ABs have plans for Mo’unga
Ian Foster reckons the All Blacks can extract the best out of Richie Mo’unga without pasting a No 15 on his back.
That doesn’t mean to say Crusaders first five-eighth Mo’unga won’t be asked to roam the back field when he next represents the All Blacks, but assistant coach Foster indicated that if he did it wouldn’t be in the traditional role of fullback.
This week Crusaders assistant backs coach Ronan O’Gara, a former Ireland international, floated the idea of shifting Beauden Barrett to fullback to allow Mo’unga, who helped the Crusaders defend their Super Rugby title against the Lions last weekend and was arguably the best playmaker in the competition, to start at No 10 in tests.
Despite All Blacks coach Steve Hansen having already endorsed Barrett, twice named World Rugby’s player of the year, as his best No 10 ahead of the test against the Wallabies in Sydney next weekend, O’Gara’s comments immediately added more heat to a debate about whether Mo’unga should usurp the incumbent.
Complicating O’Gara’s theory is the fact that Ben Smith, Jordie Barrett and Damian McKenzie are all capable test fullbacks in their own right.
‘‘There is a lot of excitement coming out here [in Christchurch] about what has happened at the Crusaders and it is great,’’ Foster said of Mo’unga.
‘‘But we have got a few plans ...Ithinkheisa10,butasa10 you play a lot at 15 nowadays anyway. And I think we have seen that with Damian, we have seen that with Beaudie.’’
The fullback position is not foreign to Mo’unga. He has played first-class footy there, beginning with seven games at No 15 for the Canterbury in 2014 and throughout his career has been asked by the Crusaders to drop behind the
‘‘I think he is a 10, but as a 10 you play a lot at 15 nowadays anyway.’’ Ian Foster, All Blacks assistant coach on Richie Mo’unga
backline to allow him to snare opposition kicks so he can either run or punt the ball back.
There is also potential for the All Blacks to empower Mo’unga to be an option in the fullback’s job, even if he is selected as a firstfive.
‘‘Some parts of the game are interchangeable,’’ Foster added.
Tonight the All Blacks will play a ‘game of three halves’ against Canterbury and Otago at AMI Stadium in Christchurch as part of their preparation for Bledisloe I.
It appears highly unlikely Jordie Barrett, who played at centre for the Hurricanes, will feature in the midfield in tests.
‘‘We certainly see him as a back-three player,’’ Foster added. Rugby Australia is confident there won’t be a repeat of last year’s record low turn out for the Bledisloe Cup opener despite sluggish sales less than two weeks from the Sydney test.
RA chief executive Raelene Castle told the NSW Parliament stadiums inquiry this week that 45,000 tickets had been sold to next Saturday’s match at ANZ Stadium, leaving the organisation with little time to bridge a gap of almost 10,000 tickets to better the 54,846 who attended in 2017.
But Castle said on Wednesday she was confident the crowd would end up closer to 60,000 with a late push in the leadup to the Wallabies’ opening Rugby Championship clash with the All Blacks. ‘‘North of 55,000, so 58-60,000 is where we think we’ll get to,’’ she said. ‘‘It will mean that ANZ Stadium at 60,000 will feel really full.’’
Attendances at live sporting events are on the wane across Australia and the rest of the world, and the test calendar’s traditional transTasman blockbuster has not been immune.