The squads for each side were announced on 2 May 2010.[1][2] The selectors for the Australian team made only five changes to the squad that won the final of the 2009 Four Nations. Three of those changes were due to injuries.[3] Notable among the selections was the omission of Brisbane BroncoscentreIsrael Folau. There had been rumours that Folau was considering moving to the Australian Football League or rugby union; however, the selectors insisted he had been dropped for form reasons. Manly centre Jamie Lyon was called up in Folau's place, and to act as goal-kicker due to Johnathan Thurston's injury-enforced absence.[4] Thurston, the incumbent Australian half back, missed the match with a shoulder injury. He was replaced in the position by Cooper Cronk.[5]Michael Weyman, a prop forward from the St. George Illawarra Dragons was the only member of the squad representing Australia for the first time.[6]
The New Zealand team included two debutants: Aaron Heremaia and Zeb Taia. Alex Glenn was named in the 18-man squad but was left out of the 17-man team.[7][8] One of the notable selections was 19-year-old Kieran Foran being named as half back for the first time:[7] Commentators predicted he would be the long-term incumbent in the position, with former Australian halfback Andrew Johns suggesting he could become the best player in the world.[9][10]
Opening of AAMI Park
The match was the first event to be held at Melbourne's AAMI Park, a rectangular stadium built for rugby league, rugby union and soccer in a city known for its preference for Australian rules football.[11] Despite having been officially sold out[12] wet conditions on the night meant an attendance of 29,442, which nearly satisfied the stadium's 30,050 capacity.[13][14] The opening ceremony featured the NRL's all-time highest point-scorer, Hazem El Masri kicking a goal.[15]
The first half of the match was low-scoring, as wet conditions caused numerous ball-handling errors.[16] Australia took a 6–0 lead at half-time, after Brett Morris scored a try to add to an earlier penalty goal from Jamie Lyon. Morris' try was scored in the 39th minute of the first half and was the result of a grubber kick from Darren Lockyer.[16] Morris scored a second try shortly into the second half to make the score 12–0. Sam Thaiday set up the try with a flick pass as he was being pushed out of the field of play by New Zealand defenders.[16][17] New Zealand pulled back two unconverted tries through Jason Nightingale and Junior Sa'u; however, they were not able to make up the 12-point deficit, and Australia won the match 12–8.[17] The match was affected by wet conditions that forced more conservative play. After the match, New Zealand captain Benji Marshall claimed that his side was at least as good as the Australian team, citing that the difference in the scoreline was caused only by Australia's better goalkicking.[18] Australia's Sam Thaiday was named Man of the Match.[16]
^AAP (3 May 2010). "Anzac Test officially a sell out". tvnz.co.nz. New Zealand: Television New Zealand Limited. Archived from the original on 6 May 2010. Retrieved 8 May 2010.