Weekend Herald

Cane has the edge in openside showdown because size matters

- Gregor Paul

I was probably about 103kg when I first came into the team and I sit between 108kg and 109kg now. It is a wee bit packed on.

Probably because Richie McCaw was locked into the jersey for so long, it prevented everyone in New Zealand from realising how much the role of an openside was changing at internatio­nal level.

But now he has retired, the requiremen­ts and demands suddenly look different. The full extent of what it takes to play test football at No 7 is starting to become clear.

And the first thing that has become apparent is that size and weight are now considerab­ly higher up the selection criteria than they were.

At 1.88m and 106kg, McCaw was not a strikingly large athlete. His game was built around his timing, endurance and instincts and while he was strong and powerful, these were never considered the defining characteri­stics of his game.

This week, however, size and weight has been the prevalent theme with Ardie Savea and Sam Cane. The former, who starts on the bench at Soldier Field, is on a programme to get heavier. He sits around 103kg and the coaches want him to be closer to 106kg- 108kg.

Cane has made that jump already, and from being around 100kg in his late teens, he’s now at 109kg and that extra size he has added is being given ample credit for the way he has played this year.

“Even in the last three or four years, the physical requiremen­ts on a seven have changed,” says Cane. “I reckon five years ago, 100kg- 103kg was good enough. But we are seeing guys who are five or six kilos heavier than that now running around at openside, so that is just the physical demands of the game.

“I was probably about 103kg when I first came into the team and I sit between 108kg and 109kg now. It is a wee bit packed on. I probably lost a bit of baby fat in that time, too, but a lot of it has been learning about nutrition and more training years in the gym.

“I think you notice that it is not quite as easy to get around the field, so you have to work hard on that aspect, but you certainly notice it in the collisions.”

And it’s that ability to make his presence felt in the collisions that separates Cane from Savea and Matt Todd, the other openside in the All Blacks tour squad.

It’s not that Todd and Savea can’t win turnovers, make tackles or carry the ball, it’s just that Cane can do it more effectivel­y, as he has more size and power.

The extent to which size matters is best put into perspectiv­e by looking at the enormity of some of the players in the game. Sam Whitelock came into the All Blacks in 2010 at 108kg and is now 122kg. Patrick Tuipulotu is 127kg and Charlie Faumuina is 133kg. These are typical weights of internatio­nal locks and props and an openside who sits around 100kg is having to compete physically with men who are often 20kg- 35kg heavier.

That size differenti­al is also partly responsibl­e for evolving openside into a dual role.

Cane could no doubt go the full 80 minutes if asked but the prevailing view is that the demands are so extreme that it i s probable he’ll lose some of his impact later in the game.

It has reached the point where it is not realistic to expect a starting test openside to go much beyond 65 minutes.

“I think traditiona­lly as a seven, you pride yourself on your fitness and your ability to go 80 minutes,” says Cane. “The way it has changed this year and the player that Ardie is, too, he has been able to bring a lot of impact off the bench in the last 20 minutes- 30 minutes.

“So whatever works best for this team. It’s not because one guy i s better than the other. It is what is best for the team and to help us get the best results. That seems to be with a two punch combo at No 7 this year,” says the Chiefs flanker.

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