Bledisloe Cup 2010 Live, Bledisloe Cup 2010 Live Online Streaming, live Bledisloe Cup Live Hong Kong, All Blacks v Wallabies Live, Australia vs New Zealand Live,Australia vs New Zealan Live TV
Saturday, October 30, 2010
Friday, October 29, 2010
Australia vs New Zealand Live Streaming Hong Kong Bledisloe Cup 2010
New Zealand vs Australia live stream Bledisloe Cup 2010 Hong Kong match schedule :
Match : New Zealand vs Australia
Date : 30 October,2010
Time : 16:15 (08:15 GMT - 19:15 AEDT; 21:15 NZ time)
Venue : Hong Kong Stadium
Competitions: Bledisloe Cup 2010
New zealand Team
Nickname : The All Blacks
National Emblem : A Silver Fern
Home Union : New Zealand Rugby Union
Founded: 1892
Rugby World Cup Record : Champions 1987, Finalists 1995, Semi-finalists 1991 (3rd), 1999 (4th), 2003 (3rd), Quarter-finalists 2007
Current IRB Ranking : 1
Coach : Graham Henry
Captain : Richard M
On the web : www.allblacks.com
Squad : 15 Mils Muliaina, 14 Cory Jane, 13 Conrad Smith, 12 Ma'a Nonu, 11 Joe Rokocoko, 10 Dan Carter, 9 Jimmy Cowan, 8 Kieran Read, 7 Richie McCaw (c), 6 Jerome Kaino, 5 Tom Donnelly, 4 Brad Thorn, 3 Owen Franks, 2 Keven Mealamu, 1 Tony Woodcock.
Replacements: 16 Hika Elliot, 17 John Afoa, 18 Samuel Whitelock, 19 Daniel Braid, 20 Alby Mathewson, 21 Stephen Donald, 22 Isaia Toeava.
Australian Team
National Emblem : the Wallaby
Home Union : Australian Rugby Union
Current IRB Ranking : 2
Coach : New Zealand Robbie Deans
Captain : George Gregan
On the web : www.rugby.com.au
Squad: 15 Kurtley Beale, 14 James O'Connor, 13 Adam Ashley-Cooper, 12 Matt Giteau, 11 Drew Mitchell, 10 Quade Cooper, 9 Will Genia, 8 Ben McCalman, 7 David Pocock, 6 Rocky Elsom (c), 5 Nathan Sharpe, 4 Mark Chisholm, 3 Ben Alexander, 2 Stephen Moore, 1 Benn Robinson.
Replacements: 16 Saia Faingaa, 17 James Slipper, 18 Dean Mumm, 19 Richard Brown, 20 Luke Burgess, 21 Berrick Barnes, 22 Lachie Turner.
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The Last Meeting (in Australia) – New Zealand 23, Australia 22 at Sydney, 11 September, 2010.New Zealand became the first side to win all six matches in the expanded Tri Nations series after rallying from 9-22 down in the last 14 minutes to snatch a record 10th consecutive win over Australia. The game represented the sixth occasion, through those 10 defeats, that Australia had led at halftime but been run down. It was also Australia’s third consecutive defeat by a single point in Sydney, the second of which had been inflicted on the Wallabies by New Zealand.
Australia v New Zealand Match Preview :
It has been a while hasn't it? But for the fourth time in 2010, the Wallabies and All Blacks will collide for their now annual stopover Test match in Asia.
For those you who have been out of the loop this week, ticket sales for the Hong Kong clash have been sluggish, with around 25,000 tickets out of 38,000 reportedly sold, but organisers are hoping for a last-minute rush of interest. Let us hope it does not resemble something from New Delhi.
One thing that is certain has to be New Zealand's record against Australia - ten straight wins and just two defeats in their last eighteen meetings.
Dominance personified and yet we again find ourselves not writing off Australia. Deja vu or whatever you would like to call it, but that word 'potential' once more becomes attached to these Wallabies. The 2011 World Cup clock is ticking though, so surely this tour needs to bring results.
One major fillip to their cause is the return of Ben Alexander, of that there is no question. His injury-enforced absence during the Tri-Nations saw Salesi Ma'afu step in, which proved just how crucial the former is to Robbie Deans. Stephen Moore is also in hooking ahead of Saia Faingaa while the solidity of Mark Chisholm over the mobility of Dean Mumm remains. Ben McCalman deserves his jersey at number eight.
New Zealand meanwhile resisted the opportunity to blood a host of new/young faces on tour as they instead opted for the tried and tested Stephen Donald, Sitiveni Sivivatu and Isaia Toeava over younger trio Aaron Cruden, Rene Ranger and Robbie Fruean.
Graham Henry's opening team selection is one of even greater familiarity in a move that the man himself explained as 'a thank you for what they've done and reinforcing the positives of the year'. A nice sentiment but the debate in NZ has been whether fresh blood was required and whether Donald and Toeava have had enough opportunities.
One man who should get his run-out when the All Blacks arrive in London for the start of their four-Test tour of Britain and Ireland is Sonny Bill Williams, who - despite not being in the 22 on Saturday - still finds himself at the centre of both camera lens and the press conference fallout. Assistant Coach Steve Hansen admitted that they will give the star rugby league convert ample time to adjust to life in the international set-up.
Time though will soon start not being a luxury as the World Cup nears. Delivering on promises and faith put in both players and coaches is now what's required as the temperature heats up nicely before New Zealand and Australia drop into the colder north.
Ones to watch:
For Australia: He may be relishing his re-baptism of fire but a clash with Tony Woodcock and the All Blacks could push Ben Alexander's reserves to the limit. His absence from the Test arena did hurt Australia but when you look at his return, the jigsaw is almost complete.
For New Zealand: Richie McCaw is set to win his 90th cap for New Zealand and should break Sean Fitzpatrick's record of 92 in November. One of the game's true professionals, the flanker takes on David Pocock who many believe has the potential to match his run.
Head-to-head: It is hard to believe that this is the first time that Dan Carter and Quade Cooper are meeting in the Test arena and what better venue to judge them on than neutral ground. Cooper is still relatively untamed while Carter has that aura of calmness. Enjoy.
Previous results:
2010: New Zealand beat Australia 23-22 in Sydney
2010: New Zealand won 20-10 in Christchurch
2010: New Zealand won 49-28 in Melbourne
2009: New Zealand won 32-19 in Tokyo
2009: New Zealand won 33-6 in Wellington
2009: New Zealand won 19-18 in Sydney
2009: New Zealand won 22-16 in Auckland
2008: New Zealand won 19-14 in Hong Kong
2008: New Zealand won 28-24 in Brisbane
2008: New Zealand won 39-10 in Auckland
2008: Australia won 34-19 in Sydney
2007: New Zealand won 26-12 in Auckland
2007: Australia won 20-15 in Melbourne
2006: New Zealand won 34-27 in Auckland
2006: New Zealand won 13-9 in Brisbane
2006: New Zealand won 32-12 in Christchurch
Prediction: A very close one and I'll put my neck on the line. Australia by 2!
