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14th November 2021
02:19pm GMT

'There is reason to be worried,' he stated, 'that the All Blacks no longer have the ante to play at the same table as the likes of Ireland, England and South Africa and are no closer to finding the muscularity they need than they were when they began searching for it four years ago.'While most Irish outlets concentrate on player ratings for local players, and Kiwi outlets do likewise, it was left to many English publications to give their marks for both sets of players. At a remove, they were still tough on the All Blacks but not so much swept up in that green wave of euphoria. That could be the reason, then, that the popular Ruck website awarded James Ryan and Josh van der Flier just 6/10 for their contributions. For context, we awarded both men 9/10. Ryan made 14 carries for 21 metres, stuck all 10 tackles he attempted, was massively physical, claimed four Irish lineouts and stole two from New Zealand. Van der Flier was the impetus for that aggressive Irish defence and flogged himself for 58 minutes until he passed the baton to Peter O'Mahony. The same ratings had two 9/10 marks as their highest ratings, for Lowe and Tadhg Furlong. Jordie Barrett and try-scorer Will Jordan rated highest for the visitors with dual 7/10s. Stuff, meanwhile, gave Dalton Papalii their highest rating, 8/10 while Jordi Barrett [7.5] was not far behind. They also doled out 4/10 marks to Rieko Ioane, Sevu Reece, Nepo Laulala, captain Sam Whitelock and Beauden Barrett, who went off concussed after only 21 minutes. In Test rugby, it is so often much more closer than the ratings suggest. You may have teams that deliver more 7s and 8s than 6s and 7s that get over the line. On Saturday, the ratings reflect a gulf between the sides that was acknowledged by All Blacks coach Ian Foster when he admitted they were 'second best'. WATCH HOUSE OF RUGBY HERE:
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