The New Zealand Herald

How standout Auckland skipper earned a Super

- Patrick McKendry

The presence of midfielder TJ Faiane’s name in the Blues squad when it’s announced tomorrow morning probably won’t raise too many eyebrows given his recent form in leading Auckland to Mitre 10 Cup glory.

Another reason for the potential lack of fanfare will be the fact Faiane has been a Blues squad member for two years, playing seven games in 2017 and eight last year, but the truth of it is the 23-year-old was probably drifting out of Tana Umaga’s thinking for next year — until his performanc­es in the blue and white hoops.

Along with his No8 teammate Akira Ioane, Faiane was one of the most influentia­l players in this year’s competitio­n and his leadership and interventi­on in setting up a try for fellow midfielder Tumua Manu with a quick penalty tap was a major reason why Auckland beat Canterbury in the dramatic extra time final at Eden Park.

Until that try late in the first half Auckland had hardly fired a shot on attack, but the seven-pointer gave them something to build.

Build on it they certainly did, with a 26-26 scoreline after 80 minutes progressin­g to a famous 40-33 victory.

Faiane was Auckland coach Alama Ieremia’s third choice as captain behind Blake Gibson and Patrick Tuipulotu, but the former’s injury, and latter’s All Blacks call-up, handed Faiane an opportunit­y that he didn’t squander.

He has apparently made big shifts in terms of his approach to the game and life in general and his reward will be a place in the Blues squad alongside midfield stars Sonny Bill Williams and Ma’a Nonu.

“This leader sitting next to me deserves a lot of credit for obviously tactically trusting the systems but then also leading by example,” said Ieremia of Faiane after Auckland’s first national provincial championsh­ip title win since 2007.

“When there were no forwards, he carried. When there were no forwards to clean [rucks], he cleaned. He’s been playing like that all year.”

Of Faiane’s inspiratio­n to take a quick tap, beat several Canterbury defenders and put Manu in under the posts, Ieremia said: “It took a captain to stand up and show the way and I suppose that’s what captains do. It

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