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Australia vs New Zealand Live Stream Bledisloe Cup Hong Kong
Match : New Zealand vs Australia
Date : 30 October,2010
Time : 16:15 (08:15 GMT - 19:15 AEDT; 21:15 NZ time)
Venue : Hong Kong Stadium
Competitions: Bledisloe Cup 2010
Australia v New Zealand Match Preview :
It has been a while hasn't it? But for the fourth time in 2010, the Wallabies and All Blacks will collide for their now annual stopover Test match in Asia.
For those you who have been out of the loop this week, ticket sales for the Hong Kong clash have been sluggish, with around 25,000 tickets out of 38,000 reportedly sold, but organisers are hoping for a last-minute rush of interest. Let us hope it does not resemble something from New Delhi.
One thing that is certain has to be New Zealand's record against Australia - ten straight wins and just two defeats in their last eighteen meetings.
Dominance personified and yet we again find ourselves not writing off Australia. Deja vu or whatever you would like to call it, but that word 'potential' once more becomes attached to these Wallabies. The 2011 World Cup clock is ticking though, so surely this tour needs to bring results.
One major fillip to their cause is the return of Ben Alexander, of that there is no question. His injury-enforced absence during the Tri-Nations saw Salesi Ma'afu step in, which proved just how crucial the former is to Robbie Deans. Stephen Moore is also in hooking ahead of Saia Faingaa while the solidity of Mark Chisholm over the mobility of Dean Mumm remains. Ben McCalman deserves his jersey at number eight.
New Zealand meanwhile resisted the opportunity to blood a host of new/young faces on tour as they instead opted for the tried and tested Stephen Donald, Sitiveni Sivivatu and Isaia Toeava over younger trio Aaron Cruden, Rene Ranger and Robbie Fruean.
Graham Henry's opening team selection is one of even greater familiarity in a move that the man himself explained as 'a thank you for what they've done and reinforcing the positives of the year'. A nice sentiment but the debate in NZ has been whether fresh blood was required and whether Donald and Toeava have had enough opportunities.
One man who should get his run-out when the All Blacks arrive in London for the start of their four-Test tour of Britain and Ireland is Sonny Bill Williams, who - despite not being in the 22 on Saturday - still finds himself at the centre of both camera lens and the press conference fallout. Assistant Coach Steve Hansen admitted that they will give the star rugby league convert ample time to adjust to life in the international set-up.
Time though will soon start not being a luxury as the World Cup nears. Delivering on promises and faith put in both players and coaches is now what's required as the temperature heats up nicely before New Zealand and Australia drop into the colder north.
Ones to watch:
For Australia: He may be relishing his re-baptism of fire but a clash with Tony Woodcock and the All Blacks could push Ben Alexander's reserves to the limit. His absence from the Test arena did hurt Australia but when you look at his return, the jigsaw is almost complete.
For New Zealand: Richie McCaw is set to win his 90th cap for New Zealand and should break Sean Fitzpatrick's record of 92 in November. One of the game's true professionals, the flanker takes on David Pocock who many believe has the potential to match his run.
Head-to-head: It is hard to believe that this is the first time that Dan Carter and Quade Cooper are meeting in the Test arena and what better venue to judge them on than neutral ground. Cooper is still relatively untamed while Carter has that aura of calmness. Enjoy.
Previous results:
2010: New Zealand beat Australia 23-22 in Sydney
2010: New Zealand won 20-10 in Christchurch
2010: New Zealand won 49-28 in Melbourne
2009: New Zealand won 32-19 in Tokyo
2009: New Zealand won 33-6 in Wellington
2009: New Zealand won 19-18 in Sydney
2009: New Zealand won 22-16 in Auckland
2008: New Zealand won 19-14 in Hong Kong
2008: New Zealand won 28-24 in Brisbane
2008: New Zealand won 39-10 in Auckland
2008: Australia won 34-19 in Sydney
2007: New Zealand won 26-12 in Auckland
2007: Australia won 20-15 in Melbourne
2006: New Zealand won 34-27 in Auckland
2006: New Zealand won 13-9 in Brisbane
2006: New Zealand won 32-12 in Christchurch
Prediction: A very close one and I'll put my neck on the line. Australia by 2!
The teams:
Australia: 15 Kurtley Beale, 14 James O'Connor, 13 Adam Ashley-Cooper, 12 Matt Giteau, 11 Drew Mitchell, 10 Quade Cooper, 9 Will Genia, 8 Ben McCalman, 7 David Pocock, 6 Rocky Elsom (c), 5 Nathan Sharpe, 4 Mark Chisholm, 3 Ben Alexander, 2 Stephen Moore, 1 Benn Robinson.
Replacements: 16 Saia Faingaa, 17 James Slipper, 18 Dean Mumm, 19 Richard Brown, 20 Luke Burgess, 21 Berrick Barnes, 22 Lachie Turner.
New Zealand: 15 Mils Muliaina, 14 Cory Jane, 13 Conrad Smith, 12 Ma'a Nonu, 11 Joe Rokocoko, 10 Dan Carter, 9 Jimmy Cowan, 8 Kieran Read, 7 Richie McCaw (c), 6 Jerome Kaino, 5 Tom Donnelly, 4 Brad Thorn, 3 Owen Franks, 2 Keven Mealamu, 1 Tony Woodcock.
Replacements: 16 Hika Elliot, 17 John Afoa, 18 Samuel Whitelock, 19 Daniel Braid, 20 Alby Mathewson, 21 Stephen Donald, 22 Isaia Toeava.
All Blacks Wallabies HongKong 2010 Live Telecast
All Black vs Qantas Wallabies live stream Bledisloe Cup 2010 Hong Kong 2010 match schedule :
Match : All Black vs Qantas Wallabies
Date : 30 October,2010
Time : 4:30pm (Local),7:30pm (AEST)
Venue : Hong Kong Stadium
Competitions: Bledisloe Cup 2010
All Blacks performing the Haka
Match Review
A commanding second half performance from the All Blacks saw them overcome a spirited performance from the Qantas Wallabies to win the historic Bledisloe Cup Test in Hong Kong by 19 – 14 tonight.
The Wallabies led 14-9 at half time after two tries to Wallabies winger Drew Mitchell, but they were cancelled out by five pointers to Sitiveni Sivivatu and Richie McCaw after the break to give the Kiwis the spoils.
With the house full sign going up at Hong Kong Stadium and Rugby fever gripping Asia like never before, the first ever offshore Bledisloe Cup match was clearly a success before it even kicked off.
But the result that all Wallabies and Wallabies’ fans craved was a victory over the All Blacks to square the ledger at 2 Tests a-piece for 2008.
