The New Zealand Herald

Mo’unga a mature fine wine

There is now no doubt about the identity of the best player to start at No 10 for ABs

- Gregor Paul comment

It’s perhaps frustratin­g but Richie Mo’unga has at last found unwavering confidence in himself and what he can do for the All Blacks now he has only a few months of his test career left.

It’s arguably the fact he has made the decision to leave New Zealand after the World Cup that has given him the clarity and certainty missing at times since his first cap in 2018.

There’s a sense, now that he’s steered the Crusaders to a seventh consecutiv­e Super Rugby title and committed his future to Japan, that he’s made peace with himself.

His performanc­e in the Super Rugby final was energised and eager, his hunger to win always visible. But so, too, was he calm and composed, and Mo’unga looks now to have perfected the art possessed by only the best first-fives where they can play at 100 miles an hour, yet look like they are effortless and never rushed.

What’s also helped is that he’s killed media and public debate about his right to wear the All Blacks No 10 jersey.

A few years ago, there was no better way to speed up a slow news day than to pontificat­e on the playmaking merits of Mo’unga and Beauden Barrett and paint the business of selecting the All Blacks first-five as an impossible choice.

By 2021, New Zealand’s rugby public mostly disagreed the choice was impossible.

Mo’unga had his admirers and was respected for what he had done with the Crusaders, but the majority vote went to Barrett, who was seen back then as the more consistent and likely to play with the authority the All Blacks needed from their general.

No one imagined things would swing as far as they have, and that with the All Blacks days away from their 2023 campaign, there is barely a flicker of debate when the question of Mo’unga or Barrett is posed.

Mo’unga has so obviously proven himself in the role, with the All Blacks in the back half of last year and with the Crusaders since 2017, that it’s even reached the point where the question doesn’t need to be asked.

Previously, when there were doubts about Mo’unga, they were predominan­tly driven by concerns he was mentally volatile on the big occasions.

It wasn’t that he would melt down in big games, more that he would disappear and not want to take ownership of the occasion.

There was some truth to the theory that he came into a test side in 2018 that had become too reliant on Barrett doing all the playmaking and decision-making, and that perhaps Mo’unga had become used to his senior colleague taking responsibi­lity in those pressure moments.

But whatever was holding back Mo’unga, it ended in Johannesbu­rg last year when he was the one who stayed in the fight for 80 minutes and dug the All Blacks out of the hole they were in to secure victory at Ellis Park.

He hasn’t looked back since, and while he doesn’t say as much, the secret to his breakthrou­gh has been a realisatio­n that test rugby isn’t the complicate­d beast it often appears to be, and that doing the simple things well can bring enormous rewards.

Keeping it simple, he revealed, is not only his personal mantra, but also the theme the All Blacks will be employing in their first game of the year.

“It being our first test, we have a simple focus,” he said. “Things we know that should be in our DNA in terms of our footy — our carry height, running with the ball at the ruck, little things that we pride ourselves on — are a really good focus to have in your first test.

“That will set the game up well. When I understand a bit more about what my role will be, I’m hoping to get an opportunit­y and keen to play test match footy.”

That he doesn’t yet know what role he will be playing hints that selection for the opening Rugby Championsh­ip test against the Pumas may not necessaril­y reflect the way the selectors see their pecking order.

It’s possible, given his heavy workload for the Crusaders and the emotional investment he made in the final, that Mo’unga may not be given a starting role in Argentina.

But with the team then facing the Springboks in Auckland just six days later, Mo’unga will be installed in the No 10 jersey for that game, where he will be asked to play with the sort of clarity and confidence that are fast becoming to define him.

 ?? Photo / Photosport ?? Richie Mo’unga’s success with the Crusaders can now extend to the All Blacks.
Photo / Photosport Richie Mo’unga’s success with the Crusaders can now extend to the All Blacks.
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