Junior Boks down New Zealand to clinch first U20 Championship title since 2012
The Junior Springboks ended a 13-year victory drought in the World Rugby U20 Championship by defeating New Zealand 23–15 in a gruelling final in Rovigo on Saturday night.
Tries from Will Jordan, Anton Lienert-Brown, Du'Plessis Kirifi and Brodie McAlister coupled with nine points from Damian McKenzie's boot saw the All Blacks prevail.
France were excellent for large parts in Hamilton despite missing most of their front-line stars, with scrumhalf Nolann Le Garrec scoring 16 points that included a try while Antoine Hastoy struck a drop-goal.
Scott Robertson's outfit had to deal with some late disruption to their line-up after Luke Jacobson pulled out injured in the warm-up, which meant Ardie Savea shifted to number eight and Kirifi was handed his first start on the openside. That freed up a place on the replacements bench where Christian Lio-Willie wore jersey 20.
After an early All Blacks foray, it was France who crossed first on nine minutes, Le Garrec scrambling over at the back of a maul on the right wing before converting his own try. That was an early marker thrown down, confirming that this France team in Test III was a genuine threat.
Clearly rattled, the hosts gift wrapped a further three points for Les Bleus after Savea attempted a chip kick in his own 22 that resulted in Le Garrec moving it to 10-0.
That penalty took the scoring up a notch in its frequency as on 21 minutes, a smart kick into open space from Cortez Ratima saw wing Jordan win the foot race as New Zealand cut the gap to three points before Hastoy knocked over a smart drop-goal for the French soon after to make it 13-7. Suddenly, every attack had real potential.
The concern for New Zealand was the frequency France were adding to their tally, as two further Le Garrec penalties after a McKenzie effort made it a nine-point cushion.
Crucially, though, the All Blacks struck with the clock in the red at the end of the opening half when Lienert-Brown slid over the whitewash to make it 19-17 at the interval.
France looked to keep the scoreboard ticking shortly after the restart, but this time Hastoy's drop-goal attempt was dragged wide before New Zealand looked to counter.
However, tenacious French defence was evident again, typified by Gabin Villiere who won his side a ruck penalty that was also off-target from Le Garrec from distance.
Two lifelines for the All Blacks who then sent on front-row replacements including debutant McAlister at hooker, with boss Robertson eyeing a response from his side.
But France's resolve in defence was something to admire as they continued to frustrate the hosts, Mickaël Guillard this time denying Patrick Tuipulotu a try out wide.
Finally, though New Zealand got their score when a McKenzie grubber caused chaos in-goal and Kirifi was on hand to gather and ground for the try before the hour.
At 22-19, the fixture was far from over, but the All Blacks had their noses in front for the first time in the contest. However, France were still enjoying opportunities.
As time wore on, however, New Zealand were starting to gain dominance and Dalton Papali'i went agonisingly close to scoring as the hosts had a spell of territory.
They got their reward eventually as debutant McAlister slid over for a match-sealing try that must have felt incredible after the All Blacks' lineout had been struggling.
McKenzie would miss the conversion attempt but it mattered not as New Zealand had seen off an impressive France outfit to take this series in a 3-0 whitewash.