Weekend Herald

How Akira Ioane flipped script: I decided to take action

Akira Ioane had a career year in 2020. After years of criticism and need for improvemen­t, he finally took the next and necessary step. The Blues loose forward spoke with Alex Chapman on his last year and where he’s determined to get better

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Akira Ioane just seems different. Physically, it’s obvious. When watching him train with the Blues under the scorching Auckland sun, he seems more explosive, less out of breath when having to continuous­ly run.

As the Blues run drills and simulate match situations, Ioane wants the ball, as always, but on defence, he’s more steady and sure of himself.

He’s leaner, too, but there’s still plenty of muscle there.

But when speaking, there’s a different presence to him.

The tag “what could’ve been” is no longer dragging him down. He’s relaxed and more willing to speak. He pauses to think how he wants to answer questions, and corrects himself when he doesn’t like the way he has said something.

“I’m pretty proud, but it wasn’t just me,” he answers when asked about his mental resilience, something that a lot of his teammates and coaches have identified as a big area of growth for the 25-year-old.

“I’m obviously the one that changed it, but I had good backing behind me — a good bunch of boys, my partner, family — so bouncing ideas off them and them giving me the hard word that I needed, turned it all around.”

Last year began like others for Ioane, with criticism, questions over his fitness and work ethic, and an inability to secure a regular, starting spot. Then he proved his doubters wrong, with a man-of-the-match performanc­e against Argentina, in a game which clinched the Tri Nations for the All Blacks. It was just his second test.

“It was a year of ups and downs. At the start of the year, things weren’t going my way, and that’s all good, but then going into Super Rugby Aotearoa, after lockdown, I sort of took my chance and it was up from then. There were a lot of lessons, and a lot to be happy with, but it wasn’t the ideal start.

“This year, it’s just about being on top of everything . . . my eating habits, my training, and relaxing when I need to, rather than rugby

24/7, which sent me down the rabbit hole.”

Ioane’s open to any suggestion­s over relaxation. Time with friends and family, PlayStatio­n, watching movies, and surprising­ly, golf, are among his preferred options.

It’s hard to believe a man who is

1.94m and 113kg finds solace in striding the fairways, chipping out of bunkers, and gracefully and subtly putting greens.

“I’m one of what they call beginners. I hit the odd good shot, and it keeps me coming back.

“I’m not really that great. I don’t have a short game, don’t have a long game, but I enjoy it. It gets my mind off rugby and I have good laughs with the boys.”

Ioane identifies last year’s first lockdown as when he decided to take action in an attempt to achieve some sought-after consistenc­y. “I took it upon myself to get back in shape, and hopefully if I did, then I’d be playing the rugby I knew I was capable of.

“There’s always that backing yourself, but you need to lay the foundation­s first.

“You don’t want to back yourself and then you have nothing to fall back on,” he says.

“I was just lucky enough to get a shot last year and I took it with both hands and never looked back. But this year’s a different year.”

For Ioane, 2021 is simply about just enjoying rugby.

“That’s when I tend to play my best rugby, when I’m not overdoing things. We built something pretty special last year, but we can’t rest on that. This year’s a different year, a lot of new and different boys, so just building those relationsh­ips and enjoying the grind over the next three weeks before the season starts.”

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? All Blacks rookie Akira Ioane, at Blues training in the heat, reveals how he set his mind to being a better person and a muchimprov­ed rugby player.
Photo / Getty Images All Blacks rookie Akira Ioane, at Blues training in the heat, reveals how he set his mind to being a better person and a muchimprov­ed rugby player.

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