The New Zealand Herald

All Blacks switched on to the threat of

- Patrick McKendry

The All Blacks have admitted they appear vulnerable to the lineout drive after conceding two tries there to Argentina, but the Springboks should be wary about concentrat­ing too much time and effort into this area of the game.

Heyneke Meyer’s men beat the All Blacks at Ellis Park 27-25 last year with an attacking game plan and a firstfive in Handre Pollard who was just too hot to handle.

They won’t beat the All Blacks by trying to get into an arm wrestle. Just as the All Blacks believe they have the talent and players to win any sort of test — by kicking or running teams off the park or crushing them with their pack — so the Boks must keep an open mind rather than narrow their focus to the set piece.

In 2013, with the giant Andries Bekker on board, the Stormers had what appeared to be an unbeatable lineout heading into a Super Rugby match against the Crusaders in Cape Town.

However, with Sam Whitelock contesting the Stormers’ throws and putting immense pressure on Bekker, the Crusaders, minus the injured Kieran Read, Dan Carter, Israel Dagg and Richie McCaw, stopped the threat at source and ran out 19-14 victors. It was a classic case of a team’s greatest strength also being its biggest weakness — without that advantage, the Stormers had little else.

The All Blacks’ two brief lapses against the Pumas in Christchur­ch were more mental than physical and coach Steve Hansen, who called the rolling maul “bloody boring” in the wake of the test, will make sure both minds and bodies are suitably prepared in Johannesbu­rg this week.

“We let in a couple of tries from the Argentines’ driving and it’s probably somewhere they [Springboks]

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