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Wallabies zoom into RWC contention

Wellington - The New Zealand news media rounded on the All Blacks on Sunday saying they deserved to lose the Rugby Championship decider while Australia have become "genuine World Cup contenders".

The Wallabies outscored the All Blacks three ties to two in Saturday's showdown with a 27-19 victory as they stormed home with a late penalty and converted try after trailing 19-17 with 14 minutes to go.

It gave the world's fifth-ranked side a clean sweep of the southern hemisphere championship, beating the world's top two sides New Zealand and South Africa as well as Argentina as they build for the World Cup starting in England next month.

"Now they are genuine World Cup contenders after being just the second side to beat the All Blacks in the last two seasons," the Herald on Sunday said.

Their rugby correspondent Gregor Paul said Australia were the better team "pure and simple. They won because they played better rugby and took their chances" against a "flustered" New Zealand unit.

"The All Blacks weren't ruthless and clinical. The Wallabies were," he said. "The mighty All Blacks were a bit rattled and will no doubt have invited everyone to come at them hard at the World Cup."

Radio New Zealand described Australia's first win over New Zealand in 11 Tests since 2011 as a "dark night" while Fairfax Media highlighted the All Blacks' failure to control the key battle in the forwards.

They were "out-muscled at scrum time, beaten at the breakdown" where Australia successfully experimented with dual opensides Michael Hooper and David Pocock.

"Pocock got the turnovers and Hooper did the tackling, several of his low missiles coming at crucial junctures. The All Blacks were simply not accurate enough with ball in hand or at the ruck," Fairfax rugby writer Toby Robson said.

Problems evident within the All Blacks when they scraped home 27-20 two weeks ago against South Africa were not corrected as "ball retention was proving an issue".

Former All Black Richard Loe, in his Herald on Sunday column, said it was "a poor All Blacks performance" with catching, passing and tackling well below standard and crucially the forwards were outmuscled.

"The old cliche is that it starts up front and, in short, that's the point, it didn't start up front which is a worrying sign."

The All Blacks are bidding to become the first team to win back-to-back World Cups but that could not be guaranteed," wrote Fairfax columnist Marc Hinton.

"If the All Blacks turn up off their game, as they did in Sydney, defeat could follow at any stage from the quarter-final on," he said, while talking up Australia's chances despite being in the so-called "pool of death" with England, Wales and Fiji.

"This is a Wallabies outfit playing with plenty of skill, speed and power, and they will have a bit of swagger about them now too," he said.

"There are still areas of their game that can be better... but this is a team very much in World Cup contention."

The last time the Wallabies beat the All Blacks was just before the 2011 World Cup but it was no gauge of what was to come.

The All Blacks beat Australia in the World Cup semi-finals and went on to beat France in the final.

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