Weekend Herald

Mature Cruden coping with setbacks

All Blacks No 10 stays supremely confident despite knockbacks

- Gregor Paul

Life has thrown a fair bit of bad luck at Aaron Cruden but he always finds a way to cope. He’s a fighter, a believer — the sort of bloke who can absorb fate’s cruel blows and yet never lose confidence in himself, never doubt what he can do on the rugby field.

Given the year he had in 2015, when injury saw him miss most of the season including the World Cup, he had grounds to imagine his fortunes would improve in 2016.

In some part they did when he had an injury- free and impressive campaign with the Chiefs to earn the All Blacks No 10 jersey.

It was the moment he’d long waited for, to be the rightful No 1, to no longer be the understudy, to not be relying on injury to someone else to get his chance.

But he had only one full test before he damaged his neck early in the second and, while Cruden was recovering, Beauden Barrett emerged out of his cocoon all beautiful butterfly.

The year has belonged to Barrett since that second test in June. Cruden has, once again, found himself as the No 2. He waited six years for his chance, the door opened and in rushed Barrett ahead of him.

Lesser men would have fallen apart if forced to accept similar circumstan­ces. Not Cruden.

He seems at peace with how things have gone. He has no sense of entitlemen­t, despite his wait and, as far as he i s concerned, the landscape is no different now to how it has ever been.

It’s the All Blacks. There will always be a monumental battle for the No 10 jersey and he can’t assume anything.

“I know what type of person I am and I always want to be in the starting lineup but the reality is that only 15 guys can do that at one time,” he says.

“For me, it’s about making sure I am clear in my role whether that i s in the starting lineup or not. Prepare the best I can and I know the hunger and drive will never disappear. I think in a profession­al environmen­t you have to be competitiv­e, otherwise you will be found out pretty quickly and you won’t last that long.”

It i s the art of channellin­g that competitiv­eness which has enabled Cruden to become such a valued member of the All Blacks. For live commentary on the All Blacks v Italy tune in to Radio Sport He has never been one to overplay his hand when his chance comes. He’s never been guilty of trying to run through his entire repertoire in the first 10 minutes of a test, just to show what he can do. His greatest strength is arguably that ability to stay composed and clear- headed and to play for the team and not himself. That’s what he will do in Rome tomorrow morning ( NZT) when he starts his first test since playing Wales in June. In his head it won’t be about emulating or going past Barrett, it will be about playing his game.

He won’t get caught up trying to impress, knowing that doesn’t work. He’ll instead be all about the next task, building his game from one play to the next knowing the picture has 80 minutes to form.

“Beauden has done really well in patches this year and I don’t know if I would see it as inspiring or frustratin­g,” says Cruden. “I can’t control what others do. I can control me and how I respond and how I react if I get an opportunit­y regardless of who has gone before me.

“It is about keeping your emotions in check and being really clear and decisive when you get out there.

There’s a calm about Cruden which i s easy to imagine i s his key strength. He is not easily ruffled or distracted. It’s mostly innate. He was captain of Manawatu when just 20 and won the respect of older men as easily as he could run round them.

But he believes he’s become more Damian McKenzie Israel Dagg Anton Lienert- Brown Waisake Naholo Aaron Cruden Tawera Kerr- Barlow Steven Luatua Sam Cane ( c) Elliot Dixon Scott Barrett Patrick Tuipulotu Charlie Faumuina Codie Taylor Wyatt Crockett philosophi­cal and better mentally equipped as he has become older.

“Maturity helps,” he says. “When you are younger, rugby takes over a massive part of your life.

“When you have been in the environmen­t for a bit longer, I am not saying it is not as important to you but you get more of a balance and appreciati­on for other things outside of rugby as well and that has been the case for me.

“Coming up as a young fella, I was pretty keen, pretty eager and maybe didn’t get that balance right at times. It was a little bit detrimenta­l but now I am able to work really hard when I need to and making sure that I have a check- list and tick everything off on the rugby side of things but then let it go.

“I try to enjoy the countries and cities we get to visit. It is pretty cool. And hopefully that balance trades when I get out there.

“I have got into a bit of reading of late, pick up a book and all of a sudden an hour or two can go. I try to get out there and experience life as much as I can.” emember back to June 18 at the Cake Tin. I’ll bet Aaron Cruden does. The All Black five- eighths stepped out against Wales intent on showing his internatio­nal credential­s were back in sync and he was the best replacemen­t for Daniel Carter after succumbing the previous year to a knee injury.

He’d been steady the week before at Eden Park and was about to sharpen that effort. He got a touch over 30 minutes until he hurt his neck. Beauden Barrett replaced him and hasn’t relinquish­ed the job until now.

Cruden’s test diet in that five months has been five substitute appearance­s with Lima Sopoaga and Damian McKenzie sniffing chances to also put the heat on their teammate.

Stadio Olimpico in Rome tomorrow is a big stage for many in the All Black group and especially Cruden who is paired with his Chiefs teammate Tawera Kerr- Barlow and being asked to drive the plans.

The ground is not new for Cruden. He was sharp there in 2012 when he kicked all but one attempt in the 42- 10 win against Italy and late in the game linked up with substitute Kerr- Barlow.

That match was a catalyst for Cruden turning in another strong performanc­e the next week when he started against Wales and kicked all seven attempts in the comprehens­ive 33- 10 victory. He was primed for any time Carter was out of action.

Cruden must bring that energy, direction and goalkickin­g tomorrow if his name is going to be in a lengthy selectors’ discussion for the return test with Ireland. Maybe those wise men have another plan but it’s difficult seeing past a Barrett/ Cruden shootout for the No 10 jersey in Dublin.

They’ve seen Barrett in an extended test run this season against a variety of opponents and watched how his running game and punting skills create pressure on rivals. They’ve also seen the pressure his fluctuatin­g goal- kicking creates on the All Blacks.

Since Barrett began a stretch of nine starts against Wales in Dunedin he succeeded with 39 of his 59 attempts at goal or a touch over 66 per cent. Cruden brings a different package and similar goal- kicking issues. He likes to stress defenders in a different way with his brave dexterity and ability to offload to teammates on the inside and outside channels.

That understand­ing should be there with Chiefs teammates KerrBarlow, Anton Lienert- Brown, Damian McKenzie and Sam Cane understand­ing his methods.

The All Blacks were stung by their historic loss last week and vacancies for the rematch will be on the minds of those playing tomorrow at the home ground of Lazio and Roma. That provides another type of pressure which Cruden and Co must combat.

 ?? In Rome Picture / Brett Phibbs ?? Aaron Cruden aims to impress against the Italians in Rome.
In Rome Picture / Brett Phibbs Aaron Cruden aims to impress against the Italians in Rome.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand