Australia
Bledisloe thumping not Cooper's fault: Cheika
August 15, 2015
New Zealand 41-13 Australia (Australia only)

Wallabies coach Michael Cheika has leapt to the defence of under-fire five-eighth Quade Cooper, whose second-half sin-binning on Saturday night effectively handed the Bledisloe Cup to New Zealand.

Cooper's tempestuous relationship with Eden Park continued when he was shown a yellow card in the 48th minute of Saturday night's Test for a high shot on Aaron Smith, as the New Zealand scrumhalf bore down on the try-line. Referee Nigel Owens awarded a penalty try, which gave the All Blacks their second five-pointer of the night - and then they went on to cross twice more, through Ma'a Nonu and Conrad Smith, while Cooper was in the sin bin.

It proved a defining period in the match as New Zealand turned their 13-6 half-time lead into a commanding 41-13 victory - but Cheika is not pinning the result on Cooper, who watched on from the bench as the All Blacks tore apart the Wallabies for the remainder of the match.

"We didn't want to lose him to the sin bin when he did, but he was trying to make a try-saving tackle and didn't intentionally go for a head-high tackle," Cheika said. "I thought he put us in good position early on and made some good plays and led us around the park well, until he had to leave the field."

The crowd took great delight in Cooper's sin-binning © Getty Images
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Cooper made a few handling errors and was hounded by the 48,457-strong crowd for each one, but did as much as a five-eighth could behind a beaten pack against the red-hot world champions.

"It was that little period after half-time that I felt we just made some poor decisions. That led into the sin bin, and boom," Cheika said. "The key issue is that we didn't improve from last week's performance and the opposition did. The margins are like that. You go away from home and that's what happens."

Aside from an encouraging opening period, the Wallabies had no answers once the irresistible All Blacks found their groove.

For New Zealand, it was an emphatic response to last week's loss in Sydney and the perfect way to farewell six veteran stars - among them skipper Richie McCaw and Dan Carter - who were likely playing their last Tests on home soil. McCaw was playing in his 142nd Test, which makes him the most capped international rugby player in history.

"Sport's an interesting thing, isn't it. One week you're a mug, everyone's saying you should be out of the team," All Blacks coach Steve Hansen said. "The next everyone's writing them up as heroes. Whilst it hurts and it sucks to lose, it's just another good reminder that occasionally you have to do it to go bone-deep and find out about yourself."

The result adds another year to Australia's long wait for the Bledisloe Cup and continues their miserable record at Eden Park, where they have not won since 1986.

© ESPN Sports Media Ltd

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