Australia
reasserted themselves as rugby league's No.1 outfit and sent a chilling
warning south of the border as the all-Queensland backline put World
Cup champions New Zealand to the sword with a 38-10 pummelling in
Brisbane on Friday night.
Six months after their stunning World
Cup triumph, New Zealand proved no match for a rampant Kangaroos side
with Johnathan Thurston and Justin Hodges scoring doubles in the seven
tries to two romp to continue an 11-year drought for the Kiwis in
mid-year Tests.
New Zealand's pain would no doubt have flowed all
the way back to NSW with Australia's all-Queensland backline providing
all 38 points for the victors in an ominous warning shot ahead of the
State of Origin series.
And while the win would have done nothing
to ease the pain of last year's World Cup final loss, it did at least
reassure Australia's status as top dogs, a mantle which had been under
threat from the Kiwis.
"They won the World Cup last year and we
can't take that away from New Zealand, we can only come out tonight and
play the way we did," Kangaroos skipper Darren Lockyer said.
"You walk away from winning tonight feeling good about ourselves and felling proud about playing for Australia."
Asked if the win showed Australia deserved to be world No.1, Lockyer said: "I suppose, yeah.
Told
by coach Tim Sheens that their defence in conceding 34 points in last
year's World Cup final was unacceptable, the Australians responded.
"Our
defence early in the first half set the platform for the night for us
and sent a message to ourselves and the opposition," Lockyer said.
"That's where the game was won for us."
New
Zealand coach Stephen Kearney admitted a poor ten minutes either side
of the break cost his side as Australia turned a 10-6 lead into a 22-6
advantage.
"I'm disappointed obviously with the result, but the one thing I couldn't fault was the lad's effort.
"I guess a couple of instances in the game ... they were moments in the game that made it really tough for us."
The
haka again provided a fitting fiery opening with new Kiwis skipper
Benji Marshall eyeballing Kangaroos opposite Lockyer, but both sides
were anything but red hot early in the game.
Cameron Smith's
40-20 attempt sailed over the sideline, but it had nothing on Iosia
Soliola's gaffe when he coughed up possession from a scrum win five
metres out from his own line.
Australia made him pay for the
blunder with Israel Folau diving over out wide from the ensuing scrum
but the Kiwis surged back with five straight sets on the home side's
line.
The Kangaroos resisted every advance and were lucky to be
let off the hook when an incorrect tip to English referee Richard
Silverwood saw Jerome Ropati called offside, though the Kiwis went over
at their next opportunity with Sam Perrett giving the visitors a 6-4
lead.
Having worked so hard to get in front, the Kiwis quickly
relinquished it, Soliola and Adam Blair failing to lay a hand on
Thurston with his 'show and go' putting the Kangaroos back on top.
The
Kiwis were sucking in the big ones but a costly period either side of
halftime proved telling with Justin Hodges brushing through a David
Fa'alogo tackle to score just before the break and Thurston nailing his
second three minutes after the restart.
Billy Slater kept the
avalanche coming to open up a 26-6 lead, Manu Vatuvei hitting back with
New Zealand's second try of the game.
It hardly mattered as the
Australians smelled blood, Darius Boyd scoring his first Test try with
a stunning acrobatic effort as he planted the ball over the back of his
head before Hodges scored his second after Slater was denied the same
honour due to a controversial obstruction call.
SOURCE: AAP