Favourite AB tests
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@Victor-Meldrew said in Favourite AB tests:
By Hokey, yes!
My Dad won a washing machine on the radio version before it was on TB.
He was at that 1956 test at Eden Park too.
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@Snowy said in Favourite AB tests:
@Victor-Meldrew said in Favourite AB tests:
By Hokey, yes!
My Dad won a washing machine on the radio version before it was on TB.
He was at that 1956 test at Eden Park too.
Remember the family listening to on the radio as a very young kid.
Also vaguely remember the 1961 French test at Athletic Park in a hurricane. Power was off in Hutt valley due to the wind and my parents listening on a homemade transistor radio.....
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@Billy-Webb said in Favourite AB tests:
The New Zealand public were confident their heroes in Black would lower the colours of the mighty Springboks, and this confidence grew when the touring side were defeated 14 - 10 in their first match against the provincial side Waikato.
My father, uncle and grandfather were at the Waikato game, and went up to the Eden Park test. It seems everybody was there!
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@Bovidae said in Favourite AB tests:
My father, uncle and grandfather were at the Waikato game, and went up to the Eden Park test. It seems everybody was there!
"The overnight queue at Eden Park was estimated at 15,000 and 61,240 packed into the ground".
It was a biggie.
@Billy-Webb You might like this about Skinner:
***Skinner was a former All Blacks captain, a veteran of 1949 and by general consent still the most formidable prop in New Zealand. But South African memories focus on his having formerly been New Zealand's amateur heavyweight boxing champions and the havoc he wrought in the third test at Christchurch, brawling with Koch in the first half, then switching sides after halftime for a similarly brutal contest with Bekker.Skinner for the rest of his life denied that his boxing skills were a relevant factor, in 2002 telling me: "I don't think what I did had a big bearing on the match, but certain people in the news media made it out that way. My theory is that the South Africans had been kicking the black man around since 1658 and were used to the idea that nobody would hit them back. After we'd sorted a few things out in the front row, they got on with playing a bit better."***
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@voodoo said in Favourite AB tests:
@Bovidae said in Favourite AB tests:
All of my favourites have been mentioned, particularly Pretoria 1996 and RWC final 2011.
I hated that 2011 final (outcome aside!), have never rewached it!!! Such a sweaty game!
That last quarter felt like sitting there watching a slow motion car crash , except it didn’t end up crashing .
Loved winning the cup , loved going home to experience it , but didn’t enjoy that game
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@kiwiinmelb said in Favourite AB tests:
@voodoo said in Favourite AB tests:
@Bovidae said in Favourite AB tests:
All of my favourites have been mentioned, particularly Pretoria 1996 and RWC final 2011.
I hated that 2011 final (outcome aside!), have never rewached it!!! Such a sweaty game!
That last quarter felt like sitting there watching a slow motion car crash , except it didn’t end up crashing .
Loved winning the cup , loved going home to experience it , but didn’t enjoy that game
I had a massive headache after than game, was extremely stressful game. I enjoyed rugby so much more after winning that game, even more so after 2015. Was fun again.
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ABs v England 2019....
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Today
Too early?
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@booboo said in Favourite AB tests:
@Billy-Webb said in Favourite AB tests:
@maroon said in Favourite AB tests:
The Fern lets me through the defences again, to unload some ancient history.
What about that fourth test against the Boks in 1956?
It was a time when New Zealand had a monolithic rugby culture. There was national unity in the desire to beat these more-than-lifesized invaders. That desire was the highest form of passion allowed a Kiwi bloke.
Selwyn Toogood commentated. Peter Jones scored the clinching try. And we heard the word “buggered” for the first time on air.
I argue that no game since has mattered as deeply to a larger percentage of New Zealander’s.Help me remember here. Is that the series Danie Craven played for the Boks? In which case it would be the series where NZ picked a boxer in their front row to “deal” with the Boks....
Kevin Skinner. That's him.
Back when rugby was rugby.
My old man used to always tell me the story of Kevin skinner When I was growing up , you know how some people like to tell the same story over and over,
He would forget he had already told me , and I would politely listen and nod my head , not that it mattered , it was a cool story and I was happy to hear it again
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@booboo said in Favourite AB tests:
@MiketheSnow said in Favourite AB tests:
Today
Too early?
So you admit you're English?
For 80 or so mins today.
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@Victor-Meldrew said in Favourite AB tests:
@Billy-Webb said in Favourite AB tests:
In which case it would be the series where NZ picked a boxer in their front row to “deal” with the Boks....
From what I've read, Skinner wasn't just a top-class heavyweight boxer, he was one of the strongest props of his era. According to my Dad, the punch-ups have been over-egged - Skinner simply destroyed the Bok front-row with his scrummaging.
I’ve read various versions of this. The coach of that team (Mcphail?) was quoted as saying “Kevin reckoned he never hit anyone but his hands were so swollen the next day he could hardly hold a beer”.
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@Wally said in Favourite AB tests:
I’ve read various versions of this. The coach of that team (Mcphail?) was quoted as saying “Kevin reckoned he never hit anyone but his hands were so swollen the next day he could hardly hold a beer”.
He may have done the physical damage unseen.
Meads tells of St Wilson of Whineray (also a champion heavyweight boxer) sorting out opposition forwards and emerging from the scrum or ruck with a halo round his head while said opposition forward emerging seriously groggy