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Why New Zealand v South Africa is more than just the Rugby World Cup final Saturday 28 October 2023 17:38 , Mike Jones Rugby’s biggest rivalry will be played out on its grandest stage with a ...
Date Opponent F A Venue City Crowd Competition 30 July 1910 Great Britain 20 52 Auckland Domain: Auckland: 16,000 1910 Lions tour: 1 August 1914 Great Britain 13 16 Auckland Domain
The 2023 Rugby World Cup final was a rugby union match played on 28 October 2023 at the Stade de France in Saint-Denis, France.It marked the culmination of the 2023 Rugby World Cup and was played between New Zealand and South Africa, with the latter winning by a single point to claim their fourth Webb Ellis Cup, becoming the first nation to do so. [3]
New Zealand: 1981 South Africa tour of New Zealand and the United States: 36 29 August 1981 Athletic Park, Wellington 12–24 South Africa: 37 12 September 1981 Eden Park, Auckland 25–22 New Zealand: 38 15 August 1992 Ellis Park Stadium, Johannesburg 24–27 New Zealand: 1992 New Zealand tour of Australia and South Africa: 39 9 July 1994
South Africa: 0 17 Kingsmead: Durban South Africa: 1928-07-21 South Africa: 7 6 Ellis Park: Johannesburg: 1928-08-18 South Africa: 6 11 Crusader Park Port Elizabeth South Africa: 1928-09-01 South Africa: 13 5 Newlands: Cape Town: 1929-07-06 Australia: 8 9 Sydney Cricket Ground: Sydney Australia: 1929-07-20 Australia: 9 17 Exhibition Ground ...
South Africa 31–29 New Zealand: Cbus Super Stadium, Gold Coast Try: Damian de Allende, Makazole Mapimpi Pen: Handré Pollard 4, Elton Jantjies 2 Drop: Elton Jantjies: Attendance: 20,441 Referee: Matthew Carley
South Africa also had a penalty kick at goal, but this was missed by Naas Botha. The first try of the match came from New Zealand's Zinzan Brooke following a quick tap penalty which was converted by Fox. South Africa then pressured the All Blacks but failed to score, with the score at the end of first half 10–0 to New Zealand. [13]
Due to the strength of flanker Ruben Kruger and No. 8 Mark Andrews plus scrum-half Joost van der Westhuizen, the expansive attacks from New Zealand were repeatedly closed down. Andrew Mehrtens opened the scoring with a penalty after six minutes to give New Zealand a 3–0 lead. A Joel Stransky penalty put South Africa on the scoreboard after 11 ...