All Blacks deny gallant Wallabies

The All Blacks have beaten the Wallabies 37-10 to rack up a record 18th consecutive Test win and complete a 3-0 Bledisloe Cup series sweep.

Julian Savea of New Zealand

All Blacks winger Julian Savea plans to crush France again on Saturday in Paris. (AAP)

Michael Cheika wants some accountability from World Rugby after a controversial no-try ruling cruelled the Wallabies' hopes of conjuring a famous upset win over the mighty All Blacks.

Cheika refused to blame the contentious call to overturn a Henry Speight five-pointer for Australia's 37-10 loss to New Zealand on Saturday night but was unable to hide his disgust.

Speight appeared to have locked up the match at 15-all in the 45th minute - with Bernard Foley's conversion attempt to come - only for the television match official to intervene.

Wallabies winger Dane Haylett-Petty was deemed to have changed his line and taken out Julian Savea as his opposite number was pursuing Speight.

The decision left the Wallabies fuming, with the All Blacks rubbing salt into the wound 10 metres later with an 80m try to Savea against the run of play to turn the Test.

"Obviously I can't say anything because they've got you by the throat. But I've just never seen shepherding from behind before," Cheika said after the All Blacks survived a huge scare to notch their world-record 18th successive Test win.

"Before any of that, though, we've got to own our mistakes ... before we start talking about the turning point and all that business because we can only call it a turning point if we lose by less than one score perhaps.

"(But) I know there's the ramifications of the game and, at the end of the day, someone's got to own those mistakes as well.

"So we'll see what happens. We'll see if World Rugby comes out with an announcement or anything like that."

Against all odds, after a sloppy start, the Wallabies recovered from 10-0 down to have the All Blacks under pressure for the first time all year.

But further late strikes to Savea and hooker Dane Coles, after unconverted first-half five-pointers to backline aces Israel Dagg, Anton Leinert-Brown and TJ Perenara were enough for the All Blacks.

The victory in front of 47,744 mostly All Blacks fans completed an 18-match winning streak that began in 2015 against the Wallabies at the same venue - where New Zealand are unbeaten since 1994.

After falling to England earlier in 2016, the loss also consigned the Wallabies to 3-0 series defeats against two nations in a single season for the first time.


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Source: AAP


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