Weekend Herald

Cool, calm despite being centres of attention

Goodhue reflects traits of greats: Why every Rugby World Cup-winning All Blacks team has had rock playing in centre position

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Every All Blacks World Cup winning team has had a rock at centre. Jack Goodhue, who starts there in the quarter-final against Ireland, continues a line that has a tradition of clear thinking and accurate execution, started by Joe Stanley in 1987, and carried on in 2011 and 2015 by Conrad Smith.

Stanley was a city kid, born in Auckland to immigrant parents from Samoa. The first national selector to pay any attention to him was from league, Ron Ackland, coach of the Kiwis, who in 1978, when Stanley was playing league in Northland, called him to a training camp in Hunua. A brutal road run, and a wicked set of blisters, led to a mutual lack of interest in Stanley progressin­g further in league.

Smith was born and raised in Taranaki, with an All Black uncle, 1960s lock Alan. At high school in New Plymouth, Smith was a champion runner, but not a good enough rugby halfback, as he was then, to make a Taranaki age group or school side. Wellington was the first rep team Smith played for, making the senior provincial team when he was a 21-year-old law student in the city.

Goodhue grew up on a dairy farm near Kawakawa, in a rugby-mad family of four boys and one girl. “Dad’s been the club captain at United Kawakawa for at least 20 years now,” Goodhue says, “mowing the grass, organising the registrati­ons, taking the rubbish to the dump. And he has coached all of us.”

What the trio of centres have in common is a sharp intelligen­ce, and an ability to never let a big occasion get the better of them. Stanley didn’t make the All Blacks until he was 29, and remembers standing in the tunnel at Lancaster Park in 1986, with the rest of the team known as the Baby Blacks, waiting to run out against France for his first test, thinking, “These guys are the French, so unpredicta­ble, the world’s best, and here we are, a bunch of little ratbags shoved together, trying to do them over. On the other hand, I guess we were also thinking, ‘What have we got to lose’?”

To the astonishme­nt of the sporting world the little ratbags beat the then Six Nations champions, 18-9.

Smith would say before the 2011 World Cup, “We haven’t won many of these tournament­s, in case you hadn’t noticed, and we’re determined to change that. So we have got to face reality. The best way to deal with it is front on, which we probably didn’t do in the past. We swept it away and said, ‘We’re a different team and it’s not going to affect us.’ But it’s something we have to deal with. It’s part of our history.”

The 2011 team went on to hold their nerve, and win the final, 8-7, the narrowest margin in Cup history.

Goodhue presents, like Stanley and Smith, as someone with a maturity beyond his years. The quarter-final with Ireland will be just the 12th test match for the 24-yearold, but it’s hard to picture him being overwhelme­d by the occasion.

Before Goodhue’s first Bledisloe Cup test in Sydney last year his Crusaders and All Blacks teammate Ryan Crotty swore that on the field “sometimes I have to check that he’s awake, he’s so calm”.

Part of the maturing process for Goodhue is that he had to deal early in his career with an injury so serious it sidelined him for eight months.

In June 2015, Jack and his twin brother, lock Josh, were in the New Zealand under-20 team, coached by Scott Robertson, that won the world title, beating England in the final in Cremono in Italy.

Two months later Jack’s stellar season came to a crashing halt. “In the second round of the ITM Cup, we [Canterbury] were playing against Counties, and as a Counties player was making a tackle, as sometimes happens, a leg swung round and caught me on the outside of my knee, which caused it to cave in.”

The knee is now fully recovered. “It’s strong, and doesn’t give me any issues.”

Rugby was part of the reason Goodhue moved to Canterbury in 2014, but it didn’t play as dominant a role as you might have expected.

“It may be hard to believe,” he told me last year, “but it was basically the degree that got me down here. I wanted to study agricultur­al science and you could only do it at Lincoln or Massey, and I thought that Christchur­ch would probably have a better club competitio­n. I wasn’t in the [Canterbury rugby] academy when I came down, that came later.”

Goodhue knows he needs balance in his life. “I’m quite a man of faith, and go to church when I can, which is good for me to get away from the rugby world. It’s important to me.

“I also help out with Big Brothers and Big Sisters, which is a mentoring charity, which is nice. I don’t have any little brothers, so I see this guy every week or so, and we’ll just hang out. He’s at intermedia­te school. It is important to find the time to take a break from rugby. You can get caught in the trap of thinking about the game all the time, so it becomes all consuming, and probably unhealthy.”

Another trait Goodhue shares with the duo who have worn the 13 jersey for winning All Blacks at a World Cup is a quiet, but keen, sense of humour. That mullet could only be worn by a man who doesn’t take himself too seriously.

Stanley has the ability to verbally skewer pomposity while keeping a perfectly straight face.

As for Smith, I once asked him live on Radio Sport if he had a lawyer joke up his sleeve. Not missing a beat he replied, “Sure. Two lawyers are talking and one says, ‘If you’re billing a client, how much should a lawyer charge for time he’s actually spent playing golf ?’ The other replies. ‘That depends. Was the golfer a junior or senior partner’?”

As it happens wit, even in the cauldron of a rugby test, is one of the many attributes that makes Welshman Nigel Owens such a good referee. We should be grateful someone so self-possessed as him is in charge of what will be an emotionall­y electric game against Ireland tonight.

Owens has faced bigger challenges than a footy game in his life. Nineteen years ago, when he was 24, and struggling with the fact he was gay, he took a bottle of whisky, pills, and a shotgun, and climbed Bancyddrae­nan mountain near his family’s home in Wales, intending to commit suicide.

The combinatio­n of alcohol and drugs saw him fall into a coma, and he was was rescued by police in a helicopter. After two days in intensive care came a life-changing conversati­on. “My Mum said to me, ‘If you ever do anything like that again then you may as well take me and your Dad with you because we don’t want to live our life without you’.”

Owens is now so much at peace with who he is, he has quipped to an English club hooker, after a crooked throw to a lineout, “I am straighter than that one.”

The courage he showed acknowledg­ing his sexuality, and the trauma he went through before he did, must surely be an element in the fact he referees with the bravery of a man who knows that at the end of a game, no matter what the result is, it is just a game. It’s a mindset that should ensure his decisions at Tokyo Stadium will come from a calm, reasoned, place.

 ?? Photo / Mark Mitchell ?? Jack Goodhue continues a line that has a tradition of clear thinking and accurate execution.
Photo / Mark Mitchell Jack Goodhue continues a line that has a tradition of clear thinking and accurate execution.

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