A passionate haka from the All Blacks also dispelled any notions whatsoever of either team regarding this game as a ‘dead rubber’.
A good attacking opportunity for the Wallabies on 4 minutes was lost when the throw in at the line out from Stephen Moore was over-thrown as the new lineout combination found their feet.
The All Blacks were also disrupted a minute later when hooker Andrew Hore hobbled off to be replaced by Keven Mealamu.
On seven minutes the Wallabies opened the scoring when new All Blacks winger Hosea Gear spilt the ball in his 22.
The Men of Gold re-gathered and after sustained pressure through almost ten phases, well marshaled by scrumhalf Luke Burgess, flyhalf Matt Giteau slipped through a half gap underneath the All Blacks post.
He was just brought down by desperate All Blacks defence but the Force flyhalf managed to pop up a miracle ball to Force team mate winger Mitchell who did just as well to gather and crash over for the opening try.
Giteau converted to put the Men of Gold up 7-0 after eight minutes.
A debatable scrum penalty from referee Alan Lewis gave Dan Carter a chance to put the All Blacks on the board from 35 metres, wide-out and the New Zealand inside centre made no mistake. Wallabies up 7-3 after 13 minutes.
It was early in the match but the Wallabies had started by far the better and looked the hungrier, the more organized and dangerous team.
Another magnificent Wallabies attack, inspired by a break from Ryan Cross and again super-slick service from Burgess, saw the Men of Gold go close just a minute later but Al Baxter lost the ball just metres out from the Kiwi line.
Then a setback on 19 minutes when Giteau, stretching to take a floated pass from lock Nathan Sharpe, was hit in a robust tackle by All Black flanker Jerome Kaino. Thankfully the gutsy Wallabies flyhalf was able to shake off the big hit and continue, albeit a little groggy.
The All Blacks edged closer on 24 minutes when Dean Mumm was penalized for holding on at a ruck in front of Australia’s posts and Carter landed his second penalty.
But the Wallabies hit back immediately from a line out on the All Blacks 22. The ball was spun wide quickly to Mitchell who took the ball close then after good lead up work by Moore and a bullocking run by Benn Robinson,George Smith showed beautiful hands to shift the ball quickly back to Mitchell for the winger to go over out wide for his second try.
Giteau landed a superb conversion from the touchline and the Wallabies were deserved 14-6 leaders after 27 minutes.
Another penalty at the breakdown, when Baxter went off his feet, gave Carter a third chance for a penalty, and from over 50 metres the All Blacks marksman narrowed the gap once more, to 14-9.
Despite chances to both teams the score remained the same to halftime but the All Blacks were on even terms just a minute into the second half.
Giteau cleared from the Wallabies 22 into touch on the full, after Smith had passed the ball back from outside the 22, meaning the lineout came back to where the ball was kicked under the ELVs.
From the lineout the ball came wide along the All Blacks backline and clever hands from outside centre Conrad Smith and fullback (and Man of the Match) Isaia Toeava sent winger Sivivatu on a clear run to the line.
Carter however failed with the conversion from wideout, the first unsuccessful kick on the night from either goalkicker, and we were all square at 14-all with nearly all of the second half to play.
The Stephen Donald experiment at flyhalf had been negligible and he was replaced on 48 minutes with Hurricanes inside centre Ma’a Nonu coming on.
The Wallabies were having an ongoing battle with Lewis and Moore was penalized on 50 minutes for another ruck infringement but Carter missed again from 45 metres to keep the scores locked.
New Zealand went to the bench again straight after the missed kick with Piri Weepu coming on for Jimmy Cowan at scrumhalf.
The All Blacks were unlucky not to go in front moments later when Gear failed to re-gather a Nonu grubber kick inches from the line after a superb bust from Toeava.
New Zealand seemed to be getting the ascendancy and Wallabies coach Robbie Deans went to the bench bringing on Berrick Barnes for Cross, at inside centre with Stirling Mortlock moving to outside.
But there was a marked lift in the All Blacks physicality and competitiveness at the breakdown and the Men of Gold were only just holding on.
Eventually the pressure had to tell.
Some brilliant attacking play from the All Blacks, ten phases following a clever re-gather from their own 22 drop out, finally saw a long pass from Sivivatu picked up magically from the bootstraps by captain McCaw who dove over outwide for the All Blacks second try.
Carter missed the conversion but the All Blacks were threatening to take command, leading 19-14 after 65 minutes.
Deans again went to the bench bringing on Phil Waugh with Mumm moving to lock and Sharpe being replaced.
Soon after a high tackle by replacement Anthony Boric on Waugh gave Giteau a chance to narrow the gap but his penalty from 30 metres out drifted just wide.
In the humid conditions both teams were tiring and Baxter was replaced by Matt Dunning with ten minutes to go and the Wallabies desperately needing a try.
If almost came after superb attacking play from the Wallabies saw them put multiple phases together with Smith, Barnes and Robinson prominent but the final ball from Adam Ashley-Cooper to Mitchell went to ground and the possible winning score went begging.
David Pocock then came on to become the 829th Wallaby as Smith was replaced after another whole-hearted effort.
A poor kick out from replacement All Blacks fullback Cory Jane gave the Wallabies another opportunity and again Giteau and Robinson were brilliant but once more the ball went into touch.
When Peter Hynes was penalized for holding on with two minutes to go it looked like the Wallabies chance had gone and in a mirror image of the Brisbane Blesdisloe, Weepu kicked the ball into touch moments later to give the All Blacks another narrow victory.
The Wallabies now travel on to Italy where the will play the Italians in Padua next Saturday night.
All Blacks (Sitiveni Sivivatu, Richie McCaw tries; Dan Carter 3 penalty goals) defeated Qantas Wallabies 14 (Drew Mitchell 2 tries; Matt Giteau 2 conversions) at Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong. (Half time: Wallabies 14 – All Blacks 9)
Full Time Score
All Blacks 19
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
All Black vs Qantas Wallabies 30 October 2010 Hong Kong
All Black vs Qantas Wallabies live stream Bledisloe Cup 2010 Hong Kong 2010 match schedule :
Match : All Black vs Qantas Wallabies
Date : 30 October,2010
Time : 4:30pm (Local),7:30pm (AEST)
Venue : Hong Kong Stadium
Competitions: Bledisloe Cup 2010
Match Review
A commanding second half performance from the All Blacks saw them overcome a spirited performance from the Qantas Wallabies to win the historic Bledisloe Cup Test in Hong Kong by 19 – 14 tonight.
The Wallabies led 14-9 at half time after two tries to Wallabies winger Drew Mitchell, but they were cancelled out by five pointers to Sitiveni Sivivatu and Richie McCaw after the break to give the Kiwis the spoils.
With the house full sign going up at Hong Kong Stadium and Rugby fever gripping Asia like never before, the first ever offshore Bledisloe Cup match was clearly a success before it even kicked off.
But the result that all Wallabies and Wallabies’ fans craved was a victory over the All Blacks to square the ledger at 2 Tests a-piece for 2008.
A passionate haka from the All Blacks also dispelled any notions whatsoever of either team regarding this game as a ‘dead rubber’.
A good attacking opportunity for the Wallabies on 4 minutes was lost when the throw in at the line out from Stephen Moore was over-thrown as the new lineout combination found their feet.
The All Blacks were also disrupted a minute later when hooker Andrew Hore hobbled off to be replaced by Keven Mealamu.
On seven minutes the Wallabies opened the scoring when new All Blacks winger Hosea Gear spilt the ball in his 22.
The Men of Gold re-gathered and after sustained pressure through almost ten phases, well marshaled by scrumhalf Luke Burgess, flyhalf Matt Giteau slipped through a half gap underneath the All Blacks post.
He was just brought down by desperate All Blacks defence but the Force flyhalf managed to pop up a miracle ball to Force team mate winger Mitchell who did just as well to gather and crash over for the opening try.
Giteau converted to put the Men of Gold up 7-0 after eight minutes.
A debatable scrum penalty from referee Alan Lewis gave Dan Carter a chance to put the All Blacks on the board from 35 metres, wide-out and the New Zealand inside centre made no mistake. Wallabies up 7-3 after 13 minutes.
It was early in the match but the Wallabies had started by far the better and looked the hungrier, the more organized and dangerous team.
Another magnificent Wallabies attack, inspired by a break from Ryan Cross and again super-slick service from Burgess, saw the Men of Gold go close just a minute later but Al Baxter lost the ball just metres out from the Kiwi line.
Then a setback on 19 minutes when Giteau, stretching to take a floated pass from lock Nathan Sharpe, was hit in a robust tackle by All Black flanker Jerome Kaino. Thankfully the gutsy Wallabies flyhalf was able to shake off the big hit and continue, albeit a little groggy.
The All Blacks edged closer on 24 minutes when Dean Mumm was penalized for holding on at a ruck in front of Australia’s posts and Carter landed his second penalty.
But the Wallabies hit back immediately from a line out on the All Blacks 22. The ball was spun wide quickly to Mitchell who took the ball close then after good lead up work by Moore and a bullocking run by Benn Robinson,George Smith showed beautiful hands to shift the ball quickly back to Mitchell for the winger to go over out wide for his second try.
Giteau landed a superb conversion from the touchline and the Wallabies were deserved 14-6 leaders after 27 minutes.
Another penalty at the breakdown, when Baxter went off his feet, gave Carter a third chance for a penalty, and from over 50 metres the All Blacks marksman narrowed the gap once more, to 14-9.
Despite chances to both teams the score remained the same to halftime but the All Blacks were on even terms just a minute into the second half.
Giteau cleared from the Wallabies 22 into touch on the full, after Smith had passed the ball back from outside the 22, meaning the lineout came back to where the ball was kicked under the ELVs.
From the lineout the ball came wide along the All Blacks backline and clever hands from outside centre Conrad Smith and fullback (and Man of the Match) Isaia Toeava sent winger Sivivatu on a clear run to the line.
Carter however failed with the conversion from wideout, the first unsuccessful kick on the night from either goalkicker, and we were all square at 14-all with nearly all of the second half to play.
The Stephen Donald experiment at flyhalf had been negligible and he was replaced on 48 minutes with Hurricanes inside centre Ma’a Nonu coming on.
The Wallabies were having an ongoing battle with Lewis and Moore was penalized on 50 minutes for another ruck infringement but Carter missed again from 45 metres to keep the scores locked.
New Zealand went to the bench again straight after the missed kick with Piri Weepu coming on for Jimmy Cowan at scrumhalf.
The All Blacks were unlucky not to go in front moments later when Gear failed to re-gather a Nonu grubber kick inches from the line after a superb bust from Toeava.
New Zealand seemed to be getting the ascendancy and Wallabies coach Robbie Deans went to the bench bringing on Berrick Barnes for Cross, at inside centre with Stirling Mortlock moving to outside.
But there was a marked lift in the All Blacks physicality and competitiveness at the breakdown and the Men of Gold were only just holding on.
Eventually the pressure had to tell.
Some brilliant attacking play from the All Blacks, ten phases following a clever re-gather from their own 22 drop out, finally saw a long pass from Sivivatu picked up magically from the bootstraps by captain McCaw who dove over outwide for the All Blacks second try.
Carter missed the conversion but the All Blacks were threatening to take command, leading 19-14 after 65 minutes.
Deans again went to the bench bringing on Phil Waugh with Mumm moving to lock and Sharpe being replaced.
Soon after a high tackle by replacement Anthony Boric on Waugh gave Giteau a chance to narrow the gap but his penalty from 30 metres out drifted just wide.
In the humid conditions both teams were tiring and Baxter was replaced by Matt Dunning with ten minutes to go and the Wallabies desperately needing a try.
If almost came after superb attacking play from the Wallabies saw them put multiple phases together with Smith, Barnes and Robinson prominent but the final ball from Adam Ashley-Cooper to Mitchell went to ground and the possible winning score went begging.
David Pocock then came on to become the 829th Wallaby as Smith was replaced after another whole-hearted effort.
A poor kick out from replacement All Blacks fullback Cory Jane gave the Wallabies another opportunity and again Giteau and Robinson were brilliant but once more the ball went into touch.
When Peter Hynes was penalized for holding on with two minutes to go it looked like the Wallabies chance had gone and in a mirror image of the Brisbane Blesdisloe, Weepu kicked the ball into touch moments later to give the All Blacks another narrow victory.
The Wallabies now travel on to Italy where the will play the Italians in Padua next Saturday night.
All Blacks (Sitiveni Sivivatu, Richie McCaw tries; Dan Carter 3 penalty goals) defeated Qantas Wallabies 14 (Drew Mitchell 2 tries; Matt Giteau 2 conversions) at Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong. (Half time: Wallabies 14 – All Blacks 9)
Full Time Score
All Blacks 19
All Black vs Australia Hong Kong 2010 TV Coverage
All Black vs Australia live stream Bledisloe Cup 2010 Hong Kong 2010 match schedule :
Match : All Black vs Australia
Date : 30 October,2010
Time : 4:30pm (Local),7:30pm (AEST)
Venue : Hong Kong Stadium
Competitions: Bledisloe Cup 2010
Match Review
A commanding second half performance from the All Blacks saw them overcome a spirited performance from the Qantas Wallabies to win the historic Bledisloe Cup Test in Hong Kong by 19 – 14 tonight.
