The Post

It’s summer, so let’s talk rugby

- Richard Knowler and Hamish Bidwell

Now Steve Hansen has confirmed he will stop coaching the All Blacks after the 2019 World Cup, should NZ Rugby create a new job for him within the organisati­on or cut him loose?

Richard Knowler: I don’t like the idea of a former coach having a fulltime job, staring over the shoulder of his replacemen­t. Let the newcomer run his own ship. Maybe Hansen could be contracted part-time, allowing him to use his knowledge as a mentor for Super Rugby and Mitre 10 Cup coaches.

Hamish Bidwell: Cut him loose isn’t the right term, but he’s done his time and his presence would only undermine a successor. I don’t imagine any credible coaching aspirant, other than Ian Foster, would wear Hansen having any involvemen­t. If Hansen hangs around, I fear Foster is the man we’ll get. In the interests of getting the best person for the job, NZ Rugby needs to offer a Hansen-free environmen­t.

You can bet the Crusaders aren’t terribly stoked about having Sam Whitelock, Kieran Read, and probably Codie Taylor, taking extra leave to help keep them fresh for the World Cup. Should the Crusaders be miffed, or just cop this sweet?

RK: They can hardly be dancing a jig about it can they? Captain Whitelock will definitely miss the first four games, three of which are local derbies and a couple more later in the season. Read will do something similar.

Obviously the All Blacks need these players to be fresh for the World Cup, but it’s also important to note the Rugby Championsh­ip fixture list has been halved. And, still, the Crusaders have been told they have to rest their key players. It could cost them vital competitio­n points and, potentiall­y, their defence of the Super Rugby title.

HB: Miffed? They’ll be ecstatic, just as four of the teams were this year. It was only that malcontent Chris Boyd at the Hurricanes who said different. Look where he is now. Let them skip the whole competitio­n if it suits the All Blacks’ purposes.

Should any All Blacks from other teams be forced to take a rest outside of the two- game window already created?

RK: Get off. The less interventi­on the better, full stop.

HB: Owen Franks, Brodie Retallick, Beauden Barrett, Ben Smith, Aaron Smith. Natural attrition and/or head knocks will probably mean Sonny Bill Williams and Ryan Crotty get a spell too. Ardie Savea? You could go on and on. I reckon they’d have 20 blokes sit half the season out if they could.

Ardie Savea spurns a French club contract and announces he will stay in New Zealand for a few more seasons beyond 2019. Savea, remember, had previously made the decision to extend his contract with NZ Rugby for just one-year because he wanted to keep his options open after the World Cup. Cheeky or good business sense?

RK: Assuming he re-signed for some decent wedge with NZ Rugby, he should have done all right for himself. It’s every man for himself in profession­al sport. Good business sense.

HB: It’s worked out superbly. I mean what a bargaining position he found himself in. With Sam Cane injured, and an alternativ­e offer on the table, Savea must have received a pretty significan­t upgrade. Well done Ardie. Just on Cane, necks aren’t something you muck around with and I hope he’s getting good advice about his future. He got engaged earlier this year, from memory, and is a capable, articulate, good-looking guy with his whole life ahead of him. Playing rugby isn’t the be-all and end-all.

Who do you think will win the World Cup final in Yokohama next year?

RK: I like the look of South Africa, to be honest. If new coach Rassie Erasmus can improve the Boks, as he did in his first season, it seems likely he can squeeze more juice out of them in 2019. And finals football could suit their smash-and-grind game.

HB: New Zealand. Ireland have never fired at a World Cup, folding under the burden of any expectatio­n. Eddie Jones and England will combust between now and then and South Africa are one-off merchants, who could pants the All Blacks in roundrobin, and then lose to a bunch of nobodies in a quarterfin­al.

What was the most memorable rugby story for you in 2018?

RK: The one that never happened. Speculatio­n that Warriors captain Roger TuivasaShe­ck had signed with NZ Rugby to play for the All Blacks made for some seriously good clickbait.

It seemed to too wacky to be true, and proved just that. We should be thankful. He seems a decent fellow and is a gun leaguie. It would have been a shame if he ended-up doing a Benji Marshall in the 15-man code.

HB: Wow, you’ve really caught me on the hop there. Steve Hansen’s news last week was obviously pretty significan­t and the All Blacks’ 36-34 defeat to South Africa felt like a big deal at the time. I think there’s some legs in the Kieran Read situation. From leading the haka against Italy, to being very prominent in last week’s rugby awards broadcast, there’s a concerted effort to show he’s the leader of our game and indispensa­ble to the All Blacks. Sonny Bill Williams’ continued fitness problems, but firstchoic­e selection status, is more of a saga than a story but, if I had to pick a bloke who generated clicks all year, then it would be him.

New Zealand Rugby player of the year Kendra Cocksedge is now a part of rugby history, but her on-field brilliance isn’t the only thing that sets her apart.

The Black Fern halfback can’t do much wrong when she has the ball in the hand.

But her rugby genius doesn’t come from thin air – it stems from her meticulous nature that includes keeping a notebook she always carries with her and updates with insights.

That is part of what makes Cocksedge one of the most discipline­d players in world rugby.

Black Ferns first-five Krysten Cottrell says her 30-year-old team-mate is in bed by 9pm the night before a test with a cup of tea and is the first out of bed with enthusiasm levels even her younger team-mates don’t match.

She reckons Cocksedge, who has worn the black jersey for 13 years, keeps getting better and better because of her continual drive for self-improvemen­t.

‘‘She’s very onto it, she knows the ins and outs of every play. She’s always got her book with her and she’s always studying the game,’’ Cottrell said, ‘‘not just her position, but everyone else’s position as well. She knows where you should be and what you should be doing.’’

Like most halfbacks, Cocksedge likes to talk.

This has nothing to do with her loving the sound of her own voice, says Cottrell. She is one of

‘‘She’s always studying the game, not just her position, but everyone else’s position as well.’’ Krysten Cottrell on Kendra Cocksedge

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 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? Kendra Cocksedge with the Kelvin R Tremain award for player of the year at the New Zealand rugby awards.
GETTY IMAGES Kendra Cocksedge with the Kelvin R Tremain award for player of the year at the New Zealand rugby awards.

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