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27th January 2018 @ 6:06am – by Webteam
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The Greatest Try

Barbarians v All Blacks, January 27th 1973

To call it a counter-attacking try is to do it scant justice. A kick ahead by the All Blacks bounced nastily, leaving fly-half Phil Bennett retreating to collect the ball about five yards from his own line. He runs round to face a wall of black shirts, sidesteps a flanker then a centre, and with a pass cuts out another looming opponent. It's JPR Williams the full-back in support who then makes a few yards and offloads as his namesake Brian, the Blacks' 14, makes a high tackle (about 20 seconds earlier a New Zealand forward made an equally unpleasant neck-tackle on the same player). John Pullin, the English captain – the only non-Welshman in the move (perhaps for some at Cardiff Arms Park that day ever so slightly spoiling the purity of the thing) makes some ground then shifts it left to centre Dawes who by cutting right makes space again, passes inside to back row forward Tom David, he passes to Derek Quinnell who almost falling over takes, stumbles and passes with one hand seemingly to thin air as scrum-half Gareth Edwards who has screamed for the ball appears from nowhere to catch it and with pace makes the line, finishing with a dive to ensure he is not tackled out of play near the flag.

Cliff Morgan's commentary is marvellous, the rising tone of his line: "What a score!" etched on rugby's folk memory. Immediately afterwards Morgan comments on the greatness of the try, saying the finest writer in the world couldn't have created such a story and been believed. And he was of course quite right.

You can watch the try again (and again and again) here on youtube.

And today's question – what was the final score?

Click here for the answer

The Barbarians beat the All Blacks 23-11, outscoring the Kiwis by four tries to two


This article is from our news archive. As a result pictures or videos originally associated with it may have been removed and some of the content may no longer be accurate or relevant.

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