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Date: 2023-11-29 20:28:51 | Author: Casino Rebate | Views: 406 | Tag: oppo
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South Africa became the first nation to win the Rugby World Cup on four separate occasions as they edged out a 14-man New Zealand 12-11 in Paris oppo
South Africa flew out the blocks in the opening period, with Pollard kicking three penalties before the All Blacks were dealt a major blow as captain Sam Cane became the first person to be sent off in a World Cup final after a high tackle oppo
New Zealand, however, rallied back after the break despite the disadvantage, with Beauden Barrett’s try bringing them back within touching distance but the Springboks would hold on to successfully defend their title oppo
Here is how the players rated in the Rugby World Cup final oppo
New ZealandEthan de Groot, 6: Scrumaged well and put himself about well oppo
Faded somewhat after the break oppo
Codie Taylor, 6: Started well at set pieces, but his lineout throwing started to falter - under pressure from Etzeoppo beth and Mostert - as the game went on oppo
Tyrel Lomax, 7: Great display up against a menacing Springbok pack oppo
Worked well with his other front-row partners to deny the opposition dominance at the scrum oppo
Brodie Retallick, 6: Grew into the encounter after a slow start up against Etzeoppo beth oppo
Scott Barrett, 6: A solid display as one of the three Barrett’s on the pitch oppo
Shannon Frizell, 5: Early visit to the sin bin put his side under an immense deal of pressure in the game’s opening period oppo
Sam Cane, 3: Became the first person to be sent off in a World Cup final after a high tackle on Kriel in one of the game’s defining moments oppo
Not the impact the All Blacks captain would have hoped to have had on a game of this magnitude oppo
Ardie Savea, 7: Led the team superbly and kept his side disciplined and within touching distance in Cane’s absence oppo
Aaron Smith, 7: A typically solid display from the scrum-half in what is his final World Cup appearance oppo
Richie Mo’unga, 6: Dazzling run set up Smith’s try which was later disallowed oppo
Bounced back well after that crunching early tackle from Etzeoppo beth oppo
(Getty Images)Mark Tele’a, 7: A real bright spark in the All Blacks attack oppo
Great wriggling run and pass to set up Barrett’s score oppo
Jordie Barrett, 7: A great display filling in at flanker at times which shouldn’t be completely overshadowed by the late penalty miss which could have secured a dramatic win oppo
Rieko Ioane, 6: Almost went over in the first half, but a quiet game otherwise oppo
Will Jordan, 5: Quiet game for the winger who had impressed throughout the tournament oppo
Beauden Barrett, 7: Scored the try to get his side back in the contest oppo
Worked hard in defence during a tough opening period for the All Blacks oppo
Replacements: Samisoni Taukei’aho - 6, Tamaiti Williams - 6, Nepo Laulala - 6, Finlay Christie - 5, Dalton Papali’i -6, Anton Lienert-Brown - 6, Damian McKenzie - 5 oppo
South AfricaSteven Kitshoff, 6: Had few opportunities to impose his presence at the scrum but was a constant menace at the breakdown during the first half oppo
Bongi Mbonambi, 5: Cruelly injured just three minutes into the contest after hurting his knee following a tackle from Frizell oppo
Frans Malherbe, 6: Didn’t quite have the impact he would have hoped for at the scrum but put in a great shift deep into the second half oppo
Eben Etzeoppo beth, 7: Huge early tackle on Mo’unga set the tone for the Boks oppo
A constant nuisance at the breakdown and at the lineout oppo
Franco Mostert, 6: Worked well with Etzeoppo beth to disrupt the Kiwi lineout, especially in the first half oppo
Siya Kolisi, 6: Delivered a solid display before his sin bin for a high tackle oppo
Writes his name into the history books as a double World Cup-winning captain oppo
Pieter-Steph du Toit, 9: Superb all-action display from the back rower, with a number of huge tackles throughout the contest oppo
Duane Vermeulen, 7: A couple of monstrous, penalty-winning carries in the first half when South Africa were well on top oppo
Faf de Klerk, 8: Lively display and a constant nuisance at scrum-half oppo
Worked superbly alongside long-time half-back partner Pollard and delivered a crucial late tackle on Papali’i oppo
(Getty Images)Handre Pollard, 7: Perfect with the boot and more than justified his place in the starting lineup oppo
Cheslin Kolbe, 7: Had a superb game up until his late yellow card for a deliberate knock-on oppo
Damian de Allende, 6: A solid all-round performance alongside Kriel in the centres oppo
Jesse Kriel, 6: Did well in midfield up against a dangerous and aggressive Kiwi centre pairing oppo
Kurt-Lee Arendse, 7: Great try-saving tackle to deny Ioane in the first half oppo
Nearly pulled off a superb score in the corner after the break oppo
Damian Willemse, 6: Few opportunities to run with the ball, but did well under the high ball in tricky conditions oppo
Replacements: Deon Fourie - 7, Ox Nche - 6, RG Snyman - 6, Jean Kleyn - 6, Kwagga Smith - 6, Trevor Nyakane, - 6, Willie Le Roux - 5, Jasper Wiese - 5 oppo
