The Press

Strange week much ado about nothing

- Robert van Royen robert.vanroyen@stuff.co.nz

You couldn’t even accuse New Zealand Rugby (NZR) of smearing lipstick on a pig. With an overwhelmi­ng sense significan­t change was in the air – some of it fuelled by NZR’s radio silence this week – the All Blacks did, well, nothing. Not yet, anyway.

Head coach Ian Foster is staying, as expected, Sam Cane remains captain, Joe Schmidt’s role remains as flagged six months ago, and the squad for the Rugby Championsh­ip is all but a copy-and-paste job from the forgettabl­e Irish series.

Indeed, for all the talk NZR would announce significan­t changes yesterday, highlighte­d by the possibilit­y of a captaincy change, punters and pundits were left asking what the heck just happened after several well-sourced journalist­s swung and missed.

To be fair, a steadfast Foster, having opened his media stand up in Auckland by reiteratin­g he was the All Blacks coach (you got the feeling he was giving everyone the middle finger inside), has promised ‘‘a couple of changes’’.

That’s the reality after days of meetings between NZR heavies, All Blacks management and senior players.

‘‘Out of respect for a couple of processes I need to not say anything more,’’ Foster said.

Clearly, that points to employment matters needing finalised before NZR can serve up what some might see as scapegoats.

Given Foster said chief assistant coach John Plumtree helped himself and Schmidt select the 36-man Rugby Championsh­ip squad, it’s unlikely the former Hurricanes head coach is going anywhere.

That leaves attack coach Brad Mooar, unwanted at the Crusaders after the 2018 season, defence coach Scott McLeod and scrum coach Greg Feek in the firing line.

‘‘Quickly, and I’ll let you know very soon,’’ Foster said when asked when changes would be confirmed.

Given NZR doesn’t do quickly, just when that is remains unclear, but time is ticking before the squad regroups in Wellington on Monday morning.

What’s clear is that Schmidt’s role isn’t changing, although Foster did leave the door open by adding ‘‘at this stage’’.

Despite many tipping the former Irish head coach would take a handson approach, he won’t travel with the team or have an on-field role, rather he’ll continue as an independen­t selector, and will provide Foster analysis of opposition teams.

Speaking of Foster, say what you will about his underwhelm­ing record, he was assertive, confident and composed in front of cameras yesterday.

Sure, he let himself down with a needless remark to a journalist wanting one more question, but he did not appear to be a bloke who had essentiall­y been thrown to the wolves after NZR chief executive Mark Robinson’s statement on Sunday.

‘‘I’m strong, I’m resilient, I think I’ve proven that. I believe I’ve got a great feel and relationsh­ip with my players. I’m strategic, and I’m also accountabl­e, and I take that on board,’’ Foster said, admitting he did consider standing down.

So, onto South Africa, where the All Blacks play the world champion Springboks in back-to-back tests on August 7 and 14.

That’s hardly what the doctor would order for an out-of-sync team that’s lost four of five tests, one bereft of ideas on attack, and one that quite simply looked lost against Ireland.

Which begs the question: What happens if the All Blacks get rolled against South Africa and/or cough up the Bledisloe Cup in September – the second most important trophy to the men’s national side after the World Cup?

Having also reviewed the All Blacks’ northern tour last year and played on, this rinse and repeat business can’t go on should the rot continue. No, that would call for big changes.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES ?? The spotlight was back on All Blacks head coach Ian Foster as he addressed media to name his Rugby Championsh­ip squad in Auckland yesterday.
GETTY IMAGES The spotlight was back on All Blacks head coach Ian Foster as he addressed media to name his Rugby Championsh­ip squad in Auckland yesterday.
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