When George Gregan hoisted the Bledisloe Cup after the Wallabies鈥 16-14 victory over the All Blacks in Sydney in 2002, few could have imagined that, now 23 years later, no other Australian captain would have (as yet) lifted the famous transtasman trophy again.
It鈥檚 a statistic former Wallabies lock Justin Harrison, who played in that match, calls 鈥渟taggering鈥 鈥 especially since Australia had just secured the Bledisloe Cup for a record fifth consecutive year after Matt Burke鈥檚 penalty following the final whistle.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a tired clich茅, but you have to take it all in and appreciate it, as you never know if you鈥檒l experience that again,鈥 Harrison told the Herald. 鈥淭here are players who have not beaten the All Blacks, let alone won a series. To think we haven鈥檛 won it in over 20 years is staggering.鈥
That 2002 decider was a true battle, highlighted by physical play, while Burke and All Blacks playmaker Andrew Mehrtens both struggled off the tee.
With the Wallabies trailing by six points heading into the final 10 minutes, Rogers dove over near the posts, but Burke鈥檚 conversion hit the posts 鈥 meaning they trailed by a single point.
But in stoppage time, All Blacks captain Reuben Thorne gave away a penalty and Burke slotted the match-winning kick from nearly the exact same spot from his previous miss.
Justin Harrison (rear) celebrates Matt Burke's winning penalty goal with his teammates, including Stirling Mortlock (in front of Harrison). Burke is presumably buried in this triumphant scrum. Photo / Getty Images
Harrison remembers both teams being evenly matched but said the Wallabies鈥 composure in the decisive moments proved the difference.
Now head of Australia鈥檚 Rugby Union Players Association, Harrison said facing the All Blacks was always the pinnacle outside of a World Cup.
鈥淲e鈥檝e both been measured for a long time against performance in the Bledisloe,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 always been the precursor to World Cup cycles.
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鈥淭o contemplate not winning a series now 鈥 and it鈥檚 very difficult with just two tests 鈥 you鈥檝e either got to win both or draw one and then win the other to get it back.
鈥淲hen you think about the national psyche, the most competitive of all is Wallabies versus All Blacks. People talk about England-Australia because of the history, but from a purely sporting perspective, not much beats it.鈥
The Bledisloe goes on the line again on Saturday at Eden Park in the first of two tests. The Wallabies must avoid defeat to carry a chance of breaking the drought when the series shifts to Perth.
But history is stacked against them. Australia haven鈥檛 beaten the All Blacks in New Zealand in 29 tests since 2001 鈥 Harrison鈥檚 second cap, after debuting against the British and Irish Lions. To put it in perspective, two of their biggest stars, Joseph-Aukuso Sua鈥檃li鈥檌 and Max Jorgensen, weren鈥檛 even born the last time the Wallabies beat the All Blacks on Kiwi soil.
On top of that, they have lost their last 23 tests against the All Blacks at Eden Park dating back to 1986, 20 of them during the All Blacks鈥 51-match unbeaten streak at the ground.
Former Wallabies captain Phil Kearns insists there is 鈥渘othing special鈥 about Eden Park. Harrison, however, believes players can be beaten before they even arrive.
鈥淗istory can sometimes speak for itself before it even happens,鈥 Harrison said. 鈥淭he more you talk about something, the more it takes on a life of its own.
鈥淭here鈥檚 so much talk, hysteria, mystery, intrigue 鈥 almost a sense of fortune-telling 鈥 around the All Blacks鈥 record there that it becomes this immovable mountain.
Justin Harrison. Photo / RUPA
鈥淭he atmosphere and intensity there is different 鈥 more foreboding, more powerful psychologically 鈥 because it鈥檚 been talked about so much that it gets into your DNA.鈥
As for Saturday, Harrison said the scoreline is irrelevant as long as the Wallabies are one point ahead at fulltime. And with the All Blacks reeling from a record loss to the Springboks, he believes there is no better moment to strike.
鈥淭hat鈥檚 the positive for this current squad. They carry the shadow of history, but they also have a real opportunity,鈥 he said. 鈥淭he challenge is that 鈥榦pportunity鈥 is one of the worst words in the English language, because it can remain just potential. Turning it into results is what really matters.鈥
is an Auckland-based reporter for the New Zealand Herald who covers breaking sports news.
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