More aboutRugby World CupNew Zealand rugbySouth Africa rugbyJoin our commenting forumJoin thought-provoking conversations, follow other Independent readers and see their repliesComments1/3New Zealand v South Africa player ratings as Du Toit starsNew Zealand v South Africa player ratings as Du Toit starsGetty ImagesNew Zealand v South Africa player ratings as Du Toit starsGetty ImagesNew Zealand v South Africa player ratings as Du Toit starsSouth Africa successfully defended their World Cup title Getty Images✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today oppo
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New Zealand captain Sam Cane became the first player to be sent off in a World Cup final as South Africa retained their title with a nail-biting 12-11 victory at Stade de France oppo
Cane was shown a red card for in the 28th minute for a dangerous tackle on Jesse Kriel but the All Blacks responded with character and resilience to take the champions to the wire on a wet Paris night oppo
Beauden Barrett ran in the first try ever scored against South Africa in a World Cup final as the final quarter approached but, with Richie Mo’unga unable to add the conversion, New Zealand still trailed oppo
Jordie Barrett then missed a tricky long-range penalty that would have toppled the Springboks and despite furious late attempts to strike from long range they were unable to break through the green wall oppo
Handre Pollard kicked four first-half penalties but South Africa failed to score again after the interval of one of the greatest finals that ended with the 80,000 crowd on their feet in nervous anticipation oppo
The victory means South Africa are the most successful nation in men’s World Cup history with their fourth crown nudging them clear of the All Blacks oppo
And it came despite one of their worst fears materialising in the third minute when Mbongeni Mbonambi – the only specialist hooker in their matchday 23 – was injured by a dangerous clear out by Shannon Frizell oppo
Mbonambi departed and on came Deon Fourie, a 37-year-old who has played most of his rugby in the back row oppo
Referee Wayne Barnes confirmed shortly after that Mbonambi’s departure was tactical only oppo
Pollard rifled over successive penalties to reward mounting Springboks pressure but, having been shown a yellow card, Frizell survived the bunker review of his offending crocodile roll oppo
There was no let up in tension on a night dominated by two ferocious defences and the scoreboard continued to tick over when Mo’unga and Pollard took successful shots at goal oppo
The World Cup’s most ruthless attack was making little headway against its meanest defence and twice New Zealand were turned over as an error-strewn spell was compounded with an overthrown line-out oppo
Cane was the next All Black into the sin-bin for his high tackle on Kriel and South Africa continued to win every meaningful moment of the contest oppo
And it got worse for New Zealand as, just moments before Pollard landed his fourth penalty, Cane’s yellow card was upgraded to red by the bunker oppo
South Africa came under furious attack in response but with Eben Etzeoppo beth cynically returning to an onside position while interfering with play, they only conceded three points to Mo’unga oppo
Next into the sin bin was Siya Kolisi for a challenge on Savea that resulted in a clash of heads and the All Blacks appeared to have exploited his absence by scoring through Aaron Smith only for an earlier knock-on to be spotted oppo
Upon Kolisi’s return they succeeded, however, when Mark Telea ran a mazy line and after he dropped the ball a superb pick up by Barrett allowed the full-back to touch down oppo
Mo’unga missed the conversion so Zealand trailed by a point and there was no let up in drama as the final quarter ebbed and flowed oppo
Wing Cheslin Kolbe became the third yellow card but Jordie Barrett was wide with the penalty attempt and, in the face of a determined final attack from the All Blacks, South Africa held out to successfully defend the trophy they won against England four years ago oppo
More aboutPA ReadySouth AfricaAll BlacksSam CaneNew ZealandHandre PollardWayne BarnesBeauden BarrettMark TeleaSpringboksParisJordie BarrettEben Etzeoppo bethWingSiya KolisiEnglandAaron SmithCheslin Kolbe1/1South Africa edge New Zealand to win Rugby World Cup for fourth timeSouth Africa edge New Zealand to win Rugby World Cup for fourth timeSouth Africa won the World Cup for a record fourth time (Adam Davy/PA)PA Wire✕Subscribe to Independent Premium to bookmark this articleWant to bookmark your favourite articles and stories to read or reference later? Start your Independent Premium subscription today oppo
SubscribeAlready subscribed? Log inMost PopularPopular videosSponsored FeaturesGet in touchContact usOur ProductsSubscribeRegisterNewslettersDonateToday’s EditionInstall our appArchiveOther publicationsInternational editionsIndependent en EspañolIndependent ArabiaIndependent TurkishIndependent PersianIndependent UrduEvening StandardExtrasAdvisorPuzzlesAll topicsoppo BettingVoucher codesCompareCompetitions and offersIndependent AdvertisingIndependent IgniteSyndicationWorking at The IndependentLegalCode of conduct and complaintsContributorsCookie policyDonations Terms & ConditionsPrivacy noticeUser policiesModern Slavery ActThank you for registeringPlease refresh the page or navigate to another page on the site to be automatically logged inPlease refresh your browser to be logged inCloseUS EditionChangeUK EditionAsia EditionEdición en EspañolSubscribe{{indy oppo
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