Sunday Star-Times

Retallick, Meads are the best ABs locks of past 50 years

The Chiefs enforcer has moved ahead of Andy Haden.

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Three years ago, for a book I was writing, I chose my All Blacks 15 of the last 50 years.

One of the locks was, of course, the great Colin Meads, who people in the media world, like myself, have poorly served by concentrat­ing on his hardman persona rather than the brilliant set of skills he brought to the game.

The other was Andy Haden. ‘‘He had the prefect physique for a lock, but more importantl­y there’s never been a more quick-thinking, crafty forward in the game.’’

If I was writing the book today I’d pick Brodie Retallick ahead of Haden.

There are many good reasons why the Chiefs have made such a terrific start to the 2017 season.

Aaron Cruden is playing with razor sharpness at first-five, Damien MacKenzie shows every week that while defences may be more familiar with him, that doesn’t mean they’ve worked out how to stop him, and there’s a unity of aggression in the forwards that, as it was for the Highlander­s and the Blues, was too much for the Hurricanes to deal with.

But if there’s one man who gives the Chiefs an edge, it’s Retallick.

It certainly helps that he’s a giant of a man, at 2.04m (nearly 6ft 9in) and 120kg. Off the field, in his rimless glasses, Retallick, who when he was first at the Chiefs amused everyone by riding to training on a tiny 50cc scooter, doesn’t present as ruthless, more like a genial high school chemistry teacher who accidently drank the growth serum.

However, what makes him so special is how he uses that size and strength with devastatin­g effect when cleaning out a breakdown, or making a tackle.

You could say the toughness runs in the family. His maternal uncle is former All Black prop John Ashworth, a man who would joke that to protect his macho image as a player he had to quit a job as a commercial artist at The Press newspaper, and ‘‘harden up my hands’’ working as a truck driver and stacking carcasses at the Kaiapoi freezing works.

In the lineout Retallick’s already reached a point in his career, given that he doesn’t turn 26 until the end of May, where his presence alone makes opposing jumpers uneasy. As Brian Lochore once said, ‘‘There are some players you look across at in the first lineout, and think, ‘I’m in for a hell of a tough time today.’’’

The huge tweak in Retallick’s game is the amazing range of skills he brings to the party. As the hugely gifted Springbok lock Victor Matfield said before he played against Retallick in a 2014 super game, ‘‘He’s all over the park and he makes a lot of passes, he doesn’t just always take the contact. He’s a very talented player.’’

At the end of that year Retallick was voted world player of the year, and since then he’s become, if anything, more street smart.

For the Chiefs and the All Blacks he’s not so much a first choice selection, as a man to build a pack, if not a whole team, around.

‘‘All we want,’’ said Steven Luatua, still clearly embarrasse­d by his brain fade red card, to Andrew Saville on ONE news on Friday night, ‘‘is consistenc­y.’’ Just a couple of hours later the Chiefs’ Michael Leitch made a late, high shoulder charge in Hamilton and was only given a yellow card.

So consistenc­y by referees is clearly an issue. There’s an even bigger one that rarely gets addressed. I applaud entirely any moves to reduce the risk of brain injury.

Using red cards for high shots to encourage legal tackling embarrasse­s a player, and penalises his team, but in the process the innocent victims are the fans who have paid good money for their ticket, or their Sky subscripti­on.

In 2017 profession­al rugby is show business. Check out #superboomb­oom if you don’t believe me.

So why don’t we consider the fact that turning a contest, changing the spectacle, on the whim of a referee just doesn’t make sense?

I believe that a red-carded player should be replaced on the field and then, if the judiciary finds him guilty, hit with a draconian fine.

 ??  ?? Colin Meads was a hard man but he had sublime skills.
Colin Meads was a hard man but he had sublime skills.
 ??  ??

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