The New Zealand Herald

Racing 92 has Read in its sights for $2 million a year

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A French rugby team has reportedly offered All Blacks skipper Kieran Read a $2 million a year deal following the World Cup.

French publicatio­n Midi Olympique is reporting that Racing 92, the former team of Dan Carter, has offered Read a €1.2 million (NZ$2m) a season deal.

Read told the Herald earlier this month that he will end his All Blacks’ career at the World Cup in Japan next year.

The No 8, who turned 33 last month, is almost certain he'll be taking up an overseas contract. What he has not sorted out yet is where he will be going.

Read and his wife Bridget have three young children and they have always wanted to have an overseas experience together.

They want to have it before their children get too far into their schooling and 2020 is seen as the perfect time.

By that stage Read will be 34 and have completed his third World Cup – having been part of the victorious teams in 2011 and 2015.

He'll have played close to 50 tests as captain, been World Player of the Year in 2013, won Super Rugby titles with the Crusaders and played in a Lions series.

There will be no major goal left to chase and it's not realistic to imagine he could push on through to 2023.

So the time will be right to follow in the footsteps of Daniel Carter, Ma'a Nonu and Conrad Smith who all retired from the All Blacks after the last World Cup at the same age Read will be next year and took up offshore contracts.

"Yeah I have," he told the Herald about whether he has thought about what he will do after next year's World Cup.

"So for me I think it probably won't be in New Zealand. We have always thought as a family that we would like to go overseas and use that experience for the kids. That is probably the main option at the moment."

The prospect of retiring from all rugby has come up but he says that's not a preference.

If his body holds up – and he says he's feeling strong and comparativ­ely fresh – he would rather try to eke out one or two more seasons and it will most likely be somewhere in Europe.

"That [retirement] is an option as well," says Read. "There are plenty of options out there but I probably want to keep playing if I can. It is the experience for the kids that will be the main thing and it has to work for us as a family.

"I hope to have it wrapped up before the start of the season because then you can give 100 per cent because you know what you will be doing."

Confirmati­on that Read is almost certainly step down as All Blacks captain will inevitably intensify the career planning of Sam Whitelock.

Whitelock will be favoured to succeed Read as the long-term captain, having stood in for the skipper in five tests since November last year.

But Whitelock is also off contract after the 2019 World Cup and while he's contemplat­ing making a fouryear recommitme­nt to New Zealand through to the 2023 World Cup, he is discussing the prospect of a playing sabbatical in Japan as part of the negotiatio­n.

That option may be hard for New Zealand Rugby to grant if Whitelock is the next All Blacks captain and instead agreement could be reached he take a non-playing break with a view to start the process of grooming his successor.

The All Blacks have successful­ly worked captaincy succession plans since 2004 when Richie McCaw skippered the team against Wales before taking over permanentl­y from Tana Umaga in 2006.

Read first captained the All Blacks in 2012, doing so another eight times before he succeeded McCaw in 2016. An extended break for Whitelock would allow an opportunit­y for his likely successor to gain invaluable experience.

Read and Whitelock are not the only All Blacks considerin­g a move to an overseas club.

Last month Midi Olympique reported Ben Smith had signed a sevenmonth contract with Pau which would start after the World Cup.

Pau were also interested in All Blacks flanker Ardie Savea who had been linked with a move overseas for a while now.

The French paper also reported that Toulon were in talks with Hurricanes back Nehe Milner-Skudder and Crusaders centre Ryan Crotty.

Sam Whitelock will be favoured to succeed Read as the long-term captain.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Kieran Read has always wanted an overseas experience with his family.
Photo / Photosport Kieran Read has always wanted an overseas experience with his family.

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