The New Zealand Herald

Learning to relax in land of rising sun will be vital

-

For now, the hoopla around the next World Cup will be about who has been draw to play who and how that will play out in terms of knockout permutatio­ns.

But come the tournament itself, the bigger focus for most teams is not going to be on who they are playing, but how well they can deal with being in Japan for an extended time.

World Rugby has bravely, and not before time, taken the showpiece event outside of the establishe­d territorie­s. Japan might be culturally Old Word but in a rugby context and in a homogenise­d world of cultural imperialis­m, it is about as different as anywhere can be.

Every nation, other than the hosts, will be out of their comfort zone. Previous World Cups, at least as far as the main contenders would see it, have been on the beaten path. Most

Players need to feel settled and Japan has the capacity to make a few individual­s twitchy.

All Blacks would have a degree of familiarit­y with the places which have hosted previous World Cups. England, New Zealand, Ireland, Scotland, Wales and South Africa . . . they go there often enough and with the exception of 2007, the host nation has been English-speaking.

Even in 2007, the All Blacks had a fair amount of experience in France, having played two tests there in November 2006. And while there was a language barrier, the French, for all their idiosyncra­sies aren’t so wildly different to their Anglo-Saxon brethren.

But Japan will be different. It is off the beaten the track. The All Blacks have been there in 2009, to play Australia, and again in 2013 to play Japan, but a couple of weeks in Tokyo does not breed familiarit­y. Few of the main contenders regularly play in Japan and when they do, it is almost always in Tokyo.

High-performanc­e teams are all about routine. They function best when the staples of preparatio­n are without drama or difficulty.

Players are finely balanced, not so much physically but mentally and if it becomes an ordeal trying to eat well, find a coffee and get around to do a bit of spare time sight-seeing and relaxing, then the wheels can come off quickly.

Players need to feel settled and Japan has the capacity to make a few individual­s twitchy, pining for home and all the known comforts it brings. This ability to embrace the difference­s of the host nation has the ability to impact significan­tly on which nation is ultimately successful in 2019.

Some countries have proven to be better intrepid tourists than others in a World Cup context. The Irish and Scots probably being the two nations who can wash up just about anywhere in the world and find a way to make themselves feel right at home.

The former will no doubt tip sake into their Guinness and the latter

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand