Carter kicks All Blacks to win
SYDNEY, Aug 22 (Reuters) - New Zealand flyhalf Dan Carter celebrated
his return to the All Blacks with a penalty two minutes from fulltime to
seal a thrilling 19-18 win over Australia in the Tri-Nations on
Saturday.
Carter, playing his first test match this year after returning from
injury, showed why he is regarded as one of deadliest kickers to ever
play the game when he held his nerve to cooly slot the matchwinning goal
at a packed Olympic stadium after Australia wing Lachie Turner was
penalised for failing to release the ball.
The Australians, who are yet to win a match in this year's
Tri-Nations, led for almost all of the contest after their own flyhalf
Matt Giteau produced a flawless display of goalkicking but one again
came up agonisingly short after conceding the late penalty.
Giteau landed all six of his shots at goal and the home side also had
a chance to to snatch victory at the death only to cough up the ball
just metres from the New Zealand line.
The Wallabies had looked to be in control after opening up a 12-3
lead at halftime but failed to contain the All Blacks in the second
half.
New Zealand scored the only try through replacement centre Ma'a Nonu
and dominated possession and territory as the Australians struggled in
the scrums, replacing tighthead prop Al Baxter after half an hour.
The first half failed to reach any great heights as both sides failed
to deliver on their promise to play an expansive running game.
Instead, the opening term was dominated by relentless kicking and
ferocious exchanges, with three players needing the blood-bin inside the
first 20 minutes.
The All Blacks opened the scoring in the fourth minute with a Carter
penalty but the Australians drew level four minutes later when Giteau
landed his first shot at goal.
Giteau put the Wallabies ahead with a second penalty after 10 minutes
then slotted a third on the half hour and a fourth after the siren when
scrumhalf Jimmy Cowan pulled off a trysaving tackle on Australia lock
Nathan Sharpe to give the home side a handy nine-point lead at the
interval.
The match burst into life in the second half when Wallabies number
eight Richard Brown was sin-binned for a dangerous tackle on prop Owen
Franks.
Carter and Giteau traded early penalties and the All Blacks had two
disallowed tries, the first by Carter because of a forward pass and the
second by Cowan for obstruction.
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