Gulf News

All Blacks coach happy with new generation

TRIUMPH A HUGE CONFIDENCE BOOST FOR ALL BLACKS

- BY ALARIC GOMES Chief Reporter

All Blacks Sevens coach Clark Laidlaw was left reflecting on the positives after an under-par New Zealand opened the World Rugby HSBC Sevens Series with a win at The Sevens Stadium on Saturday.

Winners of the Dubai Sevens on six previous occasions from 11 appearance­s here, the All Blacks had to dig in deep without the services of skipper Scott Curry, Akuila Rokolisoa, Regan Ware and Sam Dickson en route to a 21-5 win against the USA. However, the turning moment was their 7-5 semi-final win against England earlier in the evening. “That win [against England] was a huge confidence boost to a squad that suddenly saw the younger players mature in an instance,” Laidlaw told media after the final.

“There are heaps of positives to take from here on. It’s just the way we played and the way the younger players put their hands up to bring us to this place is so huge. There is so much that can be done with this squad. It’s hugely exciting,” he added.

But with injuries to some of his key players, Laidlaw’s focus is now to assemble a squad in time for the Cape Town Sevens to be held on December 8-9. “The first thing before us is to see how many players we can get back on their feet in the next 48 hours. We have to recover and find some players even if it means some of the younger ones just coming out of school back home. It all starts all over again and the main thing is we need to keep on with this consistenc­y,” the coach remarked.

“We are not going to go ahead of ourselves, but just and find the correct rhythm as the season goes on. It is important that the boys try and spend some time together and enjoy each others’ company. There is huge amount of firepower back home and I am here to get a group assembled. It’s exciting times ahead for sure,” Laidlaw reflected.

Guts and determinat­ion

New Zealand has won the World Rugby Sevens Series a record 12 times, while no other country has won more than twice. The 2019 World Rugby HSBC Sevens Series acts as a qualifying round to determine the top four teams to qualify for the 2020 Tokyo Olympics.

“This win is up there with the World Cup and the Commonweal­th Games. To be without four main players and yet win shows some guts and determinat­ion from the boys. We spend a lot of time on the ‘culture’ and as a group. This may sound a bit cliché but each one knows what it means to play for this team,” Laidlaw observed.

“Once the injured return, it certainly doesn’t mean we will win with those players. We had a much better team last year and we still lost. But it’s just that we have to grab those opportunit­ies when they come along,” he added.

USA coach Michael Friday was left ruing a lost opportunit­y of upsetting the All Blacks.

“That’s the nature of the game. We played to the setpiece so that we could take one of them out but they boxed very clever and we couldn’t get past that sort of defence,” Friday said. “At crucial times, they slowed it down even more and that’s their smartness. That’s the Kiwi way. All credit to their team.”

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 ?? Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News ?? Lukarisito­ne James Ng Shiu of New Zealand (black) battles with Danny Barrett of USA during the Dubai Rugby Sevens men’s final at the Sevens on Saturday.
Antonin Kélian Kallouche/Gulf News Lukarisito­ne James Ng Shiu of New Zealand (black) battles with Danny Barrett of USA during the Dubai Rugby Sevens men’s final at the Sevens on Saturday.

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