The New Zealand Herald

Questions still surround Ioane

One good test does not an All Blacks loosie make: The pressure in Perth in front of 60,000 fans will tell

- Gregor Paul comment

The plaudits rained down on Akira Ioane after his last performanc­e at Eden Park. His back presumably hurt the day after, so hard was it being slapped, literally by his teammates and coaches and metaphoric­ally by just about everyone who has followed his career.

It was dubbed his coming of age performanc­e, the moment when he showed he can channel his athleticis­m in a dual capacity — operating effectivel­y in the core business of knocking people off their feet while showcasing his party trick of running like an outside back.

Ioane brought the brute force the All Blacks always want in their blindside flanker. He had a strong work rate, a desire to be involved and a lower body position that saw him skittle Wallaby defenders and crunch their ball carriers.

It was rightly heralded as the breakthrou­gh after flattering to deceive since his arrival in the profession­al ranks in 2015.

But for all that he impressed, the declaratio­ns of arrival as a genuine force in the test arena were not so much premature as over-egged.

The goal posts need to shift to some extent when it comes to the definition of a breakthrou­gh performanc­e.

The rainbows can go in the quiver but they shouldn’t all be shot the first time a player delivers the sort of commanding and dominant 80-minute effort that confirms they have the mental and physical goods to thrive in test rugby.

Judgment should be reserved until they have done it in consecutiv­e tests — followed one great performanc­e with another. It’s the equivalent of breaking serve in tennis — it’s not actually a break until it is consolidat­ed by then holding serve.

Assuming he is picked to start in Perth on Sunday, Ioane, in tennis parlance, needs to hold serve.

He took a giant leap forward in Auckland but the real challenge in elite sport is to not just have a solitary great game.

Great careers are built over time and on the back of consistent­ly good tests. Those who have truly impressed in test rugby have done so by building a portfolio of great

Judgment should be reserved . . . It’s the equivalent of breaking serve in tennis — it’s not actually a break until it is consolidat­ed by then holding serve.

performanc­es and more importantl­y, by establishi­ng a high baseline under which they never dip.

Ioane played the best game of his career on his home ground as part of a dominant team performanc­e.

He’s an Auckland boy, loves Eden Park and with his brother in the backline and his mum and dad in the crowd, circumstan­ces were ideal for him.

Sunday afternoon in Perth at Optus Stadium looms as a different and more demanding test.

The Wallabies have had three weeks together in Western Australia’s unrestrict­ed protocols.

They have had extended time to dissect where they went wrong in Auckland and have been handed an additional element of motivation by their perception that they were shafted by the All Blacks’ decision to not travel to play on the scheduled date last Saturday.

Not only will the Wallabies be highly motivated and supremely well prepared, they’ll be playing in front of 60,000 Australian­s who have twice had the date of this game changed on them and will turn up with a desire to make their presence felt and get behind their team.

In contrast, the All Blacks arrived in Perth during a level four lockdown in New Zealand, which compromise­d the ability of their players to train as they normally would.

Since they arrived in Western Australia late last week, the All Blacks have been playing catch-up in their individual strength and conditioni­ng, but more importantl­y, they have had to spend much of their time there so far fast-tracking the speed and accuracy of their micro skills.

It’s not as if the All Blacks face insurmount­able odds in preparing for this test, but the difficulty factor of beating the Wallabies this week in Perth is higher than it was in their previous test and hence the game will provide a truer test of Ioane.

There’s no doubt the Wallabies will try to up the niggle that they bring and try to unsettle the All Blacks by adopting a more physical approach than they managed in either of the two tests in Auckland.

That will most likely see them try to get under Ioane’s skin by playing him off the ball as hard as they do on it and how he copes this week will be a much better guide as to whether he truly has establishe­d himself in the All Blacks No 6 jersey.

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 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? All Blacks flanker Akira Ioane makes a break during the Rugby Championsh­ip and Bledisloe Cup match against the Wallabies in Auckland.
Photo / Getty Images All Blacks flanker Akira Ioane makes a break during the Rugby Championsh­ip and Bledisloe Cup match against the Wallabies in Auckland.

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