Foster hands Fainga'anuku and Roigard clear objectives to secure finals minutes
Round five offers fringe players one final opportunity to make their claim for a spot in the matchday 23 before the Rugby World Cup quarter-finals kick off next weekend in Marseille.
For the All Blacks, there are a number of players who have a chance to lock down bench roles, making for a highly charged matchup with an impressive Uruguay outfit.
While much of the starting XV can be considered set, there is some wriggle room on the All Blacks bench. Two men vying for their spot in the reserves are halfback Cam Roigard and winger Leicester Fainga'anuku.
Both young players have enjoyed sensational form in 2023's Super Rugby Pacific, building on impressive showings for the All Blacks XV in 2022.
Roigard has been named to start against Los Teros, with halfback competition Finlay Christie in the gameday reserves.
If the All Blacks are to win with a bonus point and secure their quarter-final birth, the Uruguay Test will be the final audition for the two in the role of Aaron Smith's backup.
"I want to see him do what he is good at," head coach Ian Foster said of Roigard. "He brings an edge to the running game, he's a threat and I want him to stick with that.
"His left-foot kicking is a real asset for us. We haven't got a lot of left-footers in our inside backs, so that's a bonus.
"One thing I do want him to do is to improve the accuracy of his pass. When he's been coming on, he's probably been rushing that aspect of his game a little bit. So this is a chance for him to settle in the game and get that right and show that that can be a massive strength for him as well."
For Fainga'anuku, the coach revealed it would be an opportunity for the blockbusting runner to show his chops across the backline.
While the 23-year-old usually resides on the left wing and has been named to start there, he has donned the 13 jersey on occasion and may well be shifted into the midfield against Uruguay.
It's a crucial revelation as midfield cover is the essential component of the New Zealand bench, given both their starting midfielders can cover the wings.
So far, Anton Lienert-Brown has been the front-runner for the impact role, and while Fainga'anuku has also appeared off the bench, Damian McKenzie's late push to be involved in the matchday 23 could push one of the two out of the quarter-final team.
"Leicester is going to cover 12 and 13," Foster said. "Obviously, Davey (Havili) would have been in there, he's out. It's something that if he does well, it gives us a great option.
"The question before was how settled are we in the 23, well he's got something to play for."
Fainga'anuku says he's been training to be ready for any challenge in any position.
"It's a position that I've constantly been building through Super Rugby and obviously here, now an opportunity at international level.
"For me, it's been consistently covering that week-in, week-out, make sure I've got the toolbox to be able to adjust my game when I do get the opportunity to slip in. For me, I am happy in any spot in the backline."
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Generally disagree with what? The possibility that they would get whitewashed, or the idea they shouldn't gain access until they're good enough?
I think the first is a fairly irrelevant view, decide on the second and then worry about the first. Personally I'd have had them in a third lvl comp with all the bottom dwellers of the leagues. I liked the idea of those league clubs resting their best players, and so being able to lift their standards in the league, though, so not against the idea that T2 sides go straight into Challenge Cup, but that will be a higher level with smaller comps and I think a bit too much for them (not having followed any of their games/performances mind you).
fl's idea, if I can speak for him to speed things up, was for it to be semifinalists first, Champions Cup (any that somehow didn't make a league semi), then Challenge's semi finalists (which would most certainly have been outside their league semi's you'd think), then perhaps the quarter finalists of each in the same manner. I don't think he was suggesting whoever next performed best in Europe but didn't make those knockouts (like those round of 16 losers), I doubt that would ever happen.
The problem I mainly saw with his idea (much the same as you see, that league finish is a better indicator) is that you could have one of the best candidates lose in the quarters to the eventual champions, and so miss out for someone who got an easier ride, and also finished lower in the league, perhaps in their own league, and who you beat everytime.
Go to commentsIt was an odd tournament full of sides cobbled together and given strange names..as well as clearly national sides. It was for this reason hard to follow.
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