The Wallabies led 14-9 at half time after two tries to Wallabies winger Drew Mitchell, but they were cancelled out by five pointers to Sitiveni Sivivatu and Richie McCaw after the break to give the Kiwis the spoils.
With the house full sign going up at Hong Kong Stadium and Rugby fever gripping Asia like never before, the first ever offshore Bledisloe Cup match was clearly a success before it even kicked off.
But the result that all Wallabies and Wallabies’ fans craved was a victory over the All Blacks to square the ledger at 2 Tests a-piece for 2008.
A passionate haka from the All Blacks also dispelled any notions whatsoever of either team regarding this game as a ‘dead rubber’.
A good attacking opportunity for the Wallabies on 4 minutes was lost when the throw in at the line out from Stephen Moore was over-thrown as the new lineout combination found their feet.
The All Blacks were also disrupted a minute later when hooker Andrew Hore hobbled off to be replaced by Keven Mealamu.
On seven minutes the Wallabies opened the scoring when new All Blacks winger Hosea Gear spilt the ball in his 22.
The Men of Gold re-gathered and after sustained pressure through almost ten phases, well marshaled by scrumhalf Luke Burgess, flyhalf Matt Giteau slipped through a half gap underneath the All Blacks post.
He was just brought down by desperate All Blacks defence but the Force flyhalf managed to pop up a miracle ball to Force team mate winger Mitchell who did just as well to gather and crash over for the opening try.
Giteau converted to put the Men of Gold up 7-0 after eight minutes.
A debatable scrum penalty from referee Alan Lewis gave Dan Carter a chance to put the All Blacks on the board from 35 metres, wide-out and the New Zealand inside centre made no mistake. Wallabies up 7-3 after 13 minutes.
It was early in the match but the Wallabies had started by far the better and looked the hungrier, the more organized and dangerous team.
Another magnificent Wallabies attack, inspired by a break from Ryan Cross and again super-slick service from Burgess, saw the Men of Gold go close just a minute later but Al Baxter lost the ball just metres out from the Kiwi line.
Then a setback on 19 minutes when Giteau, stretching to take a floated pass from lock Nathan Sharpe, was hit in a robust tackle by All Black flanker Jerome Kaino. Thankfully the gutsy Wallabies flyhalf was able to shake off the big hit and continue, albeit a little groggy.
The All Blacks edged closer on 24 minutes when Dean Mumm was penalized for holding on at a ruck in front of Australia’s posts and Carter landed his second penalty.
But the Wallabies hit back immediately from a line out on the All Blacks 22. The ball was spun wide quickly to Mitchell who took the ball close then after good lead up work by Moore and a bullocking run by Benn Robinson,George Smith showed beautiful hands to shift the ball quickly back to Mitchell for the winger to go over out wide for his second try.
Giteau landed a superb conversion from the touchline and the Wallabies were deserved 14-6 leaders after 27 minutes.
Another penalty at the breakdown, when Baxter went off his feet, gave Carter a third chance for a penalty, and from over 50 metres the All Blacks marksman narrowed the gap once more, to 14-9.
Despite chances to both teams the score remained the same to halftime but the All Blacks were on even terms just a minute into the second half.
Giteau cleared from the Wallabies 22 into touch on the full, after Smith had passed the ball back from outside the 22, meaning the lineout came back to where the ball was kicked under the ELVs.
From the lineout the ball came wide along the All Blacks backline and clever hands from outside centre Conrad Smith and fullback (and Man of the Match) Isaia Toeava sent winger Sivivatu on a clear run to the line.
Carter however failed with the conversion from wideout, the first unsuccessful kick on the night from either goalkicker, and we were all square at 14-all with nearly all of the second half to play.
The Stephen Donald experiment at flyhalf had been negligible and he was replaced on 48 minutes with Hurricanes inside centre Ma’a Nonu coming on.
The Wallabies were having an ongoing battle with Lewis and Moore was penalized on 50 minutes for another ruck infringement but Carter missed again from 45 metres to keep the scores locked.
New Zealand went to the bench again straight after the missed kick with Piri Weepu coming on for Jimmy Cowan at scrumhalf.
The All Blacks were unlucky not to go in front moments later when Gear failed to re-gather a Nonu grubber kick inches from the line after a superb bust from Toeava.
New Zealand seemed to be getting the ascendancy and Wallabies coach Robbie Deans went to the bench bringing on Berrick Barnes for Cross, at inside centre with Stirling Mortlock moving to outside.
But there was a marked lift in the All Blacks physicality and competitiveness at the breakdown and the Men of Gold were only just holding on.
Eventually the pressure had to tell.
Some brilliant attacking play from the All Blacks, ten phases following a clever re-gather from their own 22 drop out, finally saw a long pass from Sivivatu picked up magically from the bootstraps by captain McCaw who dove over outwide for the All Blacks second try.
Carter missed the conversion but the All Blacks were threatening to take command, leading 19-14 after 65 minutes.
Deans again went to the bench bringing on Phil Waugh with Mumm moving to lock and Sharpe being replaced.
Soon after a high tackle by replacement Anthony Boric on Waugh gave Giteau a chance to narrow the gap but his penalty from 30 metres out drifted just wide.
In the humid conditions both teams were tiring and Baxter was replaced by Matt Dunning with ten minutes to go and the Wallabies desperately needing a try.
If almost came after superb attacking play from the Wallabies saw them put multiple phases together with Smith, Barnes and Robinson prominent but the final ball from Adam Ashley-Cooper to Mitchell went to ground and the possible winning score went begging.
David Pocock then came on to become the 829th Wallaby as Smith was replaced after another whole-hearted effort.
A poor kick out from replacement All Blacks fullback Cory Jane gave the Wallabies another opportunity and again Giteau and Robinson were brilliant but once more the ball went into touch.
When Peter Hynes was penalized for holding on with two minutes to go it looked like the Wallabies chance had gone and in a mirror image of the Brisbane Blesdisloe, Weepu kicked the ball into touch moments later to give the All Blacks another narrow victory.
The Wallabies now travel on to Italy where the will play the Italians in Padua next Saturday night.
All Blacks (Sitiveni Sivivatu, Richie McCaw tries; Dan Carter 3 penalty goals) defeated Qantas Wallabies 14 (Drew Mitchell 2 tries; Matt Giteau 2 conversions) at Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong. (Half time: Wallabies 14 – All Blacks 9)
Full Time Score
All Blacks 19
Monday, October 25, 2010
Australia vs All Blacks Rugby Hong Kong Live Stream
Australia vs All Blacks live stream Bledisloe Cup 2010 Hong Kong 2010 match schedule :
Match : Australia vs All Blacks
Date : 30 October,2010
Time : 4:30pm (Local),7:30pm (AEST)
Venue : Hong Kong Stadium
Competitions: Bledisloe Cup 2010
Match Review
A commanding second half performance from the All Blacks saw them overcome a spirited performance from the Qantas Wallabies to win the historic Bledisloe Cup Test in Hong Kong by 19 – 14 tonight.
