Australia Kangaroos vs New Zeeland Kiwis Full Match HD
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New Zealand Kiwis claim third straight win over
Australian Kangaroos for first time since
1953
Australian Kangaroos v New Zealand Kiwis
A new-look Aussie side prepares to host a very familiar-looking
Kiwi outfit for the traditional mid-year
Test in a fixture that threatens to deviate from the usual script.
The Kiwis have struggled badly in the one-off mid-season Test over the years, winning just once – the second fixture, back in
1998 – and losing 14.
A usually-settled Kangaroos side, with the benefit of club and
Origin combinations, has frequently proved too strong for Kiwi outfits that often feature players with little experience playing alongside each other.
Not so this time; the Kiwis are boosted by most of their Four Nations-winning squad being available and will feature no debutants to
Australia's four.
That successful campaign in November last year included back-to-back wins over the Aussies; another win here would see them notch three in a row against their Trans-Tasman rivals for the first time in over 60 years and also jump to the top of the
RLIF world rankings.
While halfback
Shaun Johnson has been under fire for a slow start to the year
and five-eighth Kieran Foran has missed games recently with a hamstring strain
New Zealand have stuck with the players who have been there and done it before.
Dean Whare is out injured, so
Peta Hiku will play centre and
Roger Tuivasa-Sheck returns at fullback having not played
Test football since the
2013 World Cup.
Ben Matulino is also playing his first Test since that tournament,
Jason Taumalolo is out injured meaning
Tohu Harris will start.
Sam Moa is also back, as is
Thomas Leuluai – who missed the
Four Nations final through injury after playing the pool games – with
Lewis Brown bumped to
18th man.
The Aussies will have no shortage of motivation headed into this one and will be boosted by the return to form and fitness, and return to the side, of
Matt Scott and
James Tamou.
The Aussies have four Test debutants: wingers
Josh Dugan and
Alex Johnston, centre
Will Chambers and bench forward
Trent Merrin.
Billy Slater's late withdrawal due to a shoulder injury means
Greg Inglis again plays fullback with
Michael Jennings joining the side at centre.
Johnathan Thurston rejoins the team after missing the Four Nations along with
Luke Lewis and
Nate Myles.
Boyd Cordner,
Josh Jackson,
Daly Cherry-Evans and
Ben Hunt are among the Four Nations finalists to miss out.
Watch out Kangaroos:
Storm prop
Jesse Bromwich is arguably the form front-rower of the
NRL at the moment and
Warriors bookend Ben Matulino isn't far behind. Each is running over
160 metres per week, making them the third and fourth most productive props in terms of running after
Aaron Woods and
Andrew Fifita. When you add in
Bromwich's mobility and footwork at the line and Matulino's prolific offloading (an NRL-high 21 after eight rounds) it makes them a formidable prospect for the '
Roos forwards to deal with.
Watch out Kiwis:
Despite the late withdrawal of Slater the Aussies have an in-form and familiar 'spine' of
Inglis, Thurston, Cronk and
Smith. Four of the best big-game players you'd ever want to see, but the one in stunning form of late is
Cowboys halfback Thurston.
'JT' has nine try assists in eight games – second in the competition after impressive
Panthers fullback
Matt Moylan (10) and all bar one of those in the Cowboys' current five-match winning streak. He's one of those players that can turn a game in an instant, and even more so when he's getting some help from his forwards.
Key Match-Up: Greg Inglis v Roger Tuivasa-Sheck. There are key battles all over the park – Cronk v
Johnson, Scott and
Woods v Matulino and Bromwich,
Luke v Smith – but each set starts with the fullback and each of these men will be hoping to be their country's custodian for years to come.
While Inglis's
137 metres and
3.5 tackle breaks per game are nothing to sneeze at, they pale when compared to how the
Roosters custodian has started the year. He leads all comers for average and total metres with an absurd 235 metres per game. He has one more tackle break than Inglis this year and both have three tries, while Inglis (five) edges Tuivasa-Sheck (three) for try assists.
The
History:
Played 129;
Australia 95, New Zealand 31, drawn 3.
It's been a long history of dominance for the Aussies, particularly in the one-off mid-season fixture, but the Kiwis have won the past two – both in last year's Four Nations. Interestingly, New Zealand have won four of their past five at
Suncorp – three wins and a loss against Australia, and a win over
England.