Weekend Herald

Pick and stick: My ABs team to face Ireland at Eden Park

- Phil Gifford

Three areas need special attention if the All Blacks are to wreck the party in Paris and beat France in the first game of next year’s World Cup.

An ideal time to start to addressing them is against an Irish side who will arrive here in six weeks with a realistic hope of winning the three-test series.

One of those areas is the midfield, where the All Blacks haven’t yet found a way to consistent­ly win the collision on attack the way Ma’a Nonu did so brilliantl­y in 2015.

The second is having an enforcer who can make constantly effective head-on, torso-height tackles (or, as they’re scarily now known, choke tackles) the way Jerome Kaino did so brilliantl­y in two World Cups.

The third area is making sure the

All Blacks props are agile enough to get up quickly from breakdowns to be back on defence and stop inside runs.

With all three sectors in mind, here’s the All Blacks team I’d like to see running at Eden Park to face Ireland on July 2.

Fullback: Will Jordan

He’s in the right place at the right time too often for it not to be a touch of genius. Add in his pace and fearlessne­ss in the air, and you have a fullback who stands comparison with the great Christian Cullen.

Wing: Caleb Clarke

In a crowded field, Clarke appeals for his speed and strength, and the fact that in 2020, he showed how comfortabl­y he can make the jump from Super Rugby to test matches.

Centre: Rieko Ioane

No question he’s more than quick enough, and his passing abilities hark back to his schoolboy days in the midfield. His positionin­g on defence is the only quibble, but the longer he plays in the 13 jersey, the better that should become.

Wing: Sevu Reece

A firecracke­r, with many of the attributes that made Bryan Habana a legend for the Springboks.

Second-five: Jordie Barrett There needs to be a daring selection at second-five, which means either Barrett or Roger Tuivasa-Sheck head the queue. Barrett has the strength, skills and rugby nous for the midfield, and he offers the best goal-kicking in the country. He’s also a giant. He edges out Tuivasa-Sheck, a stunning talent, who must be in the squad.

First-five: Beauden Barrett

A close call with Richie Mo’unga but Barrett has thrived under Leon MacDonald at the Blues.

Halfback: Aaron Smith

An all-time great and you don’t discard them easily. I’d make it a package deal with Folau Fakatava on the bench ready to unleash late in the game.

No 8: Ardie Savea

He’s smaller than the men we usually see in this jersey, but as a Sydney writer noted this week, when the going gets tough, he “plays with a ferocity that is almost otherworld­ly”.

Flanker: Sam Cane (captain) Relentless, accurate and a tackling machine.

Lock: Brodie Retallick

He arrived in the All Blacks a decade ago as basically the finished product. Class, as they say, is forever.

Lock: Sam Whitelock

At 33, he’s obviously near the end of a great career but he’s still passionate. Eight minutes from the end of the Crusaders-Brumbies game in Canberra, he chased Brumbies wing Tom Wright so hard for 50m that Whitelock gave himself the chance of a miracle save over the line. Among the new guys, I hope Josh Lord gets a big shot this year. He plays with frenetic enthusiasm.

Flanker: Akira Ioane

The tightest contest in the 15, Ioane just heads off Ethan Blackadder and Dalton Papalii. Blackadder has an amazing work rate and Papalii is old-school tough but Ioane offers a startling ability to break the line and the size to be a devastatin­g defender.

Props: George Bower, Ethan de Groot

Crusader Bower has played 11 tests and Highlander de Groot just four, three as a sub. But both show signs of the sharp edge that Joe Moody at his best brought to the All Blacks. Bower especially looks nimble, which, with the way the game’s being played now, is as essential as being massive.

Hooker: Codie Taylor

The veterans, in this case Taylor and Dane Coles, still look eager and dynamic.

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