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All Blacks retain Bledisloe Cup after defeating Wallabies in Eden Park thriller

Jonathan Drennan and Iain Payten
Updated ,first published
Pinned post from 5.25pm on Sep 27, 2025
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Match report: Schmidt refuses to blame referee as All Blacks continue Wallabies’ Eden Park drought

By Iain Payten

Coach Joe Schmidt said the Wallabies have to learn to “adapt to Andrea Piardi” but declined to apportion any blame to the Italian referee for another heartbreaking loss to the All Blacks at Eden Park.

It was a case of so close but so bitterly far for the Wallabies in Auckland, where a gutsy performance saw the team on the cusp of beating New Zealand at the Auckland venue for the first time since 1986, but ultimately end up going down 33-24.

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In a two-game series, the defeat meant the Wallabies farewelled the Bledisloe Cup for a 23rd straight year and conceded a record-equalling 10th straight loss to the All Blacks.

But it was almost a night of more history-making for the Wallabies, who rallied from a 17-point deficit early in the game to trail by just three at half-time. In a second half where they were hammered by Piardi 10-3 in the penalty count as the Kiwis pushed out to lead 26-17, but again the resilient Wallabies hung in and scored to trail by just two points in the last 10 minutes.

Piardi, who refereed the contentious second Test against the Lions in Melbourne, again made a big call against the Wallabies, however, when he sin-binned winger Harry Potter for hands in the ruck in his own 22. It appeared to be a fair pilfer, but the All Blacks used the territory and the extra man to score late and seal the win.

It was a gut-wrenching defeat for the Wallabies, who made plenty of mistakes throughout the night but still looked to be finishing the stronger, and were in with a genuine chance to become the first Australian side to win at Eden Park since 1986, and the first of any Test side to beat the Kiwis since 1994.

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Unforced errors, like failing to find touch on three penalties, losing the aerial battle and missing too many missed tackles hurt the Wallabies. So did losing the penalty count 15-10. The Wallabies were pinged 7-0 in the last 27 minutes.

Former Wallabies centre Morgan Turinui didn’t miss Piardi in commentary on Stan Sport, saying the Italian was “not up to this occasion, that’s been appointed by World Rugby in error”.

But Schmidt declined to criticise the ref, saying the Wallabies have to learn to adapt and not let match officials control their fate.

“It felt a little bit like Cape Town to be honest, where, you know, we got behind and fought our way back ... and were in the game. It’s disappointing for sure,” he said.

“We’re disappointed we were penalised 15 times and we’ve got to be better than that. We’ll have a good close look at them, you know, but … the results are results.

“We’re at 40 per cent of the possession in that game and we [lost] four tries to three.

“That’s probably reflective of what we need to do better. We missed probably three or four times as many tackles as the All Blacks did, and so that’s on us. The referee’s not going to make the tackles for us. We’ve got to roll our sleeves up and make sure that we deliver those.”

Asked about Potter’s crucial yellow card, Schmidt said: “Cards are cards. And he said that the ruck was already formed, so we can’t play the ball and we’re under pressure five from our line. So that’s the risk you run.

“If we defended better higher up the field, then we don’t get that sort of pressure. We’ve got to be better so that we’re not at the mercy of decisions that we don’t control.”

Billy Pollard of Australia charges forwardGetty Images

The loss came at a severe cost, too, with halfback Tate McDermott suffering an apparently serious muscle tear in his leg which looks likely to sideline him for a while. Ryan Lonergan had a strong debut after coming on to replace him in the first half and Jake Gordon is fit, too. But Schmidt didn’t shut down the notion that Nic White may come out of retirement a second time to provide cover in next week’s second Bledisloe clash in Perth.

The Wallabies looked shot early when they fell 20-3 behind after 22 minutes, but a typically resilient fightback saw them rally and go into the half-time break trailing by just three points.

Schmidt said a lack of discipline had seen the Wallabies again fall behind, and simple errors like O’Connor missing touch compounded the problems.

“We weren’t getting a lot of penalties. So they became very precious moments that we missed. And you can’t afford to miss those moments,” he said.

The Wallabies fell behind by nine points in the second half but finally struck in the 68th minute after chancing their hand with some wide attack. Having built pressure, Carlo Tizzano scored via a rolling maul – and just for a moment, it looked the Wallabies were on the cusp of finally ending the Eden Park hoodoo.

“We had plenty of confidence there,” captain Harry Wilson said. “We didn’t really get too much ball in the second half. When we did there, we obviously scored straight away, which gave us a lot of confidence. There was plenty of belief there in the group, but obviously didn’t get the job done in the end there, which was disappointing.”

All Blacks captain Ardie Savea praised the Wallabies for their fight, and said next week’s second clash in Perth would be another tough battle.

“They’ve got great leaders and great players and experience in their squad. They know how to deal with pressure and when they are down,” Savea said.

“We’ve seen that in the British-Irish Lions, and against Africa and Argentina. So, you know, we’ll celebrate this win and then, like Razor [Scott Robertson] said, I think we’ve got to be harder on ourselves after this. We can’t sit on our laurels.”

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Pinned post from 5.25pm on Sep 27, 2025

Match report: Schmidt refuses to blame referee as All Blacks continue Wallabies’ Eden Park drought

By Iain Payten

Coach Joe Schmidt said the Wallabies have to learn to “adapt to Andrea Piardi” but declined to apportion any blame to the Italian referee for another heartbreaking loss to the All Blacks at Eden Park.

It was a case of so close but so bitterly far for the Wallabies in Auckland, where a gutsy performance saw the team on the cusp of beating New Zealand at the Auckland venue for the first time since 1986, but ultimately end up going down 33-24.

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In a two-game series, the defeat meant the Wallabies farewelled the Bledisloe Cup for a 23rd straight year and conceded a record-equalling 10th straight loss to the All Blacks.

But it was almost a night of more history-making for the Wallabies, who rallied from a 17-point deficit early in the game to trail by just three at half-time. In a second half where they were hammered by Piardi 10-3 in the penalty count as the Kiwis pushed out to lead 26-17, but again the resilient Wallabies hung in and scored to trail by just two points in the last 10 minutes.

Piardi, who refereed the contentious second Test against the Lions in Melbourne, again made a big call against the Wallabies, however, when he sin-binned winger Harry Potter for hands in the ruck in his own 22. It appeared to be a fair pilfer, but the All Blacks used the territory and the extra man to score late and seal the win.

It was a gut-wrenching defeat for the Wallabies, who made plenty of mistakes throughout the night but still looked to be finishing the stronger, and were in with a genuine chance to become the first Australian side to win at Eden Park since 1986, and the first of any Test side to beat the Kiwis since 1994.

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Unforced errors, like failing to find touch on three penalties, losing the aerial battle and missing too many missed tackles hurt the Wallabies. So did losing the penalty count 15-10. The Wallabies were pinged 7-0 in the last 27 minutes.

Former Wallabies centre Morgan Turinui didn’t miss Piardi in commentary on Stan Sport, saying the Italian was “not up to this occasion, that’s been appointed by World Rugby in error”.

But Schmidt declined to criticise the ref, saying the Wallabies have to learn to adapt and not let match officials control their fate.

“It felt a little bit like Cape Town to be honest, where, you know, we got behind and fought our way back ... and were in the game. It’s disappointing for sure,” he said.

“We’re disappointed we were penalised 15 times and we’ve got to be better than that. We’ll have a good close look at them, you know, but … the results are results.

“We’re at 40 per cent of the possession in that game and we [lost] four tries to three.

“That’s probably reflective of what we need to do better. We missed probably three or four times as many tackles as the All Blacks did, and so that’s on us. The referee’s not going to make the tackles for us. We’ve got to roll our sleeves up and make sure that we deliver those.”

Asked about Potter’s crucial yellow card, Schmidt said: “Cards are cards. And he said that the ruck was already formed, so we can’t play the ball and we’re under pressure five from our line. So that’s the risk you run.

“If we defended better higher up the field, then we don’t get that sort of pressure. We’ve got to be better so that we’re not at the mercy of decisions that we don’t control.”

Billy Pollard of Australia charges forwardGetty Images

The loss came at a severe cost, too, with halfback Tate McDermott suffering an apparently serious muscle tear in his leg which looks likely to sideline him for a while. Ryan Lonergan had a strong debut after coming on to replace him in the first half and Jake Gordon is fit, too. But Schmidt didn’t shut down the notion that Nic White may come out of retirement a second time to provide cover in next week’s second Bledisloe clash in Perth.

The Wallabies looked shot early when they fell 20-3 behind after 22 minutes, but a typically resilient fightback saw them rally and go into the half-time break trailing by just three points.

Schmidt said a lack of discipline had seen the Wallabies again fall behind, and simple errors like O’Connor missing touch compounded the problems.

“We weren’t getting a lot of penalties. So they became very precious moments that we missed. And you can’t afford to miss those moments,” he said.

The Wallabies fell behind by nine points in the second half but finally struck in the 68th minute after chancing their hand with some wide attack. Having built pressure, Carlo Tizzano scored via a rolling maul – and just for a moment, it looked the Wallabies were on the cusp of finally ending the Eden Park hoodoo.

“We had plenty of confidence there,” captain Harry Wilson said. “We didn’t really get too much ball in the second half. When we did there, we obviously scored straight away, which gave us a lot of confidence. There was plenty of belief there in the group, but obviously didn’t get the job done in the end there, which was disappointing.”

All Blacks captain Ardie Savea praised the Wallabies for their fight, and said next week’s second clash in Perth would be another tough battle.

“They’ve got great leaders and great players and experience in their squad. They know how to deal with pressure and when they are down,” Savea said.

“We’ve seen that in the British-Irish Lions, and against Africa and Argentina. So, you know, we’ll celebrate this win and then, like Razor [Scott Robertson] said, I think we’ve got to be harder on ourselves after this. We can’t sit on our laurels.”

