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    Maro Itoje explains England response to haka that set tone for win over All Blacks


    Join the Miguel Delaney team: Inside Football Join the Miguel Delaney Inside newsletter to get exclusive access and unparalleled insight. Football NewsletterJoin the Miguel Delaney inside Football newsletterMaro Itoje has explained the reasoning behind England’s pointed response to the haka before their famous victory at Allianz Stadium, Twickenham.England beat the All Blacks for the first time since the iconic 2019 World Cup semi-final, and the first time on home soil since Manu Tuilagi’s masterclass in 2012, with perhaps the defining performance of the Steve Borthwick era to triumph 33-19.The mind-games began before the opening whistle, as New Zealand performed their traditional haka and England produced a defiant response.The home players strode forward and formed a semi-circle, with former captain Jamie George and young firebrand Henry Pollock as the two men at the front points of the crescent.open image in galleryEngland held firm in the face of the haka (Getty Images)Pollock in particular seemed to relish this role, licking his lips in anticipation and staring almost unblinkingly at the All Blacks as they went through their Maori war dance.The response was reminiscent of that 2019 World Cup semi-final, where England formed a V shape to combat the haka, although they were fined when at least six players appeared to cross the halfway line, which is not allowed under World Rugby rules.There were no rule breaches this time as Steve Borthwick’s troops got into their defiant formation and the Allianz Stadium crowd responded by singing Swing Low, Sweet Chariot throughout, as the atmosphere buzzed. Open image in galleryBack at the 2019 World Cup Final, England formed a ‘V’ Itoje explains how the response took shape at his post-match press briefing.“As a group of leaders, we came up with what you guys saw and I guess it was just our response to to what they did,” Itoje says.“We were trying to achieve the same thing they were trying to achieve. The haka is a war dance they do to get themselves up for the game and I know it has a huge spiritual meaning to New Zealanders.“Our response was a response to the haka and to show ourselves, the team and Allianz Stadium that we were ready for the challenge.”Initially, it didn’t appear that the haka response had the desired effect for England, as they quickly slipped 12-0 behind inside the first 20 minutes.But from there, Borthwick’s side were superb, outclassing their opponents to score 25 straight points and eventually seal a comprehensive 33-19 win – just a third England victory over New Zealand in the last 22 encounters.
    2025-11-15 18:48:15


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