Close to a quarter million fans jammed into Auckland City today as the jubilant All Blacks celebrated their Rugby World Cup victory with a parade down Queen St.
Young, old, and people from all walks of life lined the streets to catch a glimpse of their World Cup heroes displaying the Webb Ellis Trophy which New Zealand won 8-7 after surviving a brave France onslaught at Eden Park on Sunday.
“New Zealand needed this,” one fan piped up, referring to the string of mishaps which have plagued the country for the past year.
New Zealand last won the Cup 24 years ago in the inaugural tournament at Eden Park in 1987 – also against France in the final.
For New Zealand, Tony Woodcock scored the only try and Stephen Donald later slotted in the winning points through a penalty to secure victory on a fine evening in front of a capacity 61,000 crowd. France couldn’t get past a converted try.
New Zealand coach Graham Henry lavished praise on the dogged performance of the All Blacks in the victory over France - and admitted there were some tense moments in the coaches' box.
"It has been bloody outstanding," Henry said. "Richie and the boys just hanging in there right through the 80 minutes to win this thing.
"I'm just delighted for the boys. We've been the top team in the world for a long time, so it's been a long time coming.
"There was a wee bit of turmoil up there (in the coaches' box) but you just have to reflect over the seven weeks and what these people have done right throughout the country."
Henry said the players he called on when the team were hit by injury had done an outstanding job, and singled out fly half Stephen Donald for special praise.
'He's composed'
"Donald came on and played bloody well. He kicked what turned out to be the winning goal and gave us field position when we needed it."
Asked if he felt nervous when Donald came on, Henry said: "I was nervous the whole game, not just about Stephen Donald, I knew he could handle it."
All Blacks captain Richie McCaw echoed Henry's praise of Donald, the fourth fly half New Zealand used during the tournament. Said McCaw: "Geez, he's composed so I take my hat off to the guy - but it's hard to single out one guy, everyone dug deep.
"When we had problems the next guy stood up and the next guy stood up, and I take my hat off to the guy (Donald) but it's not about one guy, everybody played as well as they can."
Added Brad Thorn, the oldest player to ever contest a final: "Stephen Donald has gotten so much flak over the years, New Zealand should be proud of him."
The All Blacks beat France, Tonga, Canada, and Japan in pool play and ousted Argentina in the quarterfinal before demolishing Australia in the semis.