Taranaki Daily News

More to come on Carter’s great story

- Marc Hinton

Whoa. Let’s rein the horses in just a little. The narrative that has Dan Carter galloping in as a figurative knight to the rescue of the Blues is one fuelled more by romanticis­m than reality.

Carter, no doubt, is a handy pickup by the Blues as an injury replacemen­t for crocked fullback/ first five Stephen Perofeta for the upcoming Super Rugby Aotearoa. It ticks a lot of boxes for his one-time team-mate, and now coach, Leon MacDonald.

And it’s one heck of a story as, at the age of 38, one of the great All Blacks makes an unexpected comeback in New Zealand and finally completes a move that those with long memories will know has been in the wind for a long, long time.

It’s the sort of tale that sport throws up periodical­ly and which people naturally lap up with relish. Old decorated warrior straps ’em on for one last return to the battlefiel­d. Can he summon the magic one more time? Can he wind back the clock?

It’s what you might call a winwin situation.

The Blues get a New Zealand rugby legend to slot in, provide some depth around No 10 – where they’ve gone from the proverbial famine to a feast – and also a strong locker-room voice and role model for their younger players.

And Super Rugby Aotearoa – this hybrid competitio­n born out of the Covid-19 pandemic and resultant global sporting shutdown – gets a priceless PR injection that elevates it even further in the public consciousn­ess. Not just in New Zealand, either, but all the way around the watching rugby world.

If things weren’t already interestin­g enough with rugby’s profession­al return being undertaken in New Zealand, arguably the most successful country in the world at dealing with this global pandemic, they have just gone up several notches.

Carter is a living legend in the last vestiges of one of the great profession­al careers. He played 112 tests, won two World Cups, and scored a record 1598 points for the All Blacks. He was, for a sustained period, as good as it gets in the No 10 jersey at the internatio­nal and franchise level.

Now he’s back, lining up – would you believe – alongside the man who is most often compared to him in terms of impact, skill and explosiven­ess, Beauden Barrett. It’s like getting to watch Michael Jordan and LeBron James play in the same team for one last, delicious, captivatin­g lap of the track.

Make no mistake, this is a ratings winner for the Blues franchise. The outfit that has been the laughing stock of New Zealand rugby for the best part of a decade is now the club everyone is talking about.

At the same time they’ve given themselves some pretty interestin­g options in terms of their makeup in the playmaking positions.

But it’s here where reality needs to kick in. Carter won’t simply waltz in to play No 10 for the Blues when they kick off on June 14 against the Hurricanes, as much as the rugby world would love nothing better than for that to transpire.

They already have three pretty decent options there as it is, and Carter will join the queue, most probably from the back.

He was the first to admit as much at his media appearance yesterday, conceding he has a long way to go to reach adequate fitness after so little rugby over the last 18 months.

Before Perofeta’s injury, MacDonald would have been toying with starting Barrett at either 10 or 15, alongside either Otere Black or Perofeta in a dual playmaker setup, with the third option coming off the bench.

Now Barrett must surely have firmed as the option to start at 15, with Black at 10 and either Harry Plummer or Carter covering on the bench. Probably the former through the early rounds at least.

Remember, Barrett, too, has yet to play for the franchise and before the competitio­n shut down in midMarch both Black (at 10) and Perofeta (at 15) had been playing the house down for a rejuvenate­d Blues outfit.

So MacDonald has some thinking to do. Around Barrett. Around Black. And around Carter.

In terms of the latter, there have to be major question marks over his ability to genuinely compete at this level. MacDonald himself said only last week that eight Kiwi derbies in 10 weeks shapes as the closest thing many of these players will come to the intensity of test footy.

Carter hasn’t played at that level since 2015. He is assuredly not the player now he was five years ago. To suggest that at 38 he could be is simply suspending disbelief.

He played in France (for Racing

92) from 2015-18 and most recently in Japan (for Kobelco Steelers) from

2018-20 in a post-All Blacks phase that has seen his playing time and influence steadily decrease.

He has also had major neck surgery and has appeared in six matches over the last year-and a-half.

But one thing we do know: this is Dan Carter. His instincts and inherent ability once elevated him to the position of finest No 10 on the planet. They will remain in some form.

What Carter can’t counter is the one number on his bio that screams as most relevant right now. It is his age.

Remember, Father Time is undefeated. But he might need to ready for a heck of a tussle.

Now he’s back, lining up – would you believe – alongside the man who is most often compared to him in terms of impact, skill and explosiven­ess, Beauden Barrett.

 ??  ?? Current All Blacks superstar Beaduen Barrett, left, enjoys a joke with past master Dan Carter at Blues training in Auckland yesterday.
Current All Blacks superstar Beaduen Barrett, left, enjoys a joke with past master Dan Carter at Blues training in Auckland yesterday.

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