Deja Vu with the All Blacks

The daggers are drawn again. Inevitably, after such an embarrassing All Blacks loss to a lowly-rated French team, issues were bound to flare up between the Cheerleaders and the Cynics.

Embarrasing, it certainly was. When an All Black team is paying just $1.11 to win and their opposition is at $6.00, the men in black losing has to be a fairly humiliating experience.

In the name of honesty and transparency, anybody who has paid me the respect of reading a blog or two of mine after the last World Cup knows that I was highly critical and cynical of the reappointment of Henry and co.

Having said that, at this stage last year, I also said that it was time for all New Zealand fans to come together, put differences aside and support Henry, Hansen and Smith in their endeavours.

And support them I did and took delight in our heroes securing the Tri-Nations title and the Bledisloe Cup yet again last year.

Which is why I can genuinely say that I'm as surprised as anybody that Henry and co. have reverted back to some of their bizarre and supposedly buried ways of the past.


Like selecting an All Blacks XV that took the field at Carisbrook containing four young men playing out of their Super 14 positions.

Corey Jane, Isaia Toeava, Liam Messam and Adam Thomson all started in jersey numbers they have scarcely worn all season.

The worst of this nonsense was putting Thomson, an out and out blindside flanker at openside. Especially given that it was Richie McCaw himself who said that he saw Tanearu Latimer as his obvious replacement when injury struck.

On Saturday afternoon, before the test commenced, Josh Kronfeld labelled the decision to play Thomson at No. 7 as "weird."

After the test, Laurie Mains said the move was "one of Graham Henry's more staggering mistakes and showed a distinct lack of judgement."

The questions must be asked. Why on earth have our three wise men reverted back to expecting certain new All Blacks to play at their best in unfamiliar positions?


Why on earth hasn't history taught them that playing the next best player in a certain position is a rule that makes the most sense.

I'm expecting the cheerleaders to tell me that injury ensured Henry and co. had no choice and that Corey Jane, for example, had an impressive game.

So what? So one out of four mistakes sort of worked out OK this time.

I'm also expecting the cheerleaders to repeat the excuse-making nonsense that Steve Hansen spouted after the game.

"That was a typical, scratchy, first-up All Blacks performance," said Steve. "They need time to get the combinations up to speed."

Really Steve? So it would also be perfectly reasonable and expected to have either Mal Meninga or Craig Bellamy come up with the same excuse if the Maroons or the Blues played as poorly in a first State of Origin game.


Hell will have truly frozen over before you'd hear such clap-trap from both these men.

And why couldn't the French trot out a similar excuse, given they'd flown halfway around the world?

Of course, I know that one loss needn't necessarily indicate a sad international season ahead for the All Blacks. And nor should the odd loss mean despair should prevail.

What does alarm me however is that our coaches have shown such clear signs of re-introducing some of the destructive strategies from two years ago.

Finally, I again emphasise that so much of this obvious lack of depth in certain positions would be solved if all New Zealanders playing overseas were available for test rugby.

For example, Nick Evans being made available would instantly relegate Stephen Donald to the provincial player he is and nothing more.

Your views are more than welcome.

YOUR COMMENTS

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sioofanoa - posted Jun 14 05:28 pm
Here is a fact, Henry & co. have said for so many times that they are picking players who are on formed during the super 14 competition. See most of the ab are aucklander which they are not on form this year, they believed that McA will do the job for us after 3 months of no came time. See he gave the French team a bonus.
oldblack15 - posted Jun 14 05:55 pm
at least we are not peaking between worldcups. to stay on top maybe new things are required. always looking for new ideas. some work and some flop after using them on the field. our under20s are in the semis against aussie so depth is coming through. one game does not maketh the man, it is the sum of them all.players should be able to secret ballot management performance wise.
andy_knows - posted Jun 14 06:01 pm
Sitting in the stand at the match I listened to everyone around me go from cheering to near silence, except for the occasional AB chant. Most of us were stunned I think. Not at the lack of skill that we saw in the team but at the tactics employed by Mr Henry yet again. Hats off to the french team and I was one who stood up and applauded them as I felt they really taught us a lesson yet again.
I know we will bounce back but surely with the skill available and the experience this shouldn't ha
wayneandteena@xtra.co.nz - posted Jun 14 06:45 pm
Henry and Tew are too locked in thier old ways. The rightful coach for the ABs is coaching AUSTRALIA ! And I agree blood the younger guys into the team, but in their rightful positions.
booyaah2001 - posted Jun 14 07:40 pm
u guys are all the same after last years perfomance no one said shit because we were winning, and thats good, we lose one game and the knives are out, I will save my opinions till after the tri nations and thats where the true tests will be in terms of depth and perfomance
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