The Wallabies led 14-9 at half time after two tries to Wallabies winger Drew Mitchell, but they were cancelled out by five pointers to Sitiveni Sivivatu and Richie McCaw after the break to give the Kiwis the spoils.
With the house full sign going up at Hong Kong Stadium and Rugby fever gripping Asia like never before, the first ever offshore Bledisloe Cup match was clearly a success before it even kicked off.
But the result that all Wallabies and Wallabies’ fans craved was a victory over the All Blacks to square the ledger at 2 Tests a-piece for 2008.
A passionate haka from the All Blacks also dispelled any notions whatsoever of either team regarding this game as a ‘dead rubber’.
A good attacking opportunity for the Wallabies on 4 minutes was lost when the throw in at the line out from Stephen Moore was over-thrown as the new lineout combination found their feet.
The All Blacks were also disrupted a minute later when hooker Andrew Hore hobbled off to be replaced by Keven Mealamu.
On seven minutes the Wallabies opened the scoring when new All Blacks winger Hosea Gear spilt the ball in his 22.
The Men of Gold re-gathered and after sustained pressure through almost ten phases, well marshaled by scrumhalf Luke Burgess, flyhalf Matt Giteau slipped through a half gap underneath the All Blacks post.
He was just brought down by desperate All Blacks defence but the Force flyhalf managed to pop up a miracle ball to Force team mate winger Mitchell who did just as well to gather and crash over for the opening try.
Giteau converted to put the Men of Gold up 7-0 after eight minutes.
A debatable scrum penalty from referee Alan Lewis gave Dan Carter a chance to put the All Blacks on the board from 35 metres, wide-out and the New Zealand inside centre made no mistake. Wallabies up 7-3 after 13 minutes.
It was early in the match but the Wallabies had started by far the better and looked the hungrier, the more organized and dangerous team.
Another magnificent Wallabies attack, inspired by a break from Ryan Cross and again super-slick service from Burgess, saw the Men of Gold go close just a minute later but Al Baxter lost the ball just metres out from the Kiwi line.
Then a setback on 19 minutes when Giteau, stretching to take a floated pass from lock Nathan Sharpe, was hit in a robust tackle by All Black flanker Jerome Kaino. Thankfully the gutsy Wallabies flyhalf was able to shake off the big hit and continue, albeit a little groggy.
The All Blacks edged closer on 24 minutes when Dean Mumm was penalized for holding on at a ruck in front of Australia’s posts and Carter landed his second penalty.
But the Wallabies hit back immediately from a line out on the All Blacks 22. The ball was spun wide quickly to Mitchell who took the ball close then after good lead up work by Moore and a bullocking run by Benn Robinson,George Smith showed beautiful hands to shift the ball quickly back to Mitchell for the winger to go over out wide for his second try.
Giteau landed a superb conversion from the touchline and the Wallabies were deserved 14-6 leaders after 27 minutes.
Another penalty at the breakdown, when Baxter went off his feet, gave Carter a third chance for a penalty, and from over 50 metres the All Blacks marksman narrowed the gap once more, to 14-9.
Despite chances to both teams the score remained the same to halftime but the All Blacks were on even terms just a minute into the second half.
Giteau cleared from the Wallabies 22 into touch on the full, after Smith had passed the ball back from outside the 22, meaning the lineout came back to where the ball was kicked under the ELVs.
From the lineout the ball came wide along the All Blacks backline and clever hands from outside centre Conrad Smith and fullback (and Man of the Match) Isaia Toeava sent winger Sivivatu on a clear run to the line.
Carter however failed with the conversion from wideout, the first unsuccessful kick on the night from either goalkicker, and we were all square at 14-all with nearly all of the second half to play.
The Stephen Donald experiment at flyhalf had been negligible and he was replaced on 48 minutes with Hurricanes inside centre Ma’a Nonu coming on.
The Wallabies were having an ongoing battle with Lewis and Moore was penalized on 50 minutes for another ruck infringement but Carter missed again from 45 metres to keep the scores locked.
New Zealand went to the bench again straight after the missed kick with Piri Weepu coming on for Jimmy Cowan at scrumhalf.
The All Blacks were unlucky not to go in front moments later when Gear failed to re-gather a Nonu grubber kick inches from the line after a superb bust from Toeava.
New Zealand seemed to be getting the ascendancy and Wallabies coach Robbie Deans went to the bench bringing on Berrick Barnes for Cross, at inside centre with Stirling Mortlock moving to outside.
But there was a marked lift in the All Blacks physicality and competitiveness at the breakdown and the Men of Gold were only just holding on.
Eventually the pressure had to tell.
Some brilliant attacking play from the All Blacks, ten phases following a clever re-gather from their own 22 drop out, finally saw a long pass from Sivivatu picked up magically from the bootstraps by captain McCaw who dove over outwide for the All Blacks second try.
Carter missed the conversion but the All Blacks were threatening to take command, leading 19-14 after 65 minutes.
Deans again went to the bench bringing on Phil Waugh with Mumm moving to lock and Sharpe being replaced.
Soon after a high tackle by replacement Anthony Boric on Waugh gave Giteau a chance to narrow the gap but his penalty from 30 metres out drifted just wide.
In the humid conditions both teams were tiring and Baxter was replaced by Matt Dunning with ten minutes to go and the Wallabies desperately needing a try.
If almost came after superb attacking play from the Wallabies saw them put multiple phases together with Smith, Barnes and Robinson prominent but the final ball from Adam Ashley-Cooper to Mitchell went to ground and the possible winning score went begging.
David Pocock then came on to become the 829th Wallaby as Smith was replaced after another whole-hearted effort.
A poor kick out from replacement All Blacks fullback Cory Jane gave the Wallabies another opportunity and again Giteau and Robinson were brilliant but once more the ball went into touch.
When Peter Hynes was penalized for holding on with two minutes to go it looked like the Wallabies chance had gone and in a mirror image of the Brisbane Blesdisloe, Weepu kicked the ball into touch moments later to give the All Blacks another narrow victory.
The Wallabies now travel on to Italy where the will play the Italians in Padua next Saturday night.
All Blacks (Sitiveni Sivivatu, Richie McCaw tries; Dan Carter 3 penalty goals) defeated Qantas Wallabies 14 (Drew Mitchell 2 tries; Matt Giteau 2 conversions) at Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong. (Half time: Wallabies 14 – All Blacks 9)
Full Time Score
All Blacks 19
Australia vs New Zealand Rugby hong kong Live Stream
New Zealand vs Australia live stream Bledisloe Cup 2010 Hong Kong 2010 match schedule :
Match : New Zealand vs Australia
Date : 30 October,2010
Time : 4:30pm (Local),7:30pm (AEST)
Venue : Hong Kong Stadium
Competitions: Bledisloe Cup 2010
Match Review
A commanding second half performance from the All Blacks saw them overcome a spirited performance from the Qantas Wallabies to win the historic Bledisloe Cup Test in Hong Kong by 19 – 14 tonight.
