00:00 The agony goes on.
00:01 Ireland must wonder what they have to do to break this quarter-final curse.
00:06 How long to spend as no-one in the world, how many grand slams to win, how many victories
00:11 in a row.
00:12 Instead, let the record state - eight quarter-finals, eight defeats.
00:17 So much came to an end.
00:19 Not just the dream of a World Cup semi-final.
00:22 Not just the career of Johnny Sexton, who wandered the pitch in tears at the end.
00:26 Not just a run of 17 consecutive test wins, only one shy of the record held by England
00:32 and - yes - these blessed All Blacks.
00:35 And for the All Blacks the record reads - nine quarter-finals, eight wins.
00:41 How New Zealand have suffered themselves of late, toppled for some time from their perch
00:46 as the perennial champions of all things rugby union.
00:49 This may not mean a return to the top for them just yet - although they must feel a
00:54 semi-final against Argentina is eminently winnable - but that familiar precision, that
00:59 doggedness in defence, that nose for victory has been regained.
01:04 No-one can deny they earned it.
01:06 Few teams could have held out as they did through 37 phases of Irish attack at the death.
01:11 The clock long turned red, exhausted runners coming at exhausted defenders from every which
01:17 angle.
01:18 Nothing doing.
01:19 William Whitelock, the most capped All Black of all time, now often supporting his team-mates
01:25 from the bench, swooped to win the game's last penalty - on this his 151st appearance.
01:32 There was heroism everywhere in a fixture so enthralling it actually seemed to subdue
01:36 by the end a Stade de France pact to the Gunnels with Irish and Kiwis.
01:41 But there could be no arguing with result, even if the teams ran and muscled tries past
01:46 each other in equal measure - three apiece.
01:49 Ireland showed confidence and nerve, riding the All Blacks' deadly darts in a way they
01:55 never would have only a few years ago - but they were loose in the details.
01:59 Line-outs went astray, passes to ground.
02:02 Do that against the All Blacks and expect to find yourself 13-0 down in no time.
02:08 And so it was.
02:09 Two penalties - one for Richie Manga and another from halfway by Jordie Barrett - put New Zealand
02:15 into an early lead.
02:17 Then the brilliance.
02:18 Another of the Barrett brothers, Buden, sparked it with a chip into space, which he gathered.
02:24 With lightning speed, the ball was whisked left to Leicester Fane-Guanacu, who found
02:29 Rico Aiyon.
02:30 The latter's return ball inside was so fast and dexterous even Fane-Guanacu must have
02:35 been surprised to receive it, but he responded to take the ball over.
02:40 So New Zealand had the same early lead - 13-0 - as they had held in that single, legendary
02:47 defeat of theirs in a quarter-final, when France recovered to send them crashing out
02:52 in Cardiff, 2007.
02:54 We all know who the referee was then, too.
02:57 Wayne Barnes was certainly favouring the All Blacks in the early exchanges here, as he
03:02 would again when New Zealand found themselves under the pump in the second half.
03:07 But that started to change as Ireland responded with the confidence they have nurtured up
03:12 there at the top of the world rankings.
03:14 Sexton landed a penalty, straight from the restart.
03:18 Six minutes later, he was converting their first try, after Bundiaki stepped and smashed
03:23 his way through five defenders to the line.
03:26 Shiprighted perhaps.
03:28 Alas, Ireland missed a line out a few minutes before the break - not for the first time
03:33 - and another deadly kick, this a 50-22 by Will Jordan, set the All Blacks up for the
03:39 second, when Artie Savia was worked over in the corner.
03:43 But Ireland had time to respond before the break.
03:46 Aaron Smith's deliberate knockdown earned him a spell in the sin bin.
03:50 Ireland went for the corner twice, and Jameson Gibson-Park nipped over round the side of
03:55 a driven line out to pull them back to 18-17 at the break.
03:59 The third quarter was all Ireland.
04:01 And they emerged from it only further behind.
04:04 All it takes is one mistake or one flash of magic - either side can argue which it was.
04:09 Savia's die made the latest wave of Irish attacks to win a penalty over the ball.
04:14 One neat line out, one show and go by Munga.
04:18 One huge gap for him to run through.
04:21 Ireland will not forgive themselves for allowing that off a set piece.
04:25 Munga was away, and he sent Jordan to the corner.
04:28 The Irish must have been despairing then, but they kept coming.
04:32 Finally it told when they pulled back to within one again, a few minutes into the final quarter.
04:37 Sexton, having just missed a penalty, sent another to the corner.
04:42 Cody Taylor pulled down the driven line out - a penalty try and a yellow card.
04:47 That proved to be as far as the green tide would lap.
04:50 A Jordie Barrett penalty took New Zealand beyond a swing of Sexton's boot.
04:54 It had to be a try or nothing.
04:56 The emptiness of the nothing that followed will echo for some time in Irish history.
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