand full-back Will Jordan produced a similar score shortly after for his 41st try from 43 Tests.The All Blacks extended their lead to 43-10 when winger Ioane dived over in the corner on 62 minutes before Brennan crossed for the tourists with three minutes left.The series concludes with the third Test at Hamilton's Waikato Stadium on 19 July.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

West Indies bowl out Australia for 225 after dramatic collapse
West Indies bowl out Australia for 225 after dramatic collapse

Reuters

timean hour ago

  • Reuters

West Indies bowl out Australia for 225 after dramatic collapse

July 13 (Reuters) - Australia lost seven wickets for 68 runs in a dramatic collapse to be all out for 225 on day one of the third test against West Indies at Sabina Park in Kingston, Jamaica. West Indies finished the day on 16 for one -- 209 runs behind - after Australia fast bowler Mitchell Starc dismissed Kevlon Anderson in the pacer's 100th test. Australia won the toss and opted to bat first for the day-night test but crumbled despite being 157-3 at one stage as the West Indies bowlers ripped through their middle order before being dismissed in 70.3 overs. Steve Smith top scored for Australia with 48. West Indies quick Shamar Joseph finished with 4-33, the pick of the home bowlers, while Jayden Seales and Justin Greaves took three wickets each. "Every pitch has been tough. The more balls you spend in the middle you hope it gets better but it just hasn't been the case," Cameron Green told broadcasters. "It's a bit of a grind first time with these balls, but a lot of learnings. Time in the middle is key – just trying to get used to their bowlers, their conditions. "Very happy with our position (in this Test). We wanted to give them a tricky last 45 minutes. To get them one down is crucial, and we'll wait and see what happens tomorrow."

Tour de France 2025: Milan powers to stage eight sprint win to keep green jersey
Tour de France 2025: Milan powers to stage eight sprint win to keep green jersey

The Guardian

time2 hours ago

  • The Guardian

Tour de France 2025: Milan powers to stage eight sprint win to keep green jersey

Jonathan Milan ended a six-year Italian drought with victory in stage eight of the 2025 Tour de France after breakaway duo Mattéo Vercher and Mathieu Burgaudeau were caught nine kilometres from the finish in Laval. The defending champion, Tadej Pogacar, remains in the yellow jersey. In an inevitable bunch sprint on one of the Tour's flattest stages, Milan, named after the best-selling novella, Jonathan Livingston Seagull, flew up the finish on Boulevard Pierre Elain to hold off Jonas Vingegaard's teammate, Wout van Aert. 'To come with expectations and bring it home, that's two different things,' Milan said of his first Tour win that ended a run of 113 stages without success for Italian riders. 'It means a lot for me, it means a lot for my country.' Bucolic and languid perhaps best describes stage eight of the Tour, with a truce called between most in the peloton as a heatwave descended. A weekend of rolling roads meant they began the winding journey south towards the Massif Central. The growing in-race needle between Visma Lease-a-Bike and UAE Emirates was briefly forgotten as Vingegaard chatted with João Almeida, Pogacar's key wingman for the mountain stages, asking about his recovery from the injuries sustained in Friday's high-speed crash. However, the antagonism between the teams, which included the defending champion pushing the Dane's teammate, Matteo Jorgenson, in the feed zone during Friday's stage, continued in Laval. 'They do this a lot of times, coming in front of you in the feed zone like they are the only ones having bottles there,' Pogacar said. 'Sometimes you have to be patient when you're taking the bottles and pay respect to everybody.' Vingegaard's sports director, Grischa Niermann, was quick to respond to Pogacar's comments. 'I say the same back to him. Maybe we should tell our soigneurs to stand a little bit further apart from each other,' he said. 'They both missed a bottle, so that's a pity.' Pogacar does not sound optimistic for Almeida's prospects of continuing. 'It's one thing finishing today, with a lot of pain and suffering,' he said. 'He's a true warrior, but Monday is a really brutal stage. With a broken rib, it's pretty hard to breathe, all out, and he was suffering with the accelerations today. 'Nobody expects him to go over the limit. It's a bike race. You don't need to kill your body for this.' Ineos Grenadiers continue to seek a way out of their anonymity after another stage in which they merely made up the numbers. Their team leader, Carlos Rodríguez, is almost five minutes behind Pogacar, but Geraint Thomas remains optimistic that the Spaniard will bounce back in the mountains. Sign up to The Recap The best of our sports journalism from the past seven days and a heads-up on the weekend's action after newsletter promotion 'This first week has certainly not been suited to his strengths,' Thomas said. 'Someone said on the bus today that we've still got 75% of the climbing to come in this race, so I think he can still stay positive and look forward to that. Hopefully, if there's a high pace in the mountains, then Carlos can benefit from that. We haven't done any big mountains yet and that's his strength, so hopefully we can start climbing up the GC next week.' There is little doubt that Dave Brailsford, back in the fold after his sojourn at Old Trafford to oversee the Grenadiers throughout this year's race, will have high expectations of better things to come. 'Dave brings a different intensity to it and a different way of thinking and looking at things,' Thomas said of the Ineos director of sport. 'He's got the most experience there, so it's great to have him around.' Sunday's ninth stage, from Chinon to Châteauroux, has no categorised climbs and offers another chance for the sprinters to take a stage win, prior to Monday's rude awakening on the first mountain stage in the Auvergne. Slovenia's Pogacar (UAE Emirates) remains 54 seconds ahead of Remco Evenepoel (Soudal-Quick-Step) in the overall standings.

