‘Phenomenal’ Ford central to beating All Blacks

‘Phenomenal’ Ford central to beating All Blacks

Getty Images
  • 48 Comments

In November 2024, England fly-half George Ford cut a dejected figure on the Allianz Stadium turf.

Ford had been summoned from the bench to help the hosts close out a famous win against New Zealand, but instead missed a late penalty and drop-goal as his side were beaten by two points.

Following those costly misses, Ford had to work hard to get another shot at delivering glory for England.

He played only 25 minutes during this year’s Six Nations but a string of impressive performances, particularly on the summer tour of Argentina and the United States while Fin Smith and Marcus Smith were away on British and Irish Lions duty, put him firmly back in the starting mix.

The 32-year-old not only repaid Steve Borthwick’s faith in starting him against the All Blacks, but the Sale Sharks playmaker delivered a player-of-the-match performance to help the hosts to a first win over New Zealand on home soil since 2012.

The pivotal moment in the game came when Ford nailed back-to-back drop-goals right before half-time.

It helped England recover from 12-0 down to trail 12-11 at the break, before Borthwick’s star-studded bench again delivered in the second half to help his side to a comfortable 33-19 win.

“You have to give credit to the senior players in our team, especially George,” Borthwick told BBC Sport. “That period where he hit those drop-goals, he managed the game just incredibly.

“Twelve months ago I thought George came on and played really well [against New Zealand].

“A kick hit the post and he had a drop-goal under pressure, but he played really well.

    • 1 hour ago
    • 3 hours ago

Drop-goals ‘always in the plan’

George Ford looks on dejected against New Zealand last autumn Getty Images

The All Blacks started quickly at Allianz Stadium, racing into a 12-point lead with tries by Leicester Fainga’anuku and Codie Taylor.

Following Ollie Lawrence’s powerful finish, Ford’s back-to-back drop-goals meant the hosts bounced into the changing rooms with the momentum.

“The challenging thing in those moments is, when the scoreboard says 12-0, we can stick to our guns and what we believe the best way to play the game is,” Ford said.

“We got ourselves back into it and we knew if we started the second half well, with the bench coming on, we were in a good position.

“Even with 15 minutes left, we ended up on our own line with a yellow card, so we had challenges there as well.

“I think that’s what Test rugby is – who can deal with those moments the best.”

Both kicks came within two minutes of each other as the fly-half, who nailed three drop-goals in a win against Argentina at the 2023 Rugby World Cup, showed all his 104-cap experience.

Ford hit two drop-goals for Sale in a Prem game played in difficult conditions at Bath – it is a skill he is well-practised in.

“It [the drop-goals] is always in the plan,” Ford added.

“Steve is such an incredible coach that he is always in my ear about it, and rightly so because three points is valuable at any stage of the game.”

Ford marshalled his side brilliantly around the field all game, kicking smartly – both to compete and in finding space behind the visitors’ backfield.

His signature ‘spiral bomb’ also bamboozled Beauden Barrett, who failed to regather.

Having started England’s win over Australia on 1 November, Ford handed over the number 10 jersey to Fin Smith for the Fiji victory a week later.

But the biggest test on paper this autumn came against the three-time world champions, with Ford regaining his spot.

England, now on a run of 10 straight wins, face Argentina on 23 November and it will be interesting to discover if Borthwick goes back to Fin Smith or continues with Ford.

Related topics

  • England Rugby Union
  • Rugby Union

Source: BBC

234Radio

234Radio is Africa's Premium Internet Radio that seeks to export Africa to the rest of the world.