Otago Daily Times

Lions series motivation for ABs

- LIAM NAPIER

AUCKLAND: Alarm bells should be ringing for Eddie Jones.

If the often outspoken English coach was not already aware how highly motivated the All Blacks are to dominate at Twickenham tomorrow, he certainly should be now after Steve Hansen raised the stakes significan­tly by suggesting this match is more important than last year’s British and Irish Lions tour.

‘‘I think it’s even bigger than that, actually,’’ Hansen said before the All Blacks’ main training session in London.

‘‘The Lions tour has made it bigger because we weren’t successful in only drawing the series. That, to us, wasn’t successful. That’s made this week have a sharper edge to it, which is good.’’

Such comments offer a glimpse inside the mentality of the All Blacks this week.

In front of 80,000 spectators, on one of world rugby’s biggest, grandest stages, they want to be ruthless. They want to make a statement.

No matter what they do, there is a feeling within the All Blacks the Lions result is continuall­y rubbed in their face.

Defining instances, such as Sonny Bill Williams red card in the second test, and the highly controvers­ial ending to the third at Eden Park, have seemingly faded from memory for some.

Many in the north prefer to only remember the final 111 result.

Often it is suggested, in fact, the Lions should have won the series. Never mind the All Blacks blew three tries in the opening 20 minutes of the decider.

‘‘Sonny doesn’t have any demons and he’s got no devils running around in his head,’’

Hansen said, shaking his head.

‘‘Yes, he was disappoint­ed, obviously. He did a shoulder charge which hit someone in the chops and got red carded and rightly so. You just want consistenc­y in that, don’t you?’’

It is fair to say, then, the All Blacks have a point to prove over the next two weeks as they meet England and Ireland, both of who feature many familiar faces from the Lions tour.

While results here cannot change the only major blemish of Hansen’s sevenyear reign, they can alter perception­s, and also go a long way to reinforcin­g where the All Blacks sit in the overall pecking order.

This week the All Blacks’ management and players regularly touched on the difference­s in style between the southern and northern hemisphere­s, almost taunting England to deviate from its script.

If the All Blacks can win playing attractive, running rugby this weekend, while England stick to its maul, kick, defend approach, even better.

And although England’s leading Lions — Owen Farrell, Maro Itoje, Ben Te’o, Elliot Daly, Jamie George — may feel they have inside oil to draw on, the All Blacks do not appear worried.

‘‘We did a lot of looking back at the time,’’ Hansen said.

‘‘That year you can look at it and say the Lions series was a gift because there were a lot of things we didn’t do well. We haven’t wasted much time looking back at it over the last few weeks, no.

‘‘The Lions series hasn’t been great for English rugby in that a lot of players have come back and gone straight back into club footy and there’s been a lot of injuries. It’s hard to get momentum when you’re changing your squad all the time.

‘‘They beat South Africa the other day, so you’d have to say they’re on the up.’’

Even Beauden Barrett, who endured a difficult time against the Lions’ rush defence, brushed off concerns he may again be stifled.

‘‘We’ve learnt a bit from that and we think the approach may be similar,’’ Barrett said.

‘‘No doubt England would have got pieces from that series and will look to bring those into this test match. It’s exciting. We’re playing England, not the Lions, we have to remember that, so we’re up for it.’’

Hansen’s calculated message is a clear tactic to dial up pressure on Jones and England. Because when it comes to pressure, Hansen feels there is no better team accustomed to dealing with its many faces.

Walk towards it, as the All

Blacks say.

‘‘I don’t know who is writing them off — you’d be foolish to do that. Does it put pressure on us? No. There’s already pressure on us. The one constant thing about being in the All Blacks is you’re under pressure,’’ Hansen said.

‘‘You’re expected to win every test match you play and win it really well. Once you come to realise that life becomes a little easier.

‘‘It does, at times, give you an advantage because when other teams are put under pressure of having to win big games they haven’t experience­d that as much as maybe we have.’’ — NZME

 ?? PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES ?? Key man . . . First fiveeighth Beauden Barrett warms up during an All Blacks training session at The Lensbury in London yesterday.
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Key man . . . First fiveeighth Beauden Barrett warms up during an All Blacks training session at The Lensbury in London yesterday.

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