The Wallabies led 14-9 at half time after two tries to Wallabies winger Drew Mitchell, but they were cancelled out by five pointers to Sitiveni Sivivatu and Richie McCaw after the break to give the Kiwis the spoils.
With the house full sign going up at Hong Kong Stadium and Rugby fever gripping Asia like never before, the first ever offshore Bledisloe Cup match was clearly a success before it even kicked off.
But the result that all Wallabies and Wallabies’ fans craved was a victory over the All Blacks to square the ledger at 2 Tests a-piece for 2008.
A passionate haka from the All Blacks also dispelled any notions whatsoever of either team regarding this game as a ‘dead rubber’.
A good attacking opportunity for the Wallabies on 4 minutes was lost when the throw in at the line out from Stephen Moore was over-thrown as the new lineout combination found their feet.
The All Blacks were also disrupted a minute later when hooker Andrew Hore hobbled off to be replaced by Keven Mealamu.
On seven minutes the Wallabies opened the scoring when new All Blacks winger Hosea Gear spilt the ball in his 22.
The Men of Gold re-gathered and after sustained pressure through almost ten phases, well marshaled by scrumhalf Luke Burgess, flyhalf Matt Giteau slipped through a half gap underneath the All Blacks post.
He was just brought down by desperate All Blacks defence but the Force flyhalf managed to pop up a miracle ball to Force team mate winger Mitchell who did just as well to gather and crash over for the opening try.
Giteau converted to put the Men of Gold up 7-0 after eight minutes.
A debatable scrum penalty from referee Alan Lewis gave Dan Carter a chance to put the All Blacks on the board from 35 metres, wide-out and the New Zealand inside centre made no mistake. Wallabies up 7-3 after 13 minutes.
It was early in the match but the Wallabies had started by far the better and looked the hungrier, the more organized and dangerous team.
Another magnificent Wallabies attack, inspired by a break from Ryan Cross and again super-slick service from Burgess, saw the Men of Gold go close just a minute later but Al Baxter lost the ball just metres out from the Kiwi line.
Then a setback on 19 minutes when Giteau, stretching to take a floated pass from lock Nathan Sharpe, was hit in a robust tackle by All Black flanker Jerome Kaino. Thankfully the gutsy Wallabies flyhalf was able to shake off the big hit and continue, albeit a little groggy.
The All Blacks edged closer on 24 minutes when Dean Mumm was penalized for holding on at a ruck in front of Australia’s posts and Carter landed his second penalty.
But the Wallabies hit back immediately from a line out on the All Blacks 22. The ball was spun wide quickly to Mitchell who took the ball close then after good lead up work by Moore and a bullocking run by Benn Robinson,George Smith showed beautiful hands to shift the ball quickly back to Mitchell for the winger to go over out wide for his second try.
Giteau landed a superb conversion from the touchline and the Wallabies were deserved 14-6 leaders after 27 minutes.
Another penalty at the breakdown, when Baxter went off his feet, gave Carter a third chance for a penalty, and from over 50 metres the All Blacks marksman narrowed the gap once more, to 14-9.
Despite chances to both teams the score remained the same to halftime but the All Blacks were on even terms just a minute into the second half.
Giteau cleared from the Wallabies 22 into touch on the full, after Smith had passed the ball back from outside the 22, meaning the lineout came back to where the ball was kicked under the ELVs.
From the lineout the ball came wide along the All Blacks backline and clever hands from outside centre Conrad Smith and fullback (and Man of the Match) Isaia Toeava sent winger Sivivatu on a clear run to the line.
Carter however failed with the conversion from wideout, the first unsuccessful kick on the night from either goalkicker, and we were all square at 14-all with nearly all of the second half to play.
The Stephen Donald experiment at flyhalf had been negligible and he was replaced on 48 minutes with Hurricanes inside centre Ma’a Nonu coming on.
The Wallabies were having an ongoing battle with Lewis and Moore was penalized on 50 minutes for another ruck infringement but Carter missed again from 45 metres to keep the scores locked.
New Zealand went to the bench again straight after the missed kick with Piri Weepu coming on for Jimmy Cowan at scrumhalf.
The All Blacks were unlucky not to go in front moments later when Gear failed to re-gather a Nonu grubber kick inches from the line after a superb bust from Toeava.
New Zealand seemed to be getting the ascendancy and Wallabies coach Robbie Deans went to the bench bringing on Berrick Barnes for Cross, at inside centre with Stirling Mortlock moving to outside.
But there was a marked lift in the All Blacks physicality and competitiveness at the breakdown and the Men of Gold were only just holding on.
Eventually the pressure had to tell.
Some brilliant attacking play from the All Blacks, ten phases following a clever re-gather from their own 22 drop out, finally saw a long pass from Sivivatu picked up magically from the bootstraps by captain McCaw who dove over outwide for the All Blacks second try.
Carter missed the conversion but the All Blacks were threatening to take command, leading 19-14 after 65 minutes.
Deans again went to the bench bringing on Phil Waugh with Mumm moving to lock and Sharpe being replaced.
Soon after a high tackle by replacement Anthony Boric on Waugh gave Giteau a chance to narrow the gap but his penalty from 30 metres out drifted just wide.
In the humid conditions both teams were tiring and Baxter was replaced by Matt Dunning with ten minutes to go and the Wallabies desperately needing a try.
If almost came after superb attacking play from the Wallabies saw them put multiple phases together with Smith, Barnes and Robinson prominent but the final ball from Adam Ashley-Cooper to Mitchell went to ground and the possible winning score went begging.
David Pocock then came on to become the 829th Wallaby as Smith was replaced after another whole-hearted effort.
A poor kick out from replacement All Blacks fullback Cory Jane gave the Wallabies another opportunity and again Giteau and Robinson were brilliant but once more the ball went into touch.
When Peter Hynes was penalized for holding on with two minutes to go it looked like the Wallabies chance had gone and in a mirror image of the Brisbane Blesdisloe, Weepu kicked the ball into touch moments later to give the All Blacks another narrow victory.
The Wallabies now travel on to Italy where the will play the Italians in Padua next Saturday night.
All Blacks (Sitiveni Sivivatu, Richie McCaw tries; Dan Carter 3 penalty goals) defeated Qantas Wallabies 14 (Drew Mitchell 2 tries; Matt Giteau 2 conversions) at Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong. (Half time: Wallabies 14 – All Blacks 9)
Full Time Score
All Blacks 19
Bledisloe Cup 2010 Hong Kong New Zealand vs Australia
New Zealand vs Australia live stream Bledisloe Cup 2010 Hong Kong 2010 match schedule :
Date : 30 October,2010
Time : 4:30pm (Local),7:30pm (AEST)
Venue : Hong Kong Stadium
Match Review
A commanding second half performance from the All Blacks saw them overcome a spirited performance from the Qantas Wallabies to win the historic Bledisloe Cup Test in Hong Kong by 19 – 14 tonight.
