The New Zealand Herald

Four big stars still to sign with ABs

Cruden goes but Hansen counting on at least Read and Whitelock to stay in NZ

- Campbell Burnes comment

Four big names remain to be retained by New Zealand Rugby after confirmati­on Aaron Cruden has signed with French club Montpellie­r. If we assume captain Kieran Read and Sam Whitelock will re-sign some time in the next few months, just Ben Smith and Israel Dagg of the frontliner­s are not tied up beyond this season.

All Blacks coach Steve Hansen is building a squad for the 2019 World Cup and would love most of his men to stay. But he will be losing prop Charlie Faumuina to Toulouse after the Lions series, along with Cruden, who has signed a three-year deal reportedly worth $1.2 million a year.

Faumuina may prove a bigger loss than Cruden, as the tighthead depth is not as pronounced as in the firstfive ranks, where Lima Sopoaga is ripe for promotion behind Beauden Barrett. Hansen will be heaving a sigh of relief that Owen Franks put pen to paper last month.

Smith is next in line and, at 30, it would be nice to think he will stick around to 2019 after a superb four years in black where he has made himself an indispensa­ble, world-class performer.

When Smith was the bolter for the 2009 northern tour, former Otago Daily Times rugby scribe Ali McMurran told me this lad from Green Island would grow to be a great All Black. I was sceptical then, but he was right.

Sixty tests and 27 tries, nary a bad game among them, testify to that. Smith is already a very fine All Black, but three more years will enhance his greatness. However, he is a family man now, so that is a considerat­ion when faced with a massive amount of wedge from the north.

Dagg is an interestin­g case. His 2016 form, either at fullback or on the right wing, was so dynamic for the All Blacks that he may just want more of the same, still at just 28. Will he enjoy his footy as much as at, say, Toulon, where you cannot be worldclass other than in your bank balance?

There is a precedent for All Blacks departing in July, mid-season. Justin Marshall played against the 2005 Lions, though by then had ceded the starting halfback berth to his old sparring partner Byron Kelleher. Marshall then headed to Leeds, his time done at 32.

Where once it was the norm that those All Blacks in their early 30s would often head offshore, now they are going in their late 20s.

If New Zealand Rugby fail to re-sign Smith and Dagg, so be it. Their exits will erode the outside back stocks, but Damian McKenzie will come straight into the fullback reckoning, as will

If New Zealand Rugby fail to re-sign Smith and Dagg, so be it. Their exits will erode the outside back stocks, but Damian McKenzie will come straight into the fullback reckoning, as will Rieko Ioane and Nehe MilnerSkud­der on the flanks.

Rieko Ioane and Nehe MilnerSkud­der on the flanks.

Depth is not a concern among the All Blacks, and their succession planning is rather more sophistica­ted than in 1998, when Sean Fitzpatric­k, Frank Bunce, Zinzan Brooke and Olo Brown all departed around the same time to general gnashing of teeth and the shame of five test losses on the bounce.

Over to you, Chris Lendrum, New Zealand Rugby contracts man.

This is no major exodus, but there is work to do, and it may not be enough. The head of the Internatio­nal Tennis Federation insists the sport is doing enough to combat cheating.

ITF president David Haggerty visited New Zealand yesterday on his way to the Australian Open.

Tennis has been under the spotlight in the past year after a series of high profile incidents including the revelation of match fixing in the sport made at last year’s Australian Open and the Maria Sharapova drugs saga.

Players such as Andy Murray and Roger Federer have spoken out in the past about not being tested enough and Haggerty says those two and other leading players can be expected to be tested around 25 times a year.

Last year’s Shanghai Masters, one

Part of what we want to do with the drugs testing is to have it be unpredicta­ble. If players know they are going to be tested at each event they can get into a pattern of doing things a certain way. ITF president David Haggerty

of the biggest men’s ATP tournament­s outside the grand slams had no drug testing, which seems inconceiva­ble given most of the world’s top players attended.

But Haggerty said the absence of drugs testing last year in Shanghai didn’t come as a surprise to him and is all part of the plan.

“Part of what we want to do with the drugs testing is to have it be unpredicta­ble. If players know they are going to be tested at each event, they can get into a pattern of doing things a certain way. So we are sure the way we put together the testing keeps the players clean and also keeps them off guard as to whether they are going to be tested.”

Haggerty admitted taking on board player criticisms, however,

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