The Black Ferns wanted a 25-point win over the USA to reclaim the Pacific Four Series within the closing recreation of the match.
That margin was claimed shortly into the second half and solely widened as the sport wore on. New Zealand have been topped champions with a 79-14 win.
It was a fierce Eagles staff that greeted the Black Ferns, and after a rampaging driving maul received held up, it took just some minutes of battering the road to get the opening strive via the ending energy of Freda Tafuna.
Inside moments, it was the Black Ferns battering the USA’s line, and after being held up as soon as themselves, the hosts broke the road via Katelyn Vahaakolo to stage the scores.
A line break from Braxton Sorensen-McGee adopted to maintain the gang energised. Jorja Miller’s second break of the sport resulted in Vahaakolo’s second strive in simply the 14th minute.
Portia Woodman-Wickliffe got involved with a couple of carries in the 23rd minute, the second of which saw her go one-on-one with Ilona Maher and rating via contact within the nook. The Kiwi icon had a second moments later after yet one more Sorensen-McGee break and a string of offloads.
Simply because it seemed like the sport can be all one-way visitors, the USA have been making their manner again into Kiwi territory. Bruising section play finally received some reward with Hope Rogers scoring.
New Zealand have been keen to reply earlier than halftime, and did so twice. Vahaakolo and Woodman-Wickliffe have been the try-scorers, each finishing first-half hat-tricks. Halftime rating: 34-14.
New Zealand began the second half with two new props and instantly received a scrum penalty.
The USA probed however couldn’t join to complete the trouble. As soon as the Kiwis received their fingers on the ball once more, Stacey Waaka broke the road and offloaded to Miller, who had the ball ripped, just for it to seek out Woodman-Wickliffe, who scored.
A minute later, Vahaakolo was making a break down the left edge, main to a different 5 factors, this time to Ruahei Demant. The co-captain slipped when changing however made the kick.
The Kiwi scrum continued to be a weapon in the second period and helped make up for a knock-on that spoiled what would have been a try on debut for Vici-Rose Green. New Zealand won the scrum penalty and took a quick tap, sending the ball wide to Woodman-Wickliffe, who claimed her fifth try through plenty of traffic.
The scoreboard hit 60 when Vahaakolo got her fourth try of the evening, with Hannah King’s goal-kicking off the bench adding insult to injury.
Portia Woodman-Wickliffe’s immense legacy earned another stripe with her sixth try, which crowned her the all-time leading try-scorer in women’s rugby history.
Tries to Stacey Waaka and yet another to Woodman-Wickliffe closed out the game, pushing the lead to 79-14. That scoreline remained at the final whistle.