Bay of Plenty Times

Cane wears heart on black sleeve

- Liam Napier

There have been times this season when Sam Cane resembles a broken man. Understand­ably so, too. Cane cares deeply and with results descending, he carries a significan­t burden as All Blacks captain.

The darkest moments as skipper come immediatel­y following successive defeats, when Cane must front and the depths of the All Blacks decline, the overriding disappoint­ment, are impossible to ignore.

Despite the clouds of doom hovering over the All Blacks, Cane continues to believe they are on the cusp of a response.

Cane openly displays his emotions and, to his credit, always speaks with honesty. He feels the weight of a nation to lead the revival in rugby’s toughest assignment, the Springboks at Ellis Park, this weekend.

“You certainly feel it — it’s impossible not to. I’d be lying if I said I wasn’t,” Cane said. “Pressure has always been part of being an All Black. Without a doubt, it’s extra pressure. You can look to see it as a burden or embrace it and see it as an extra challenge. That’s the only way you can view it.”

After five losses from their last six tests, few expect the All Blacks to upset the world champions. Written off, then, and with their coach’s tenure hanging by a thread, a case could be made they have nothing to lose. Cane, though, doesn’t buy any such suggestion­s.

“I’m not seeing it that way at all. There’s a trophy on the line. We’re playing at Ellis Park and we’re desperate to improve and put out better performanc­es than we are. There’s as much on the line as there’s ever been.”

From their ongoing attacking and catch-pass skill struggles in the face of suffocatin­g rush defence to the Springboks’ dominance at the breakdown and superiorit­y under the high ball, the All Blacks appear a long way from rediscover­ing their best. Cane, though, reiterated Ian Foster’s polarising view that with a few minor adjustment­s, the All Blacks can stop the rot.

“If we sort out those contestabl­es. We had a pretty sharp training run, we’re starting to put a lot of those things right and make improvemen­ts so it’s been a good few days.

“I thought we defended really well considerin­g everything. I don’t think we’re far off. A few people have said it wasn’t an improved performanc­e but, in house, we’ve looked at a lot of things and there were some definite steps in the right direction. The whole focus is making sure we keep taking those steps because we’re not far off.”

In the wake of last week’s 26-10 defeat at Mbombela Stadium, Cane stood in the sheds and delivered a postmatch message designed to shift the mood of his men from one of frustratio­n to resolve.

“As disappoint­ing and as much as it hurt, there’s nowhere else we’d rather be as a team than here and having another crack at them.”

Amid the barrage of criticism and speculatio­n surroundin­g a seemingly imminent change of coach, Cane and his leadership group are attempting to keep the team zoned in on the daunting task at hand.

“It’s important to remind the boys what’s important and where to focus their energy and make sure they’re not consumed by outside noise and opinions. “My job as captain is to lead on the field and on the training park; to make sure we’re tight as a group and living and training as we want to be. I can hand on heart say that’s the case at the moment which is pleasing. Hopefully because of that we’ll start getting what we want on the field.”

That challenge is no easier with the Springboks welcoming the man mountain that is Duane Vermeulen back to start at No 8.

Cane predicts the Boks will largely stick with their limited yet highly effective forward dominated, kickheavy tactics. Seven days on, the All Blacks will hope to have more answers.

“They know their game and they execute it extremely well. There were 15 odd contestabl­e kicks and we only took five of them.

“They had good success at the breakdown so we expect them to roll out a lot of the same stuff but we would be na¨ıve to think they’re not looking for other opportunit­ies to exploit us in other areas.”

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? All Blacks captain Sam Cane doesn’t hide from the pain or the pressure.
Photo / Getty Images All Blacks captain Sam Cane doesn’t hide from the pain or the pressure.

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