Jack goes over for his early try (Getty Images).
New Zealand 40 France 13
By Alex Lowe, PA Sport, Sydney
Click here for full match stats
Doug Howlett and Mils Muliaina scored their seventh touchdowns of the
tournament to become the World Cup's joint-leading try scorers but they were
just about the only notes of worth from the match nobody wanted to play.
We could fool ourselves that New Zealand salvaged some pride by claiming third
place in the World Cup with this triumph.
But after missing out on the World Cup final and a £35,000 bonus per man to
boot, the last thing the pre-tournament favourites wanted was to return to the
scene of their semi-final grief against Australia.
That is exactly the way it looked as both sides went through the motions
before a crowd of 62,712, many of who were streaming home 10 minutes before the
final whistle.
Howlett and Muliaina were joined on the scoresheet by second-row Chris Jack,
young wing Joe Rokocoko, Brad Thorn and Marty Holah with Pepito Elhorga grabbing
France's consolation touchdown.
But this victory, full of the handling errors which categorised their
semi-final defeat, will not save New Zealand or their coach John Mitchell from
the media and public slaying they are bound to receive when they return home
on Friday.
French coach Bernard Laporte made 13 changes to the side which lost to England
on Sunday, while New Zealand made just one switch in their starting line-up -
scrum-half Steve Devine coming in for the injured Justin Marshall.
For France, in dry, humid conditions completely different from their match
against England, it was a chance to throw off their melancholy, pick a young
side and announce a new chapter in French rugby leading to the 2007 World Cup
they will host.
The match, however, was always going to suffer from a lack of intensity after
the two sides' disappointment at the weekend and there was a definite Barbarians
feel to the action.
The first try came from second-row Jack when he exploited a fluid All Blacks
movement to hand off David Bory and charge over.
And when Howlett raced in for his 20th-minute try it seemed the crowd might be
treated to a New Zealand try-fest - the All Blacks going in at half-time with a
14-6 lead after Dmitri Yachvili had replied with a penalty and a drop goal for
France.
It is tough to raise your game when the stakes are so low, however, and it was
the French who came out the brighter after the interval, immediately breaking
the New Zealand defence with wing Elhorga supplying the touchdown and Yachvili
the conversion.
Cue a surge of All Black pride - magical work from Carlos Spencer opening up
the space for Rokocoko to sweep in for a touchdown out wide and then equal
invention from Devine hassling the French defence to send in replacement Thorn.
Suddenly the All Blacks were clear and cruising and if the odd scuffle broke
out as full-back Muliaina crossed for their fifth try then there was no denying
the class of this New Zealand side when they get into the groove.
Holah added the sixth but still they looked like men haunted by their
underachievement.
One omen for England - in all previous World Cups the eventual winners and the
team which finished third have come from the same semi-final.
Just another obstacle for Clive Woodward to overcome on Saturday.
Teams
New Zealand: Muliaina, Howlett, MacDonald, Mauger, Rokocoko,
Spencer, Devine, Hewett, Mealamu, Somerville, Jack, Williams,
Thorne, McCaw, Collins, Carter.
Replacements: Carter for MacDonald (18),
Hammett for Hewett (71), Hoeft for Mealamu (71),
Thorn for Williams (50), Holah for Collins (44),
Ralph for Carter (75).
Not Used: Kelleher.
Tries: Jack, Howlett, Rokocoko, Thorn, Muliaina,
Holah. Cons: MacDonald, Carter 4. France: Poitrenaud, Elhorga, Marsh, Traille, Bory, Merceron,
Yachvili, Marconnet, Bru, Poux, Auradou, Privat, Tabacco,
Chabal, Labit.
Replacements: Brusque for Poitrenaud (26),
Liebenberg for Marsh (40), Michalak for Merceron (65),
Ibanez for Bru (54), Crenca for Poux (40),
Pelous for Privat (40), Magne for Tabacco (57).
Tries: Elhorga. Cons: Yachvili. Pens: Yachvili.
Drop Goals: Yachvili.
Att: 78,000
Ref: Chris White (England).
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