Whanganui Chronicle

Recipe for success? Just add Retallick

- Gregor Paul

The Wallabies, hardly short of reasons to rage against the world, must wonder why it is that Brodie Retallick has barely played test rugby in the last 12 months and yet pretty much won the Bledisloe Cup on his own this year.

The kicker for the Wallabies is that Retallick will be back for the third Bledisloe encounter in Yokohama and he’ll be as full of pent-up anger as he was in August.

It’s truly bad luck for the Wallabies that Retallick’s only injury-free window since September last year opened during the Bledisloe Cup, shut straight after and is now open again.

Bad luck because the All Blacks are a different team with Retallick in the second row.

The All Blacks are a good team without him — a much better team with him.

They have played good rugby throughout the last 12 months but their two best performanc­es, or two of their best performanc­es at least, have been this year’s Bledisloe Cup tests.

Maybe some of that was due to the way the Wallabies played: they are an attacking side that takes risks, which suited the All Blacks’ desire to play unstructur­ed rugby and pounce on the counter attack.

Maybe it was partly due to the soft core of the Wallabies — they fell apart in the second half of each test with just a modicum of pressure applied.

But not so much of a maybe is that the Wallabies were hit with the full force of an All Blacks’ side that was inspired by Retallick.

He was the man who seemed to be everywhere in Sydney and then incredibly managed to back-up a world class performanc­e with an even better one a week later in Auckland.

It was the presence of Retallick that enabled the All Blacks to turn up the dial to full volume.

How much the All Blacks have missed Retallick will become clearer at the end of the third Bledisloe in Japan.

He may have not played for the last six weeks but that shouldn’t be any kind of impediment to him making an immediate and obvious impact.

He’s one of those rare athletes who can spend a month or two on the sidelines and come straight back into a test with his engine showing few signs of inefficien­cy.

And he’ll use that engine to make himself available to run hard and straight in the middle of the field.

That’s the trump card in his hand — his ability to clatter into defenders and trample over them, knees and elbows making life awkward and painful.

It may not sound so hard yet it’s intriguing how few locks or loose forwards can’t impose themselves in the same way.

Again, it doesn’t seem that it should be too difficult for big men to go forward in that heavy traffic zone, nor does it immediatel­y feel overly important either in the context of the game.

But it is a crucial part of it all. The All Blacks are all about looking for space, yet the reality of modern test rugby is that it has to be created rather than found and to do that, the journey begins with a collision.

It is Retallick’s ability to set the opposition defence pedalling backwards that makes the All Blacks flow.

He takes them over the gainline, commits more than one defender and presents the ball in a way that buys an extra second of time and a metre of space.

In his absence, neither Sam Whitelock nor Scott Barrett had the same ability to do that and in the two tests against the Springboks, the All Blacks weren’t able to play on the front foot as they wanted.

Instead they were typically knocked over on the gainline, unable to generate a quick recycle and unable to prevent the Boks from being able to consistent­ly generate line speed on defence.

When teams can defend coming forward, they tend to own the game.

No space opened up for the All Blacks and Beauden Barrett had to play with South Africans all over him.

The growing belief the All Blacks are vulnerable to rush defences is not quite true.

They are vulnerable to a rush defence when they don’t have Retallick on the park and the injury gods, surely have had their fun with him and will allow him an uninterrup­ted run to remind the world just how good he is.

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