Friday, August 13, 2010

All Blacks, on the brink of greatness

All Blacks, on the brink of greatness
By TOBY ROBSON in Christchurch - The Dominion Post
Last updated 05:00 09/08/2010

Photosport
CUP OF JOY: The All Blacks have the Bledisloe Cup for company yet again as they celebrate their 13th successive test win amid increasing evidence that the team is building something special.
Exhausted but not quite fulfilled, and with Johannesburg looming, the All Blacks' face an acid test, having switched to southpaw to slug Australia into submission.
The outward satisfaction of All Blacks coach Graham Henry and his players after Saturday's 20-10 win at AMI Stadium was only in part because the All Blacks had stretched their Bledisloe Cup domination to seven years.
It was also because they had proven their ability to change tactics, soak up pressure and still win with wriggle room against a desperate opponent.
They are the ingredients that were missing in Cardiff three years ago, but which have risen from the ashes under skipper Richie McCaw.
Wallabies coach Robbie Deans wondered out loud yesterday if his side had met "one of the great" All Blacks sides.
There is growing evidence to support such a view and if McCaw's side can seal the Tri-Nations in front of 94,000 South Africans at Soccer City in a fortnight, it will be indisputable.
New Zealand rugby fans started the year looking for evidence of progress after being humbled by the Springboks last season.
They got a rugby revolution. And now they are getting conclusive proof that Henry and McCaw are building something special.
"There have been some very good All Blacks teams and I wouldn't want to belittle sides that I've been with in the past," Henry said. "But this side's very tight as people and the leaders are maturing. Richie had his 50th game as captain last night – that's a huge number of games and he's playing out of his skin."
Add Conrad Smith, Dan Carter, Brad Thorn, Keven Mealamu and Mils Muliaina and the leadership group has 408 test caps between them.
"They have matured together and become very close as people," Henry said. "When you get close as people you fight for each other and that's what they did last night."
Wayne Smith has taken the defensive reins this season and a wall of co-ordinated and committed tacklers was at the heart of the 13th straight test win.
But Carter and McCaw continued to be the central cogs. Outside the increasingly confident play of Piri Weepu, Carter was the conductor at first-five in contrast to the struggling Matt Giteau. Carter scaled back his side's attacking tempo to avoid Deans' well-laid defensive trap for the All Blacks' running game in the second spell.
"They defended a lot flatter because of the way we played last week. They only had one guy parked out in the back field, so that gave us the opportunity to kick more for territory," Carter said.
"We'll get a lot of self-belief out of this game. It's good to know we can win these tight encounters."
McCaw has been everywhere this season, relishing the freedom of not having to sacrifice his limbs in search of a turnover at every ruck.
He has led his side to new heights and his deputies have followed. Muliaina is in the midst of possibly his best season in black and wing Joe Rokocoko had his best test of the year in Christchurch.
They are among the six players in the squad who were in the side that lifted the Bledisloe from Australia in 2003.

Their challenge now is whether there is anything left in the tank.
Henry admitted seven tests in nine weeks had taken its toll. The players have little time to recover, meeting in Sydney on Friday and flying to the republic a day later in the buildup to the Springboks and a chance to test Deans' hunch.

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