Wales have belief to cause upset against England, says Angharad James
Wales have belief to cause upset against England, says Angharad James

North Wales Chronicle

time5 hours ago

  • North Wales Chronicle

Wales have belief to cause upset against England, says Angharad James

Wales have the belief to cause an upset against defending European champions England in St. Gallen, according to captain Angharad James. Currently sitting bottom of Group D, Wales have yet to win a match at Euro 2025 having fallen to defeat against the Netherlands and France in their first major tournament. But as the Dragons face a crunch clash with rivals England, James believes her side can get one over the Lionesses and knock them out of the competition. 'The pressure is all on England. They have to come out, they have to perform and they're expected to win this game,' she explained. 'Within our group, we believe that we can upset a very top team. We've prepared as normal and we're ready for the fight tomorrow. 'There's no hiding behind the history of Wales vs England. Whatever sport you're playing in, it's a rivalry match and it's one that everyone wants to play in. 'As a group, we've come on so much since the first game and the second game was such a big improvement from us. We're looking to step it up again in this game.' Having lost 3-0 to the Netherlands in the opening match, Wales made history in the second game through 38-year-old Jess Fishlock. The Dragons legend latched onto Ceri Holland's pass at the back post to turn home the first major international tournament goal in Wales' history. It saw them equalise against France in the 13th minute but Les Bleues went on to win 4-1. 'Moments win or lose you games,' reflected James. 'We've been so close to those moments. Looking at the game it's 4-1 against France, but it wasn't a 4-1 game if you watch the game. 'Those small margins are what we need to work towards as a group and we're prepared to have those honest and hard conversations to make sure that we keep improving and keep moving in the right direction.' MD-1 preparation! 💪 — Wales 🏴󠁧󠁢󠁷󠁬󠁳󠁿 (@Cymru) July 12, 2025 The Wales squad have been turning to history in search of those small moments. In 2018, the national team held England to a 0-0 draw at St. Mary's Stadium in Southampton, leaving Jayne Ludlow to hail it the greatest performance in their history at the time. Ten members of the current squad were involved in that performance and have been drawing inspiration from the embattled display in the hopes of pulling off a result of an even greater magnitude. 'You don't forget when you get a result against England, that's for sure,' said James. 'We've spoken about it and a lot of time has gone on since then and new players have come into the squad. 'We've got a nice mixture of younger players, more experienced players and there's a really nice blend within the group.' Just as back then, midfielder James is expecting another physical contest against an England side who need a win to ensure their progression to the Euro 2025 quarter-finals. 'As soon as this group got announced, we knew they were going to be three tough games, three very competitive games and three games that, as a midfielder, you love to play in,' she said. 'This group has come very far the last few games and we're looking to step it up again against England. 'The rivalry, the history behind Wales-England, whether it's football, rugby, whatever, we're ready for the fight. 'We'll be preparing the best we can in the next 24 hours to bring all of that.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store