The All Blacks are unbeaten in 52 Tests at Eden Park

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The Eden Park fortress holds for another year and the Bledisloe Cup will stay in New Zealand.

That was an utterly frustrating Test; sometimes it is the hope that gets you in sport. The Wallabies were absolutely in contention to win this, but fell short.

The Wallabies remain without a win at Eden Park since 1986 and their chance of winning the Bledisloe Cup is also gone.

The Wallabies could not get on the right side of referee Andrea Piardi all game, particularly at the breakdown with a late yellow card to Harry Potter being a cruel loss when the winger was competing for the ball on his feet.

There were parallels to the loss against Argentina in Sydney, a bad start and an inability to win the aerial contest.

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All Blacks score a late try to break Wallabies’ hearts

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Harry Potter combines with Filipo Daugunu to dance up the narrow touchline before Carlo Tizzano somehow gets the ball down off a maul. James O’Connor hits a beautiful conversion to keep his side in the game.

This game is in the balance with 10 to go. I have no fingernails left.

Now Harry Potter is inexplicably pinged at the breakdown. This makes no sense. But the Wallabies somehow hold up the All Blacks on their line.

But it’s not enough. The All Blacks score under the posts through their brilliant scrum-half Cam Roigard. That looks like it will be enough. There are just five minutes left.

The Wallabies will remain without a win at Eden Park since 1986, and the Bledisloe Cup will stay in New Zealand’s hands.

New Zealand 33 Wallabies 24

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An inability to play the breakdown

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The Wallabies have really fallen foul of Andrea Piardi at the breakdown and have coughed up penalties all game, with no end in sight.

Captain Harry Wilson has at times looked totally befuddled about how to get his team to adapt.

The Wallabies are still in this game, but it all starts with the basics, and that’s hitting touch and doing what they do best, running rugby.

New Zealand 26 Wallabies 17 (66 minutes gone)

Referee Andrea Piardi talks with Harry Wilson.Getty Images

Huge moment as O’Connor misses touch and All Blacks punish them

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James O’Connor has had a tough day kicking out of hand, and after electing to turn down a shot at three points, he goes long and misses touch.

The All Blacks get another penalty, which Damian McKenzie slots over.

A huge moment, as it has switched the game and the momentum.

New Zealand 26 Wallabies 17

A box kick from Australia’s Ryan Lonergan.Getty Images
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All Blacks swing back momentum with penalty

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This is a concern for the All Blacks as Caleb Clarke goes off, after causing so much havoc in the air.

The Wallabies are falling on the wrong side of Andrea Piardi at the breakdown after a bright start.

Hooper gets penalised for seemingly being completely on his feet when competing for the ball.

Damian McKenzie and his trademark smile are there and he slots over the penalty. The difference is six.

Harry Wilson needs to try to get his side to adapt to Piardi’s breakdown officiating – easier said than done.

New Zealand 23 Wallabies 17

Australia’s James O’Connor runs at the defence AP

Where can the Wallabies improve?

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Now Joe Schmidt’s heart rate is down, he will be desperate for his side to control their discipline. Andrea Piardi is very strident on the breakdown for both teams.

Aerially, the Wallabies have had very little luck, with both Corey Toole and Harry Potter struggling to win against the All Blacks, particularly the brilliant Caleb Clarke.

On the positive side of the ledger, Ryan Lonergan has looked assured on his Test debut so far and will also provide a handy option as a goal kicker if needed.

Wallabies coach Mike Cron said that they are freshening up the props, with Angus Bell and Allan Alaalatoa coming on after a great stint by Taniela Tupou and James Slipper.

Here we go.

Harry Potter charges forward.Getty Images

Payto at half-time

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Yet another crazy half from the cardiac kids. The Wallabies looked shot for all money midway through that 40 minutes, with the All Blacks making the most of the visitors’ mistakes, ill-discipline and poor aerial work.

When they scored a third try to race out to a 20-3 lead, it reminded me of many previous games at Eden Park. And gave concern about what could follow.

But the Wallabies reminded us of their modern capacity to fight back, scoring two tries in the last 11 minutes of the half, and staying in the game.

They’ll have to fix up their aerial receipts in the second half and be tidier with the ball.

Sadly, Tate McDermott’s injury looks serious, and he may be missing for some time. Ryan Lonergan had a nervous start behind him to get into the game well, and he looks right at home.

New Zealand’s Wallace Sititi runs at Australia’s Corey Toole at Eden Park.AP
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Wallabies score back-to-back tries and are within three at half-time

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The Wallabies keep the momentum going as Harry Potter cruises over for another try, and who is at the centre of it, with a no-look assist pass? Len Ikitau. Who else.

James O’Connor nails a crucial conversion.

Brilliant. This is a game of rugby. Utter madness at times, but compelling. There is no quit in this Wallabies side.

New Zealand 20 Wallabies 17

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