All Black winger joining South Sydney Rabbitohs for new opportunity

Blues and All Blacks winger Caleb Clarke is taking an unusual path ahead of next season's Super Rugby Pacific season by linking with the South Sydney Rabbitohs NRL club.
The 24-year-old will train with the Rabbitohs in January as he looks to reclaim the form that saw him break into the All Blacks in 2020.
His friendship with NRL superstar Latrell Mitchell is part of the motivation to learn from the other rugby code, with Clarke hopeful the experience will boost his game.
“I've always been a Rabbitohs fan and thought, in my time off before I join the Blues campaign, I can look to learn off the NRL boys,” Clarke told Newshub.
“After a year that didn't go as well as I hoped for, I want to do something different in terms of preparation for 2024.
"Being around an environment with people I look up to and can learn from can bring the edge I want to get and take into this new season."
Clarke started the first Test of the year for the All Blacks against Los Pumas in Argentina but found himself out of the starting side as Blues teammate Mark Telea cemented himself as a left wing.
Telea's blistering form was too much for the selectors to ignore and the slippery Blues' winger was one of the All Blacks' best.
Clarke did see action in the pool stages, starting against Namibia and featured off the bench against Uruguay.
Since his debut in 2020, Clarke has experimented with a Sevens switch for the 2021 Tokyo Olympics but returned with the Blues to continue his career in 15s.
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Go to commentsYes, but by now you must realize you don’t hold common opinions, let alone can think for New Zealand rugby’s best interests.
I don’t think that should come into it, it’s a business decision when it comes down to it. First though, it hasn’t passed the “is it OK to do?” has it.
That view would be an oxymoron in their (most peoples) eyes.
I hadn’t been expecting anything, but that’s likely because if it was in the spotlight to expect something, I would have expected the status quo to come out on top like every other time.
Isn’t that being determined now in conjunctin with World Rugby/every other union?
It could be their is reason to change in that time frame, but why on Nations League years? More pointedly, shouldn’t it be every year?
I could probably easily get out of the idea these sorts of days aren’t for sport/fun to take center stage. It’s a mentality I don’t think holds everywhere already. But I’m happy to follow what those that really do care about the day (never been a dawn service person) think.
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