The New Zealand Herald

Six Nations, Championsh­ip have contrastin­g virtues

- Gregor Paul

Eden Park on Saturday night.

and his ball carrying has started [to improve], we saw a bit more of that last night, so, may it last for a long time.”

The Pumas showed the threat they possess when beating South Africa 32-19 in Mendoza overnight, but the All Blacks selectors are unlikely to deviate from the plan they agreed before the Rugby Championsh­ip kicked off. “You’re always flexible in your thinking but we’ve got a plan that we’ve put in place and we just have to trust everybody to do their jobs,” Hansen said. “You can’t get sidetracke­d by results, you’ve got to understand what it is you’re trying to do. They’re going to be tough. Obviously they got a good win this morning . . . again it highlights how difficult it is to back up a big performanc­e against the same opposition.” There have been noises out of the UK that the Rugby Championsh­ip is a poor man's Six Nations and all but broken.

Two weeks into this year's tournament and the first part of that assessment has been proven to be obviously not true, but the second part is becoming harder to refute.

The Six Nations can tell themselves whatever they like about the quality of rugby they see in the Southern Hemisphere, but they would be ill-advised to ignore the pace and intensity all four teams are capable of producing.

The Rugby Championsh­ip produces a different type of rugby to the Six Nations. Not uniformly, but mostly the games down here are faster and confrontat­ional in different areas.

They tend to open up more as all four teams, even South Africa, tend to be more willing to play wider more regularly and often the games are brilliantl­y free-flowing and absorbing.

The mindsets are different in this part of the world where there isn't an endemic culture of scrummagin­g for penalties and making the set piece the key battlegrou­nd. That doesn't make the Rugby Championsh­ip technicall­y or physically inferior or the cappuccino to the Six Nations' double espresso.

It's a moot point to wonder how Ireland might have fared at Eden Park on Saturday night, other than to suggest that the Wallabies shouldn't be judged too harshly. They have enough resilience and physical standing to be confident they can bounce back and take a few scalps in the remainder of the year.

They are not a bad side — something that will become clearer by November when it wouldn't be a surprise at all to see them beat England at Twickenham.

Nor should it get lost that South Africa cleaned up England in June The All Black juggernaut rubs out championsh­ip intrigue.

and yet were made to look one-paced against a Pumas side that may indeed have come a long way in a short time under the astute guidance of new coach Mario Ledesma.

But the Rugby Championsh­ip does have a problem selling itself as a genuine four-horse race. Just two rounds in and can anyone really see there being any other winner than the All Blacks?

They are on a different level and if they get their feet back on the ground quickly after Eden Park, knuckle down to some hard work in Nelson and Wellington and play to their potential, they will most likely win their next two tests against the Pumas and Springboks.

And this is the issue at the moment — if the All Blacks get it right, none of the other three can live with them and already we are facing the prospect that once again, the All Blacks will have either won, or will all but have won their third consecutiv­e title with two rounds remaining.

This was the story in 2016 and 2017 and also, not quite as emphatical­ly, in 2012 and 2014. Only once have the All Blacks played their last Championsh­ip game with the title still open.

That was in 2013 when they played a winner takes-all, last game decider at Ellis Park, where the Boks could have snatched the title had they won with a bonus point.

A competitio­n without a genuine element of surprise — something other than the Pumas snatching the occasional victory — lacks an engrossing element. The problem with the Rugby Championsh­ip is that the rugby has spectacle, but not so much drama. It lacks intrigue, not so much in each individual contest, but more in the context of how everything is piecing together in the overall race for the title.

That's the Six Nations' advantage, that it tends to throw out more unexpected storylines and doesn't have such an underlying sense of things operating to a pre-determined script.

None of this should be blamed on the All Blacks. They shouldn't be expected to dumb themselves down or give up on their pursuit of excellence just to liven things up.

Their standards are theirs to keep and grow and for others to meet. The onus is on the Wallabies, Pumas and Springboks to close the gap and find a way to be more consistent.

 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ??
Photo / Brett Phibbs
 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ??
Photo / Brett Phibbs
 ?? Photo / Brett Phibbs ??
Photo / Brett Phibbs

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand