The Scotsman

Scottish-born scrum-half Christie named in All Blacks squad

- By GRAHAM BEAN

A Scottish-born scrum-half has been named in the All Blacks squad.

Finlay Christie, who hails from the Borders but whose family emigrated to New Zealand when he was a child, has

been selected for the Tests against Fiji and Tonga.

It's a reward for the 25-yearold’s recent form for Blues but, from a Scottish perspectiv­e, there will be a nagging sense of his having slipped through the net. Born at Borders General Hospital near Melrose and raised in Peebles before the family emigrated to New Zealand when he was seven, Christie has forged an impressive profession­al career in the world’s premier rugby nation.

On Saturday, he was part of the Blues side which won their first Super Rugby title in 18 years, beating the Highlander­s 23-15 in the final of the trans-tasman tournament.

He is now in line to make his All Blacks debut next month when New Zealand play against Tonga on 3 July, then two Tests against Fiji, on 10 and

17 July. Asked last year about the possibilit­y of one day playing for Scotland, Christie said “never say never” in an interview with The Scotsman.

However, that ship would now appear to have sailed.

The Christie family moved from Scotland to Pukekohe in south Auckland and Finlay and his older brother Gregor both blossomed athletical­ly, Finlay representi­ng New Zealand at gymnastics before focusing on rugby. Gregor, also a scrum-half, later returned to Scotland to play for Currie Chieftains.

Finlay Christie is one of four uncapped players in the 36-man New Zealand squad named by head coach Ian Foster. The others are Ethan de Groot, Quinn Tupaea and

Ethan Blackadder. The latter is the son of the former Edinburgh and All Blacks captain, Todd Blackadder, who also enjoyed a spell coaching in Scotland with the capital club.

The series against Tonga and Fiji will take place on home soil and kicks off a busy season for the All Blacks who could play up to 15 Test matches.

“We saw this as a great opportunit­y to pick a squad of 36,” said Foster. “We’ll need that sort of number to get through this year. Our goal is to be No1 in the world. That's what we want. And everything we do is about chasing that."

 ??  ?? 0 Finlay Christie emigrated to New Zealand as a child
0 Finlay Christie emigrated to New Zealand as a child

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