What they said:
Michael Brown (NZ Herald journalist)
There are some events or games that remind you why sport is so captivating. This was most definitely one of them.
Not only was it played in front of a big crowd at one of the world's iconic venues but it was also played under extreme pressure with a place in the World Cup final at stake. It would have still been a great match even if New Zealand had lost but it seemed fitting there was some late drama when Shaun Johnson snaked through the England defence with 20 seconds remaining to score. The silence at Wembley was astonishing. They had been a terrific crowd, roaring England to what they thought would be a famous victory, but immediately went quiet. They couldn't believe what had happened. Few could.
Fortunately as a Kiwi journalist working on the other side of the world in the early hours on a Sunday morning (NZT), the deadline pressures weren't particularly difficult. It didn't really matter if the story went on the website five minutes later than normal for a live report. It meant I could watch the drama unfold and appreciate what both sides had given to an extraordinary contest.
Ian Chadband of the Daily Telegraph
England, at the climax to a thunderous performance in an epic sporting collision, had been 50 seconds away from a World Cup final when they gave away a needless penalty and were 21 seconds away when they were undone by a missed tackle and a piece of inspirational opportunism from New Zealand's Kiwis. How the hell do you salvage 'the positives' from such utter deflation?
Yet English rugby league really had to. True, this really did feel, as one of the home try scorers Kallum Watkins conceded, as if a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity had disappeared along with the chance to take on Australia on home soil in Manchester this weekend and to become world champions for the first time for 41 years.