The New Zealand Herald

Crafty Cruden great pick-up for Gats’ Chiefs

- Liam Napier comment

Andrew Mehrtens, Carlos Spencer, Dan Carter, Stephen Larkham, Morne Steyn. History tells us to genuinely challenge, any rugby team needs an accomplish­ed playmaker. This is why Aaron Cruden may prove the best piece of business for next year’s Super Rugby season.

New Zealand’s super signing day is nothing more than a marketing plug. With all teams announcing headline additions well ahead of time to guarantee maximum exposure in a saturated market, the so-called big reveal is largely left with the next generation of talent that will emerge in due course.

Of all the major signings for the 2020 season, Cruden stands out. The closest contender comes in the form of the Hurricanes nabbing one-test prop Tyrel Lomax from the Highlander­s — another recruitmen­t revealed months ago — which significan­tly bolsters their budding front row stocks.

Cruden’s influence could, however, outweigh them all — even that of Beauden Barrett’s at the Blues given the All Blacks playmaker will join his new franchise only midway through the season following his extended leave.

Cruden, meanwhile, will be on deck in Hamilton from January 6 after a mini break which should give his body time to recover. He will be with the Chiefs for preseason games, and available for their full campaign, before departing for Japan.

Cruden’s 50 tests offer invaluable guidance, while allowing Hawke’s Bay talent Tiaan Falcon another year to develop at his own pace.

After a difficult 21⁄ 2- year stint in Montpellie­r, where he suffered several injuries, Cruden will relish returning to a team close to his heart.

Super Rugby suits his silky, subtle game, much more so than the combative nature of the French Top 14 club competitio­n grind.

The accumulati­ve toll on Cruden’s body will rob him of the same zip off the mark that allowed him to seamlessly glide through gaps and help push the Chiefs to their maiden titles in 2012/13. Back then, he had Sonny Bill Williams rampaging outside him in career-best rugby form, too.

But in terms of rugby intelligen­ce and temperamen­t, Cruden is a great get for the Chiefs. The ability of a playmaker to garner time and space, to make decisions under pressure, cannot be underestim­ated at any level.

Start Cruden outside Brad Weber, inside Anton Lienert-Brown, and the Chiefs backline could be lethal. His combinatio­n with Damian McKenzie cutting in from the back, chasing Cruden’s trademark chip kicks, should be one to savour next year.

Mix in Solomon Alaimalo and Shaun Stevenson on the edges and

Cruden sure has plenty of talent to work with.

Coach Warren Gatland need look no further for attacking inspiratio­n, either.

The Chiefs challenge will be providing enough quality ball. While flush with All Blacks props — Nepo Laulala, Atu Moli, Angus Ta’avao and Reuben O’Neill who made the squad but not the field — their locking stocks appear wafer-thin with Brodie Retallick in Japan.

Glance through New Zealand’s other backline generals and one could summarise that, in this department alone, the Chiefs are now better placed than all but the Crusaders who, of course, claim Richie Mo’unga.

Josh Ioane should now kick on with the Highlander­s after his debut for the All Blacks before the World Cup.

The Blues will mix and match Otere Black and Stephen Perofeta until Barrett arrives. The Hurricanes are likely to favour the largely unproven Fletcher Smith, with the experience­d James Marshall and Jackson Garden-Bachop other options, after failing to source a suitable Barrett replacemen­t for this season.

The other, intriguing signing for next year is England centre Joe Marchant to the Blues.

It was thought New Zealand Rugby’s groundbrea­king arrangemen­t with Harlequins would facilitate Kiwis heading north on short-term stints, not the other way around. Yet here is Marchant, 23 and in the prime of his career, moving south for one season.

According to Opta stats, since the start of the last Premiershi­p Rugby season, Marchant has the leading try involvemen­ts (12 tries, five assists), breaks (24), metres (792), gain-line success (61 per cent) and secondmost defenders beaten (50) of all centres in that league.

He could be a serious hit. How Marchant fares could pave the way for others to follow.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Super Rugby should suit the silky skills of Aaron Cruden better than the tough grind at Montpellie­r.
Photo / Getty Images Super Rugby should suit the silky skills of Aaron Cruden better than the tough grind at Montpellie­r.
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand