The Timaru Herald

To Johnson’s demotion

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completely different style to the unpredicta­ble Johnson, but Great Britain hooker Josh Hodgson believes they are equally as dangerous.

‘‘I wouldn’t say it makes them any easier to defend at all,’’ Hodgson said. ‘‘Different players have different strengths. I’ve watched Kieran Foran play for the Bulldogs and he gets them around the park really well and bosses them around. That’s certainly a strength that he’ll bring to the side.’’

Meanwhile, Great Britain have been busy tidying up their execution on attack after the surprise 14-6 defeat to Tonga.

The Lions have been on hiatus since 2007 and while English players make up the bulk of the squad, last week was their first outing together.

There was always bound to be some rust but Hodgson said that was no excuse.

‘‘We knew what was coming, we just didn’t execute the way we wanted to and we didn’t finish in the right spots on the field,’’ the Canberra hooker said.

‘‘We gave them too much possession and off the back of that they’ve got some big men and if you do that much defending against big men it hurts you a lot.

‘‘We really need to be on and executing what we’ve practised this week.’’

The Kiwis coaches want Shaun Johnson to ‘bounce forward’ from his axing, not backwards.

Johnson was the high profile casualty from the Kiwis’ 26-4 loss to the loss to the Kangaroos last Saturday.

It came as a surprise to no-one that he’s been replaced in the team by Kieran Foran for this weekend’s encounter against Great Britain in Auckland.

At an opposed training run against the New Zealand Residents XIII yesterday, Johnson lined up against players who were alongside him last weekend and Kiwis assistant coach Ben Gardiner says they hope Johnson takes his demotion the right way.

‘‘One thing with Shaun is that he is full of energy, he is happy to be amongst the group,’’ Gardiner said.

‘‘Like everyone in that situation, you take it pretty hard at first, but it’s your ability to bounce forward, not bounce back.

‘‘We want him to bounce forward, into a position where he’s ready to go for next week and he’s an option for us to select.

‘‘He’s definitely not banished or anything like that, it’s just an opportunit­y to give Kieran a go and after this weekend’s game we’ll see what happened and go forward from there.’’

There has probably never been a New Zealand league player who’s been equally praised and criticised as much as Johnson.

Yes, he can be a match winner, but he can also have shockers like last weekend and Gardiner says it comes down to Johnson himself to find that consistenc­y in his game.

‘‘That’s the challenge for him,’’ he said. ‘‘People talk about consistenc­y and stuff like that and at the end of the day it’s up to Shaun with how he deals with that and whether he bounces forward with it.’’

 ??  ?? Kieran Foran is set to represent the Kiwis for the first time since the 2017 Anzac test.
Inset: Eels youngster Dylan Brown is regarded as one of the most promising halves in the NRL.
Kieran Foran is set to represent the Kiwis for the first time since the 2017 Anzac test. Inset: Eels youngster Dylan Brown is regarded as one of the most promising halves in the NRL.

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