The Southland Times

Read’s absence, Folau’s reception

- RICHARD KNOWLER

1. Now that All Blacks coach Steve Hansen has confirmed injured captain Kieran Read is extremely unlikely to play France in June, who will win the race for the No 8 test jersey?

First things first. There’s no chance of it being Brad Shields, with reports up north noting the Northampto­n-bound back rower could be asked to represent England when they meet South Africa during the test window.

Other options? Luke Whitelock (Highlander­s), Akira Ioane (Blues), Ardie Savea (Hurricanes) and Jordan Taufua (Crusaders) are potential replacemen­ts.

Don’t forget Liam Squire, currently sidelined with a fractured thumb. The Highlander­s back rower, who can cover No 8 and blindside flanker, appeals because he offers pace and power with the ball and when he gets his timing right he hits opposition ball carriers into next week.

2. Which leads to the question, who should captain the All Blacks in Read’s absence?

It’s a two-horse race, surely, between the Crusaders’ Sam Whitelock and the Chiefs’ Sam Cane.

Openside flanker Cane first captained the All Blacks when they played Namibia during the 2015 World Cup. The promotion of Cane, because regular skipper Richie McCaw was given a spell from the pool game, indicated the selectors believed the Chiefs No 7 was a test captain in embryo.

But that was before Whitelock inspired the Crusaders to win the Super Rugby title last year. He was also preferred ahead of Cane to lead the All Blacks in their tour finale against Wales in Cardiff late last year.

Beauden Barrett captained the ABs against the Barbarians in London several weeks earlier but seems an unlikely option to replace Read. This race is between Whitelock and Cane.

3. And with Dane Coles still unable to straighten his leg properly after injuring his knee in Paris late last year, who will back up Codie Taylor for the tests?

Nathan Harris, Liam Coltman, James Parsons and Asafo Aumua have all been exposed to life inside the All Blacks bubble. With seven rounds of Super Rugby remaining until the competitio­n goes into hiatus, the Chiefs’ Harris might have the inside running. He backed up Taylor in Cardiff and Edinburgh last year.

4. What sort of reception will Israel Folau get from the Sydney crowd when his Waratahs play the Lions tonight?

Only the most devout Waratahs supporters could ignore the issue about Folau’s stance on where the gay community fits into his religious beliefs. The longer this rumbles on, the more awkward it becomes. Will it affect crowd numbers in Sydney? Will Folau get the razz from the local rugger fraternity? And will it affect his performanc­e? No-one is talking about his ability to take the high ball or step past opponents any more.

5. It’s 34 and counting. Can the Reds do a number on the Chiefs in Brisbane?

Aussie teams have now lost 34 games straight against their Kiwi counterpar­ts in Super Rugby. It’s beyond the joke and it isn’t healthy for the competitio­n. Be sure of one thing. No side from NZ is going to want to be the one that allows this sequence to be snapped. That’s the pre-match team-talk right there.

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