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Published 15:02 29 Jun 2022 BST
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New Zealand centre Ma'a Nonu skips his way through the Irish defence, at Lansdowne Road, in November 2005.(Photo by John Gichigi/Getty) [/caption]
Fast forward to 2012 and a chance I got to travel back to New Zealand for work, and cover a three-Test tour.
This Ireland team was primarily made up of a Leinster side that had won three Heineken Cups in four seasons, with a healthy dollop of Ulster players that had reached the 2012 European Cup final, and hardened Munster veterans like Ronan O'Gara and Donncha O'Callaghan.
Three Tests, three Ireland defeats. Two years after that tour, I wrote the following recollection of Ireland's final game butchering, in Hamilton:
There was a certain logic to most of Kidney’s selection calls on the 2012 tour to New Zealand. Calling Paddy Wallace off a beach holiday in Portugal to face the world’s best team at Waikato Stadium was devoid of such logic. Outstanding for Ulster all season, Darren Cave would watch from the stands as Wallace and his team-mates were shredded by the offloading, flick-pass likes of Sonny Bill Williams and Aaron Cruden. Brian O’Driscoll had vowed Ireland were capable of besting the All Blacks after the harrowing, last-minute failure in Christchurch. After 29 minutes in Hamilton the hosts were 28-0 up.
Ireland needed to score first after the break to halt All Black momentum but Rob Kearney was cooling his Cooley jets in the sin-bin. Sam Cane - an openside of so much raw potential that he had shifted Richie McCaw to Number 8 - did a spot of juggling before diving over for his second try of the match. New Zealand’s sixth try was an ‘all she wrote’ affair.
Hosea Gear outpaced Fergus McFadden up the left wing and slowed to a canter before crumpling Keith Earls with a vicious fend-off. Williams, running a supporting line, stopped to check whether Earls was concussed while McFadden, who had caught up with Gear again, dived and grasped mere vapour lines.
Kiwi journalists, usually brash and loquacious when winning, kept schtum. The press box had a funereal feel. They were embarrassed on our behalf. The only sound, and it is one that will stick with me forever more, was the derisive sniffs of the local scoreboard operator as he totted up the tries and conversions. He finally rested at 60-0.It will be 2022 by the time Ireland return to New Zealand for a Test match. Hopefully the memory of that match - those Cruden offloads, Liam Messam’s stuck-out tongue and the sniffs of the scoreboard man - will have been leeched by the 10-year gap. [caption id="attachment_265702" align="aligncenter" width="800"]
TJ Perenara of the Maori All Blacks hugs Bundee Aki of Ireland, at FMG Stadium. (Photo by Hannah Peters/Getty Images)[/caption]
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