The All Blacks are at a loss to explain the way in which they fell apart to etch another tombstone in their Wellington graveyard.
In the immediate aftermath of their 43-10 defeat to the Springboks, the largest loss in All Blacks history, coach Scott Robertson and captain Scott Barrett struggled to comprehend what had transpired before their eyes.
One week on from defending fortress Eden Park, the All Blacks had the better of the first half before conceding five second half tries and 36 unanswered points as unwanted records tumbled to leave hordes of New Zealanders among the sold out crowd departing well before the final whistle.
The All Blacks were confident they had reset from last week鈥檚 success but once the Springboks gained the upper hand, there was no stopping their relentless onslaught.
How did it unravel so badly?
鈥淣ot right at the moment,鈥 Robertson replied when probed on what answers he had for the backward step that continues the deeply worrying inconsistent theme of his tenure after the 1-1 Argentina tour.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 something we鈥檒l have to look at and we鈥檒l have to find out pretty quickly because we鈥檝e got a big Bledisloe coming.
鈥淪outh Africa played incredibly well and took their opportunities. Congratulations to them. We鈥檒l take it on the chin. They were clearly better in that second half.
鈥淵ou get extremely disappointed because you put so much effort and work into the team, the culture, and you set yourselves up to dig in and show grit and then that happens. We couldn鈥檛 buy anything, couldn鈥檛 get anything happening, they just went on a tear. Congratulations to them.
鈥淥f course something like that is going to hurt you.鈥
Robertson believed the game could, perhaps, have taken a different turn had Cheslin Kolbe not snaffled Billy Proctor鈥檚 first half intercept.
Yet that had no impact on the All Blacks set piece falling apart, with the scrum conceding frequent penalties once the bench was injected and the lineout capitulating to hand the Springboks multiple chances to strike.
That is where Barrett fingered his frustrations.
鈥淎s a group you have to stick together,鈥 he said.
鈥淵ou have to look at your own game. And then it鈥檚 what鈥檚 going to give us the biggest shift. Right now it鈥檚 probably set piece.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 front of mind. That鈥檚 where we thought we made a shift but they got energy from there and grew in confidence.
鈥淚n the second half when you鈥檙e chasing you play a bit more loose and push the play and it clearly didn鈥檛 come off so it is disappointing.
鈥淭here will be some discomfort, clearly, but I鈥檓 sure this team will use that discomfort to bounce forward for the Bledisloe and finish this Rugby Championship strong.鈥
Defensively the All Blacks must again make major improvements, too. Last week at Eden Park the All Blacks met the Boks physicality head on to disrupt their breakdown and pressure them into mistakes.
In Wellington, though, the Boks revamped and inexperienced backline ran riot in the second half to force the All Blacks into 46 missed tackles.
Composure was then absent as the All Blacks attempted to chase the game with rash decisions and a lack of clinical finishing blowing any chance of mounting a comeback.
鈥淚t felt like at half time we鈥檇 done enough but in the second half they won the aerial battle, the scraps, too many penalties around the set piece,鈥 Robertson added.
鈥淲e lost a couple of really big moments there and the game go away. If it was preparation we would鈥檝e seen the signs a bit earlier.鈥
With the Freedom Cup gone for another year, the Rugby Championship wide open and the Bledisloe Cup on the line, the pressure valve once again spikes as the scrutiny ramps up on Robertson鈥檚 coaching team to deliver a swift response.
They shouldn鈥檛 be back in this position, certainly not the depths of their darkest defeat, but it鈥檚 becoming an all too familiar cycle.
鈥淚t鈥檚 tough, the boys are hurting that鈥檚 for sure,鈥 All Blacks fullback Damian McKenzie said. 鈥淔or us it鈥檚 about believing in ourselves. We know we鈥檝e got a tight circle.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going to have a good look at ourselves and our performance, as you do after any game, win or lose. We鈥檒l keep tight and move forward.鈥
is a Senior Sports Journalist and Rugby Correspondent for the New Zealand Herald. He is a co-host of the .
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