New Zealand flex their muscles in second half to beat England

All Blacks make it five wins in a row against England

New Zealand captain Richie McCaw scores his side’s second try against England  despite the attempts of Dylan Hartley. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho
New Zealand captain Richie McCaw scores his side’s second try against England despite the attempts of Dylan Hartley. Photograph: James Crombie/Inpho

England 21 New Zealand 24

England’s ambition of issuing a statement of intent ahead of next year’s World Cup was crushed by a losing start to their autumn series that saw New Zealand depart Twickenham narrow 24-21 winners.

England’s chance slipped from their hands after the All Blacks dominated the second half to extend their mastery of the fixture to five successive victories.

While the pre-match attention focused on the debut of serving British Army solider Semesa Rokoduguni, it was his fellow wing Jonny May who brought Twickenham to its feet with a stunning solo try.

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May, the fastest player in England's squad, switched on the afterburners to sprint around Conrad Smith and Israel Dagg as England made a dream start to the first of their autumn internationals.

New Zealand's response through Aaron Cruden was shrouded in controversy as the outhalf did not appear to ground the ball properly and England were able to reflect on a strong first half they finished 14-11 ahead.

But after the interval they were rarely able to escape their own half and spent long spells defending against waves of All Blacks attacks that were hampered by the driving rain.

Missing seven Lions to injury, Stuart Lancaster’s men showed trademark resolve and their refusal to concede defeat until the final whistle was rewarded with a penalty try with seconds remaining.

New Zealand arrived at Twickenham with a remarkable record of having lost just twice in 39 Tests since winning the 2011 World Cup, but they looked anything but 1/3 match favourites as England raced into the lead after just three minutes.

Two missed passes from a lineout created half an opening for May and the lightening-fast Gloucester wing seized his chance by racing around Smith and Dagg to cross in the left corner.

England's brilliant start continued with May threatening a second try until Dagg intervened and number eight Billy Vunipola being stopped just short of the line on two occasions.

The All Blacks were rattled and but for better hands from Mike Brown their line would have been breached again as Kyle Eastmond sought to exploit an overlap.

By the 10th minute they had composed themselves and ran in a controversial try through Cruden, made possible by Kieran Read's bullet pass to lock Sam Whitelock.

Cruden appeared to fall short and spill the ball forward before grounding it, but referee Nigel Owens awarded the score immediately instead of referring it to the TMO and replays on the big screen were met with boos.

Farrell landed two penalties before England lost Courtney Lawes after the secondrow took a blow to the head, resulting in George Kruis making his debut off the bench.

Cruden was on target with three points and New Zealand built pressure, with Cruden's classy off-load to Sonny Bill Williams a dangerous moment, but England scrambled superbly.

The match rattled along at a fast pace, Cruden adding a second penalty before England won a turnover that ended with Richie McCaw being penalised at the breakdown, enabling Farrell to nudge Stuart Lancaster’s men into a 14-11 half-time lead.

The advantage lasted only five minutes of the second half when New Zealand expertly exploited a crumbling defence.

Marauding prop Owen Franks punched a hole in midfield before the ball was spun left, with Dagg sending McCaw over for the simplest of tries as debutant Rokoduguni attempted to defend a three on one overlap.

A tight encounter made way for a dominant third quarter from New Zealand, who began to find space with increasing regularity.

All Blacks hooker Dane Coles was sent to the sin-bin for lashing out with a boot on the ground after being pulled by Dylan Hartley, but still England were unable to escape their own half.

Julian Savea, the scorer of eight tries in four matches against England, knocked on as the line beckoned, a victim of the increasingly heavy rain that was falling.

Beauden Barrett missed a penalty from in front of the posts, but after Williams ran through a tackle by Farrell, the substitute outhalf had a second chance from a similar position and this time was successful.

It was only a matter of time until England's line cracked again and it was substitute Charlie Faumuina who drove over after waves of attacks, although England had the final say when Owens gave a penalty try after the All Blacks had pulled down a maul.