The actual greatest game ever played, also staring the Wallabies was 6th July, 1996. No team has come as close to perfection.
That went over everybody's heads anti, but that remains one of the best performances by a test team I have seen and certainly the best wet weather performance. Not the greatest game though as it was one-sided.
IIRR it was the 1st 3N test ever and the Blacks played the game as though it were a dry day. Once I realised that Oz couldn't win I relaxed and enjoyed the AB's play taking all their chances.
But I have mentioned that game a few times before - back to the topic.
There was another annoying thing in the Durban test that got up my nose. Early on the Bok scrum was taking an eternity to pack down with all their standing ups and chatting to each other and wriggling around in their binds. Then in the second half the Wallabies were just as bad.
Referees have permitted this for too long. Because of the institutionalisation of the power hit, not part of rugby tradition, and even unlawful because the front-rowers charging in, referees allow the packs to do all this preliminary stuff so they can perform, or receive, the hit.
Instead of managing the period from when the ball is put in, as they did a while back, they are managing the preliminaries to the bloody hit. But until they get rid of the hit and a real scrum contest can take place on a power push, we are stuck with it.
But refs can still have some good effect until that happens. They can stop the posturing and time delay as the front rowers go through their rituals like sumo wrestlers throwing salt and stamping their feet.
Simply ping the delaying scrum for time wasting - it's in the book.
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