Taranaki Daily News

Hurting, hungry, desperate

- RICHARD KNOWLER

Steve Hansen has viewed enough rugby to understand why desperate, and angry, teams can revert to unsavoury tactics when plotting their revenge.

Look at what happened when the Wallabies lost their first Bledisloe Cup test in Sydney last year.

Humiliated by that 42-8 defeat, the Wallabies were a frothymout­hed bunch when they attempted to upset the All Blacks a week later – only to be forced to wipe the gunpowder from their own faces as they lost 29-9 in Wellington; niggle, and lots of it, was on display and lock Adam Coleman was yellow-carded for a late charge on fullback Ben Smith.

All Blacks coach Hansen has surely given his team the tip that a boisterous reception could be in store for them in Bledisloe II in Dunedin tomorrow night, given they humiliated the Aussies 54-34 in Sydney last weekend.

‘‘I will expect them [the Wallabies] to be a lot more physical than they were last week, yeah,’’ Hansen said yesterday. ‘‘There’s a good PC answer for you.

‘‘They’ll be hurting, so they’ll be hungry and desperate.’’

The fact of the matter is that political correctnes­s could be in short supply at Forsyth Barr Stadium, and rather than try to entertain the players and crowd with pithy one-liners, referee Nigel Owens could be better off ensuring his pockets are fully loaded with cards.

Not that the All Blacks are angels, either.

We saw that when Sonny Bill Williams was deservedly red carded for almost turning British and Irish Lions wing Anthony Watson’s head into margarine when he butted his shoulder into him in the second test in Wellington this winter.

Flanker Sam Cane, who put in a huge shift with 25 tackles last weekend, accepts the All Blacks mustn’t allow the Wallabies to bully them but also cannot allow it to dilute their focus.

‘‘The best way to look at is is ‘jeez, if they are running around trying to do those sorts of things it means they are off-task in the things that they probably should be concentrat­ing on’,’’ Cane said.

‘‘At the same time you don’t want to put up with any stuff that you shouldn’t have to. As long as

you can deal with it, and it doesn’t detract from you doing your job, you let them know you are not going to put up with that rubbish.’’

Wallabies coach Michael Cheika will have spent the week after the two sides observe a moment’s silence.

All Blacks lock Sam Whitelock, who shares the No 5 jersey Meads wore through most of his career, will gift his playing jersey from the match to the Meads family.

educating his forward pack on the need to be spikier in confrontat­ions. Aggressive defence and cleanouts doesn’t equate to niggle. If his side is to have a chance of upsetting the Kiwis in a city the

All Mitre 10 Cup and Mitre 10 Heartland Championsh­ip matches this weekend will also observe a moment’s silence. The Black Ferns wore black armbands in recognitio­n of Meads in their World Cup win over the USA on Wednesday.

Wallabies have not won in since 2001 they must change their game in multiple areas.

Losing veteran tighthead prop Owen Franks, who could require an operation to fix his troublesom­e Achilles tendon, isn’t ideal for the All Blacks. His replacemen­t Nepo Laulala is a good scrummager, but doesn’t deliver the some sting with his defensive hits or cleanouts.

Hansen kept the same back three that started in Sydney because he wanted to give Damian McKenzie another shot at fullback, meaning Israel Dagg has again been left out of the match-day 23.

‘‘They will be a lot sharper of mind and body,’’ Hansen said in reference to the Wallabies. ‘‘They will be desperate because there is a lot of negativity [about Australian rugby in general], and one of their responsibi­lities is to put some smiles on some faces.’’

 ?? PHOTO: JOSEPH JOHNSON/STUFF ?? Wallaby coach MIchael Cheika, here addressing the media in Christchur­ch yesterday, will demand a more aggressive approach from his forwards in tomorrow’s test.
PHOTO: JOSEPH JOHNSON/STUFF Wallaby coach MIchael Cheika, here addressing the media in Christchur­ch yesterday, will demand a more aggressive approach from his forwards in tomorrow’s test.

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