The Timaru Herald

All Blacks ready to sign off on high note

- Marc Hinton

Ian Foster believes his All Blacks have come a long, long way from the disjointed group who staggered their way through the first part of this rugby year. Eighty minutes on Twickenham under the England blowtorch in their tour finale should tell us all we need to know about that bold claim.

It is a fitting, and telling, end to the All Blacks year as Foster’s men run out at England’s southwest London stronghold for their last test of the season tomorrow morning (NZT). Against a side who sat them on their backsides last time out – 19-7 in a magnificen­t 2019 World Cup semifinal ambush in Yokohama – it is expected to provide the perfect barometer for the New Zealanders as they head for their final summer ahead of the World Cup in France.

The All Blacks opened 2022 by losing a home series to Ireland (from 1-0 up) for the first time in their history and then dropping their Rugby Championsh­ip opener to the Springboks in Mbombela. At that stage they had lost three of four for the year, and five of their last six, and things were unravellin­g fast.

Of course a correction, of sorts, came. Foster’s men produced a brilliant final-quarter comeback to roll the Springboks at Ellis Park to save the coach’s job, and their season, though immediatel­y took a dip on the rollercoas­ter ride of 2022 by dropping a first ever home test to Argentina in Christchur­ch – their fourth defeat of the annum (one shy of the record in the profession­al era).

Since then there have been seven consecutiv­e victories, and the first three tests of this tour tucked away with varying degrees of impressive­ness. Winning has suddenly become a habit for these All Blacks, even if they’ve needed their fair share of luck to prevail in Melbourne (over the Wallabies), in Tokyo (over Japan) and then last Monday (NZT) over a gallant Scottish outfit.

Now, can they sign off in style and head to the beach with a spring in their steps before the long haul to France 2023 gets under way?

The signs are promising. For starters, the form trend of 2022 suggests they’re due another command performanc­e after the muddled effort of Murrayfiel­d just six days previous. And Foster has chosen what looks to be his strongest possible lineup with Beauden Barrett back at fullback, Jordie Barrett into midfield, Richie Mo’unga in the pivot and Scott Barrett returning to blindside flanker.

There’s even a bold call or two, with last week’s debutant Mark Telea given a deserved crack at No 14, the experience­d Codie Taylor preferred to the in-form Samisoni Taukei’aho at hooker and the bench carrying two loose forwards and two midfielder­s as

Unwanted in Canterbury out of high school, the man they call Guzzler will notch his 100th test for the All Blacks on Sunday. Uncompromi­sing and hard-nosed, the All Blacks will need him at his uncompromi­sing and hard-nosed best against the big English pack.

Foster covers his bases. ‘‘We’re ready,’’ Foster declared. ‘‘We’re in a good space. I like where our game is going. We’ve had a plan to grow some options, to cement some combinatio­ns and change a few things in our game. If you look at the last three to four weeks with where

Referee: Mathieu Raynal (France)

Assistant referees: Damon Murphy (Australia), Nika Amashukeli (Georgia)

match official: Brian MacNeice (Ireland)

TAB odds: All Blacks $1.67 England $2.25

we’ve got delighted.’’

‘‘Now we’ve got another one at Twickenham against an opponent that has clearly targeted this game as the big one of their autumn programme,’’ he added. ‘‘It’s a great challenge, and great to test ourselves on

to in that space, we’re

Samisoni Taukei’aho George Bower Nepo Laulala Shannon Frizell Hoskins Sotutu TJ Perenara David Havili Anton Lienert-Brown

Jamie George Mako Vunipola Will Stuart David Ribbans Jack Willis Ben Youngs Guy Porter Henry Slade

the last test of the year and finish off what we hope is going to be a successful tour.’’

The All Blacks should be plenty motivated, too. It is Brodie Retallick’s 100th test (Owen Farrell’s on the other side too), and he and skipper Sam Whitelock combine in the second

This test will likely be won by the side whose engine room gets the edge. While Itoje hasn’t been at his best in recent times, class is permanent and the gifted second rower is sure to lift in a test of this magnitude.

row for a world record 64th time. These are men their team-mates will be desperate to honour in the appropriat­e manner.

It’s a big, big test, and with Jones pulling the strings in the England camp, Foster expects, well, the unexpected. ‘‘I’m sure there will be

surprises,’’ he shrugged. ‘‘They’re a good team, they’ll be hurting a little after dropping that game to Argentina, and I’m sure they’ll come up with some clever plays.

‘‘But their DNA is mainly about suffocatin­g you, and taking your time away. It’s a great challenge.’’

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