The Wallabies led 14-9 at half time after two tries to Wallabies winger Drew Mitchell, but they were cancelled out by five pointers to Sitiveni Sivivatu and Richie McCaw after the break to give the Kiwis the spoils.
With the house full sign going up at Hong Kong Stadium and Rugby fever gripping Asia like never before, the first ever offshore Bledisloe Cup match was clearly a success before it even kicked off.
But the result that all Wallabies and Wallabies’ fans craved was a victory over the All Blacks to square the ledger at 2 Tests a-piece for 2008.
A passionate haka from the All Blacks also dispelled any notions whatsoever of either team regarding this game as a ‘dead rubber’.
A good attacking opportunity for the Wallabies on 4 minutes was lost when the throw in at the line out from Stephen Moore was over-thrown as the new lineout combination found their feet.
The All Blacks were also disrupted a minute later when hooker Andrew Hore hobbled off to be replaced by Keven Mealamu.
On seven minutes the Wallabies opened the scoring when new All Blacks winger Hosea Gear spilt the ball in his 22.
The Men of Gold re-gathered and after sustained pressure through almost ten phases, well marshaled by scrumhalf Luke Burgess, flyhalf Matt Giteau slipped through a half gap underneath the All Blacks post.
He was just brought down by desperate All Blacks defence but the Force flyhalf managed to pop up a miracle ball to Force team mate winger Mitchell who did just as well to gather and crash over for the opening try.
Giteau converted to put the Men of Gold up 7-0 after eight minutes.
A debatable scrum penalty from referee Alan Lewis gave Dan Carter a chance to put the All Blacks on the board from 35 metres, wide-out and the New Zealand inside centre made no mistake. Wallabies up 7-3 after 13 minutes.
It was early in the match but the Wallabies had started by far the better and looked the hungrier, the more organized and dangerous team.
Another magnificent Wallabies attack, inspired by a break from Ryan Cross and again super-slick service from Burgess, saw the Men of Gold go close just a minute later but Al Baxter lost the ball just metres out from the Kiwi line.
Then a setback on 19 minutes when Giteau, stretching to take a floated pass from lock Nathan Sharpe, was hit in a robust tackle by All Black flanker Jerome Kaino. Thankfully the gutsy Wallabies flyhalf was able to shake off the big hit and continue, albeit a little groggy.
The All Blacks edged closer on 24 minutes when Dean Mumm was penalized for holding on at a ruck in front of Australia’s posts and Carter landed his second penalty.
But the Wallabies hit back immediately from a line out on the All Blacks 22. The ball was spun wide quickly to Mitchell who took the ball close then after good lead up work by Moore and a bullocking run by Benn Robinson,George Smith showed beautiful hands to shift the ball quickly back to Mitchell for the winger to go over out wide for his second try.
Giteau landed a superb conversion from the touchline and the Wallabies were deserved 14-6 leaders after 27 minutes.
Another penalty at the breakdown, when Baxter went off his feet, gave Carter a third chance for a penalty, and from over 50 metres the All Blacks marksman narrowed the gap once more, to 14-9.
Despite chances to both teams the score remained the same to halftime but the All Blacks were on even terms just a minute into the second half.
Giteau cleared from the Wallabies 22 into touch on the full, after Smith had passed the ball back from outside the 22, meaning the lineout came back to where the ball was kicked under the ELVs.
From the lineout the ball came wide along the All Blacks backline and clever hands from outside centre Conrad Smith and fullback (and Man of the Match) Isaia Toeava sent winger Sivivatu on a clear run to the line.
Carter however failed with the conversion from wideout, the first unsuccessful kick on the night from either goalkicker, and we were all square at 14-all with nearly all of the second half to play.
The Stephen Donald experiment at flyhalf had been negligible and he was replaced on 48 minutes with Hurricanes inside centre Ma’a Nonu coming on.
The Wallabies were having an ongoing battle with Lewis and Moore was penalized on 50 minutes for another ruck infringement but Carter missed again from 45 metres to keep the scores locked.
New Zealand went to the bench again straight after the missed kick with Piri Weepu coming on for Jimmy Cowan at scrumhalf.
The All Blacks were unlucky not to go in front moments later when Gear failed to re-gather a Nonu grubber kick inches from the line after a superb bust from Toeava.
New Zealand seemed to be getting the ascendancy and Wallabies coach Robbie Deans went to the bench bringing on Berrick Barnes for Cross, at inside centre with Stirling Mortlock moving to outside.
But there was a marked lift in the All Blacks physicality and competitiveness at the breakdown and the Men of Gold were only just holding on.
Eventually the pressure had to tell.
Some brilliant attacking play from the All Blacks, ten phases following a clever re-gather from their own 22 drop out, finally saw a long pass from Sivivatu picked up magically from the bootstraps by captain McCaw who dove over outwide for the All Blacks second try.
Carter missed the conversion but the All Blacks were threatening to take command, leading 19-14 after 65 minutes.
Deans again went to the bench bringing on Phil Waugh with Mumm moving to lock and Sharpe being replaced.
Soon after a high tackle by replacement Anthony Boric on Waugh gave Giteau a chance to narrow the gap but his penalty from 30 metres out drifted just wide.
In the humid conditions both teams were tiring and Baxter was replaced by Matt Dunning with ten minutes to go and the Wallabies desperately needing a try.
If almost came after superb attacking play from the Wallabies saw them put multiple phases together with Smith, Barnes and Robinson prominent but the final ball from Adam Ashley-Cooper to Mitchell went to ground and the possible winning score went begging.
David Pocock then came on to become the 829th Wallaby as Smith was replaced after another whole-hearted effort.
A poor kick out from replacement All Blacks fullback Cory Jane gave the Wallabies another opportunity and again Giteau and Robinson were brilliant but once more the ball went into touch.
When Peter Hynes was penalized for holding on with two minutes to go it looked like the Wallabies chance had gone and in a mirror image of the Brisbane Blesdisloe, Weepu kicked the ball into touch moments later to give the All Blacks another narrow victory.
The Wallabies now travel on to Italy where the will play the Italians in Padua next Saturday night.
All Blacks (Sitiveni Sivivatu, Richie McCaw tries; Dan Carter 3 penalty goals) defeated Qantas Wallabies 14 (Drew Mitchell 2 tries; Matt Giteau 2 conversions) at Hong Kong Stadium, Hong Kong. (Half time: Wallabies 14 – All Blacks 9)
Full Time Score
All Blacks 19