The New Zealand Herald

Blues look to continue upward arc

Super Rugby Aotearoa kicks off on Friday night. The Herald will preview a team each day; today, the Blues.

- Liam Napier

The down low

The upward trend is positive for the Blues. Progressio­n through the first two years of Leon MacDonald’s stewardshi­p is tangible, offering hope this could be the year they attain their first title in 18 years.

Beauden Barrett’s departure for Japan robs the Blues of serious strike power — yet they never lack attacking threats. Caleb Clarke and Hoskins Sotutu present a handful alone, both one year wiser after their respective promotions to the All Blacks.

Patrick Tuipulotu establishe­d his leadership presence last year, and around him, the Blues have added significan­t depth by recruiting All Blacks prop Nepo Laulala and Highlander­s openside Dillon Hunt, one of New Zealand’s hardestwor­king defenders.

Last Super Rugby Aotearoa season, the Blues lost two games — away to the Hurricanes and Crusaders. They finished that campaign second to the Crusaders, with their final-round match scrapped due to a Covid-19 outbreak.

This year, there is no reason the Blues can’t kick on and claim the title. That will certainly be their aspiration.

While Barrett cannot be replaced, Otere Black and Stephen Perofeta, the latter from fullback, formed a slick dual playmaking combinatio­n that guided the Blues to four unbeaten matches to start 2020, and they may again be paired to start this season.

The Blues pack, overseen by Tom Coventry, must be considered among New Zealand’s best. Boasting four All Blacks props — Alex Hodgman, Laulala, Karl Tu’inukuafe, Ofa Tuungafasi — and Samoan internatio­nal James Lay should ensure an impeccable platform is consistent­ly laid, while the loose forwards overflow with dynamic athletes.

In Tasman’s Scottish redhead Finlay Christie, the Blues have a classy halfback on the rise, one with speed to the breakdown and superb support lines.

Midfield depth is perhaps a tad light, and inexperien­ce in the backthree division, particular­ly the influentia­l fullback role outside Perofeta, could be an area opposition elect to target.

MacDonald will, however, back his fullback experience to help promote rookie prospects Zarn Sullivan and Jacob Ratumaitav­uki-Kneepkens, dual talents offering serious promise.

Eden Park must be a fortress for the Blues. If they can continue their improving away record, and avoid any further Covid outbreaks in Auckland, they should reach the inaugural SRA final and provide plenty of highlight reel moments along the way.

Defining factor: Game management

Much rests on Otere Black’s shoulders. These days an experience­d, trusted figure, little flusters Black. He does not pose the same attacking threat as Barrett or Perofeta, who are both at their best challengin­g the line, but Black offers a calming influence capable of creating for those around him. He’s also proved his value icing match-winning kicks on several occasions. How MacDonald opts to rotate Black, Perofeta and Auckland first-five Harry Plummer, also comfortabl­e one spot out, could make or break the campaign.

Positional battle: Loose forwards

Ridiculous depth. With Blake Gibson, Dillon Hunt, Akira Ioane, Dalton Papalii, Tom Robinson, Hoskins Sotutu and new recruit Taine Plumtree, son of All Blacks forwards coach John, on their books, the Blues’ bases are loaded.

Sotutu at No 8, Ioane on the blindside, the role he seized for the All Blacks last year, and Papalii at openside appeals as the Blues starting trio.

Yet MacDonald can easily mix and match any combinatio­n. Prior to his unfortunat­e knee injury last year, Robinson was the glue that held the Blues pack together. His relentless work ethic — his hunger to make repeat efforts and bust a gut to make the next, desperate play — is a trait every coach desires.

While his best position is blindside, Robinson’s height and the Blues’ stacked loose forward stocks could necessitat­e him frequently featuring at lock. Hunt, the one-test All Black, is another superb addition that boosts the Blues’ defensive resilience.

The luxury of such supreme depth gives MacDonald options to start a different fresh trio each week and demand no drop in form.

Under-the-radar prospect: Jacob Ratumaitav­ukiKneep ken s

A highly sought-after talent, with the Blues fighting off the Chiefs and Hurricanes to secure the 19-year-old’s signature. Ratumaitav­uki-Kneepkens scored eight tries in his debut provincial season on the wing for Taranaki — two in the Ranfurly Shield victory over Canterbury in Christchur­ch. He previously spent six months with the Parramatta Eels, and had Covid not gripped the globe last year, he would have made his New Zealand sevens debut, too.

 ?? Photo: Getty Images / Herald graphic ??
Photo: Getty Images / Herald graphic

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