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Some fair points but N F-J here however, I feel if you were to introduce #1 Greg Holmes and #2 Jeremy Paul to the XV with Dunning and Moore to the Bench the Wallaby Scrum would be an entirely more threatening combination.
Pack 'not good enough'
From Peter Jenkins in Auckland
July 22, 2007
FORMER captain Nick Farr-Jones fears Australia lacks the pack to win the World Cup in France.
Farr-Jones told New Zealand television his concerns were raised by the All Blacks' second-half performance last night, as they squeezed the Wallabies in a territory battle and ground out victory to claim both the Bledisloe Cup and Tri-Nations trophy.
"All five World Cups to date have been won by sides with dominant packs," said Farr-Jones, who lifted the Webb Ellis trophy at Twickenham in 1991. We've won two World Cups in Europe and you can never write these guys off. But let's be honest, you shut us down in the forwards, you wore us down.
"The All Blacks can play many different styles and in those conditions tonight, which were tough, they were able to close it down. Their scrum is strong and (five-eighth) Dan Carter used his left boot well. There are many ways to win a game and they did that in this Test.
"They showed patience and maturity that we didn't see from the All Blacks in Melbourne. They imploded and panicked a few weeks ago. They should never have lost that Test. But they were methodical in the second half here and we didn't look like scoring."
But while Farr-Jones had reservations about the Wallabies securing an unprecedented third World Cup title in October, two-time winner Tim Horan and ARU chief executive John O'Neill claimed Australia is on track.
"They can definitely beat the All Blacks if we meet them in the semi-finals," Horan said.
"The New Zealanders will have doubts in their mind after Australia beat them in Melbourne, and it was reasonably close here."
O'Neill took aim at Wales referee Nigel Owens and his South Africa touch judges Mark Lawrence and Craig Joubert about several decisions that went against the Australians at Eden Park.
He cited a high tackle by All Blacks flanker Jerry Collins on Wallaby rival George Smith that went unchecked.
Even more galling was a ruling that Wallabies skipper Stirling Mortlock caught All Blacks winger Doug Howlett high when replays showed contact across the shoulder.
From the penalty, Carter kicked three points.