The New Zealand Herald

First Bledisloe warriors have experience to burn

- Liam Napier

The All Blacks used three tests against Tonga and Fiji this month to build depth and experiment by rotating their 36-man squad. They now have a firm idea of their best line up. We predict the team that will take on the Wallabies in the opening Bledisloe Cup test at Eden Park on August 7.

1

Ofa Tuungafasi

Missed all three tests in July after minor knee surgery but returns as the first-choice loosehead with Joe Moody awaiting medical clearance following his foot surgery. In their absences, George Bower and Ethan de Groot stepped up in dominant scrummagin­g performanc­es. The return of Tuungafasi pushed de Groot out of the squad and will likely send Bower to the bench.

2 Dane Coles

Another calf complaint ruled Coles out of the third test where Samisoni Taukei’aho shone off the bench. Provided Coles overcomes that issue he should start as the form hooker. Codie Taylor’s lineout throwing was amiss at times in Hamilton and Coles’ unrivalled skills in the wide channels will be valuable against the Wallabies.

3 Nepo Laulala

Fast becoming the rock of the All Blacks scrum. Laulala is widely considered the strongest scrummager in New Zealand — and it’s not hard to see why. Starting Laulala and bringing Angus Ta’avao’s superior mobility and ball skills off the bench when the game opens up makes sense, too.

4 Brodie Retallick

Something of a low-key return after 18-months out of the test arena, with one start and one appearance off the bench. Ian Foster gave Retallick a 6/10 for his skills at training before his return in Dunedin but felt he has since rapidly improved. Expect his influence to increase.

5 Sam Whitelock

Made a notable impression regaining the captaincy from Aaron Smith. During the first 20 minutes in Hamilton, when Fiji were highly competitiv­e, he gathered the All Blacks together after scoring points and laid down the law following another disjointed start. Whatever he said hit the mark, as the All Blacks romped clear from there.

6 Akira Ioane

Direct and confrontat­ional, Ioane has probably done enough to lock in one of the most hotly contested starting spots. The simplicity brief the All Blacks supplied Ioane seems to be working. They wanted him to stick much closer to the ruck; to carry, clean, tackle hard and often. Ioane made a significan­t impact in Hamilton. He finished last year as the All Blacks favoured blindside, having usurped Shannon Frizell. After an indifferen­t Super Rugby season he appears to have regained that mantle.

7 Ardie Savea

Claimed a try in an otherwise quiet return from his MCL injury. Will featured at No 8 for the All Blacks this season but with Sam Cane out and Dalton Papalii battling a calf issue, Savea seems set to stay at openside for now.

8 Luke Jacobson

Found a home at the back of the scrum where he’s consistent­ly delivered for the Chiefs and carried that form through to the All Blacks. Jacobson’s value is evident all around the park; with his quick feet at the line and offloading skills, in his defence, work-rate and presence at the lineout.

9 Aaron Smith

Not his best series, but well ahead of the chasing pack. Smith endured a difficult evening as maiden captain in Dunedin when the All Blacks were beaten at the breakdown. While he linked down the blindside for one Sevu Reece try and his kicking game was sharp in Hamilton, he threw an intercept that required a Damian McKenzie try-saver.

10 Richie Mo’unga

Seized his chance to hold off Beauden Barrett in Hamilton. Mo’unga had a hand in four tries against Fiji — three involving Crusaders team-mate Reece. One of those was a wonky skip ball that bounced favourably, but Mo’unga is certainly much more comfortabl­e pulling the strings with McKenzie at fullback. Barrett is yet to regain his best form but when he does, his contest with Mo’unga will rise several notches.

11 Rieko Ioane

Started two of three tests at centre but with Lienert-Brown returning, Ioane’s opening comes on the wing where he remains a potent force. Ioane is generally a left-sided threat so in this team he starts there with Reece on the right.

12 David Havili

Nailed his long-awaited audition. Four years since his last test Havili slotted back in a completely different position with ease. Having overcome emergency bowel surgery that threatened his career you can only admire his perseveran­ce. Havili possesses the full range of skill but his ability to run direct lines and straighten the attack through July impressed most.

13 Anton Lienert-Brown

Quiet on return from minor elbow surgery for his 50th test, with Ian Foster noting his timing was off. There’s no doubt Lienert-Brown is the All Blacks best centre, though. At the back end of Super Rugby, despite being unable to straighten his arm, he was exceptiona­l for the Chiefs.

14 Sevu Reece

The form back of July. Reece descended the pecking order last year as quickly as he rose to prominence prior to the 2019 World Cup. This season, though, his resurgence has been impossible to ignore as he replicated his Crusaders form with the All Blacks. One of the best in Dunedin on the right wing, Reece then claimed a hat-trick in Hamilton on the left. Should be one of the first on the team sheet.

15 Damian McKenzie

Another highly contestabl­e position, with Jordie Barrett, Will Jordan and Beauden Barrett all options, yet McKenzie grabbed his chance to retain the fullback role. Of all the contenders McKenzie offers the best, natural secondary playmaking option. He’s happy playing second fiddle, sharing the load, while sparking counters from the backfield. He remains a flight risk of being isolated with ball in hand at times, but his confidence is clearly restored after a long road back from the ACL injury that robbed him of attending the 2019 World Cup.

Reserves: Codie Taylor, George Bower, Angus Ta’avao, Scott Barrett, Ethan Blackadder/Dalton Papalii, Brad Weber, Beauden Barrett, Will Jordan

 ?? Photosport ?? Akira Ioane has done enough to lock in one of the most hotly contested starting spots.
Photosport Akira Ioane has done enough to lock in one of the most hotly contested starting spots.

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