The New Zealand Herald

Hansen swings axe as trio of stars get boot

Make or break: Laulala, Bridge and Reece brought in to add spark

- Patrick McKendry

The All Blacks selectors have wielded the knife as they eye a must-win Bledisloe Cup test against Australia at Eden Park on Saturday night, with senior trio Owen Franks, Rieko Ioane and Ben Smith big casualties.

The winners are Nepo Laulala, who replaces Franks at tighthead prop, and inexperien­ced Crusaders outside back duo George Bridge and Sevu Reece, who replace Ioane and Smith.

None of the dropped trio are included in the match-day 23, with Jordie Barrett, last sighted against the Pumas in Buenos Aires, included on the reserves bench as outside back cover.

Coaches Steve Hansen and Ian Foster both reinforced the need to remain calm and not panic after the disastrous 47-26 defeat in Perth, virtually a foregone conclusion once Scott Barrett was red-carded at the end of the first half.

But they and fellow selector Grant Fox have clearly felt the need to try something different.

Franks was underwhelm­ing against the Wallabies at Optus Stadium and previously in the drawn test against the Springboks in Wellington, and right wing Ben Smith is clearly not 100 per cent after returning from a hamstring tear suffered while playing for the Highlander­s in May.

As for Ioane, his demotion is a little more of a surprise. The left wing looked sharper last weekend and scored one of the All Blacks’ four tries, but clearly Hansen and company want to experiment a little more ahead of the World Cup — despite the high stakes — and the Bridge/Reece combinatio­n, although inexperien­ced, should bring a spark that has been badly missing so far.

Sonny Bill Williams is straight back to second-five following his two full games for Counties in the Mitre 10

Cup, with Anton Lienert-Brown, one of the few impressive performers for the All Blacks in Perth along with Beauden Barrett, moving out one to centre as a replacemen­t for Jack Goodhue, who has a hamstring strain.

Beauden Barrett remains at fullback, with Richie Mo’unga retained at first-five, a combinatio­n which appears close to being a decisive attacking force providing the below-par pack can put them on the front foot.

Patrick Tuipuloto starts at lock alongside Sam Whitelock following Scott Barrett’s three-week ban for his shoulder charge on Wallabies skipper Michael Hooper, a dismissal that changed the test significan­tly and meant the Ardie Savea/Sam Cane/ Kieran Read loose forward combinatio­n couldn’t be fairly evaluated.

It’s no surprise that trio has been retained; there were promising signs in the first half as they started a test for the first time, with Savea and Read busy, in particular. No 8 and skipper Read was a huge force defensivel­y.

Conclusion­s will probably be jumped to, but this is unlikely to be the end of Franks, Ioane or Smith. All three are likely to be included in the World Cup squad when it’s announced at the end of the month, but the selectors have acted decisively and that will send a message throughout the group that the performanc­es so far have not been acceptable.

The fate of the Bledisloe Cup rests on this test and if that doesn’t inspire a reaction it’s difficult to know what will. If the Wallabies win it will be the first time they have held the old trophy since 2003, and the first time they have been successful against the All Blacks at Eden Park since 1986.

Hansen said: “We have worked hard this week on our game. We’ve had a great preparatio­n and are excited and looking forward to a massive, must-win match for the Bledisloe Cup on Saturday.

“We know Australia will be determined and confident after their win in Perth which makes the challenge even more exciting.”

We know that Australia will be determined and confident after their win in Perth which makes the challenge even more exciting. Steve Hansen

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