'I didn't see a massive difference in the Wallabies': Ian Foster's blunt assessment of All Blacks' Bledisloe Cup loss

All Blacks coach Ian Foster has given a blunt assessment of his team's performance in their loss to the Wallabies in Brisbane on Saturday night, admitting there will be some things they simply have to take on the chin.
The All Blacks fell to a 24-22 defeat at the hands of their trans-Tasman rivals in a chaotic game which saw both teams receive a red and yellow card.
But while the Australians bounced back from a 43-5 defeat a week prior, Foster said Saturday night's scoreline was more a reflection of his side's performance than a turnaround from the Australians.
"I didn't see a massive difference in the Wallabies to be honest," Foster said, speaking the day after the match. "I thought the first 20, apart from the first try we conceded – and good on the Wallabies for that – but I thought we looked reasonably composed with the ball, we were creating stuff; I don't think we potentially actually backed ourselves to get the ball to the space that we needed to.
"We'll take some of that on the chin. It might be combinations and people coming back in, I get all that."
In a game full of emotion with a number of scuffles breaking out, the All Blacks failed to respond as Foster would have liked and were unable to capitalise on a number of promising periods.
While there are plenty of things to work on heading into this weekend's match against Argentina, Foster said there were bright spots in the loss.
"I'm not sure how the narrative goes about this game, but I was intensely proud with many things," Foster said. "We were under a lot of pressure, withstood a lot of pressure, physically we kind of ran ourselves into the ground there for a while.
"But you could just see that our game tightened up. We got narrow in our perspective, we got narrow in the way that we played, and that to me is an indication of where we're not seeing things clearly and responding to the opposition rather than being proactive and forcing them to start responding to us.
"You can't just keep bashing yourself against a brick wall when you're feeling frustrated because it makes it easier for them to get physical with you. That was my frustration – we lost our ability to step back and say 'Okay, what can we do here that's going to widen our game a little bit and change the picture?'
"There's a massive degree of emotion and feeling whenever the Wallabies play the All Blacks, and [Saturday] night's a classic case of it. When people talk about dead rubber and all that, clearly our number one priority was to win the Bledisloe, we did that, but we needed to back that up and really launch ourselves into the Tri Nations, and we also needed to make another statement against the Wallabies and we didn't."
Latest Comments
Cane shouldn’t have been one last year, based purely on performances. Lakai is as close to a like for like of swap of Savea you’re ever likely to find, based on his short career so far at least. He has many of the same qualities - very strong ball carrier, great at the breakdown, and an absolute work horse on defence. I feel like he and Sititi could lead the way in the loose at the next WC.
I think we have become obsessed with replacing Kaino with someone exactly like him. Kaino was a perfect foil for the other loose forwards we had at the time. Based on the talent we have around at the moment those players could be made up in the aggregate by three players who are all exception all rounders - Lakai, Sititi, and Savea. Missing some height for sure but Sititi’s defensive work in the line out last year was phenomenal. He gets off the ground so quickly and was able to steal a couple of balls off the top of the springbok line out.
If our young locks coming through can actually stay fit long enough to get selected, it seems inevitable that Va’ai could end up in a hybrid 6/lock role.
Go to commentsWas strange game, full of errors and the usual refereeing decisions. Both teams suffered as a result but Ospreys discipline was a major factor. I think this weekend will be different as the Ospreys will pick a full strength team but Scarlets will gain confidence in the fact that only Tipuric was missing in the forwards and they dominated that pack for the whole 80 minutes. If they can repeat that dominance at scrum and breakdown then the Scarlets backs will always have more to offer on the front foot.
Go to comments