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'I know what it's like': How Richie McCaw's 'selfless' leadership rubbed off on a debutant

Brodie Retallick and Richie McCaw. (Photo by Steve Christo/Corbis via Getty Images)

Having logged the most Test caps as captain in rugby history, one might expect Richie McCaw’s leadership skills to be fairly impressive, but rarely do we hear any specific example of his greatness in action.

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James Parsons’ All Blacks debut was against Scotland in 2014 and came under the reign of Richie, the hooker recalled an interaction during the match that left a lasting impression on him.

The story came about on RugbyPassThe Aotearoa Rugby Pod as Parsons and commentary great Grant Nisbet discussed their favourite All Blacks of all time.

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“I got presented my jersey by Richie,” Parsons said. “My first jersey so I’m fairly fond of him and the way I hold him in high regard, for the era I came through.

“I stuffed up a lineout on debut and he was the jumper, and he came up to me at the next scrum and he was like ‘mate, I was a bit slow across the ground’ and so all of a sudden, my debut, I’m like ‘beauty! that’s not my fault, skip’s got me!’ and packed down for the scrum.

“And after the game he goes ‘mate, I know what it’s like’ – this is the level of leadership and thought he had – he’s like ‘I wanted to take the pressure off you but it was overthrown so let’s just have a look at that during the week and rectify it’.

“I just thought that’s amazing, in a pressure situation, Test match, he has the ability to know that I needed that pressure relieved to get the best out of me for the rest of the game. It’s just things like that you’ve got to admire, he is quite a selfless player.”

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McCaw’s career saw him claim two World Cup titles, seven Tri-Nations/Rugby Championship titles and 10 Bledisloe Cup series. For the Crusaders, he won four Super Rugby titles, three of which he was captain for.

Grant Nisbet delivered the name of the player who he believes to be the best he has witnessed in the 300 Test matches he’s commentated.

“I’ve been lucky enough to see some of the great All Blacks, If I’m asked a name like greatest ever All Black who I saw, it’s always Christian Cullen. He was an absolute freak. An absolute freak.”

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Comments

2 Comments
C
Christ 782 days ago

my old brother watched Christian Cullen try against the Wallabies after catching a pass from Zinzan Brooke. my brother said that guy is a freak, so, agreed with Grant Nisbet

p
peter_qld 784 days ago

He was a thinking man's Captain. In Carter's book released around 8 years ago, Carter explained what Richie did after losing the 2007 WRC. He came up with what he wanted from the players, presented it to the older leadership group and got their agreeance. Then to the whole team and got them to agree. One of the things he put a stop to was the drinking culture. That could not have been easy. He pushed the team to a level of personal professionalism that few Captains ever do and in so doing led by example.

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Soliloquin 1 hour ago
Competing interests and rotated squads: What the 'player welfare summer' is really telling us

I don’t know the financial story behind the changes that were implemented, but I guess clubs started to lose money, Mourad Boudjellal won it all with Toulon, got tired and wanted to invest in football , the French national team was at its lowest with the QF humiliation in 2015 and the FFR needed to transform the model where no French talent could thrive. Interestingly enough, the JIFF rule came in during the 2009/2010 season, so before the Toulon dynasty, but it was only 40% of the players that to be from trained in French academies. But the crops came a few years later, when they passed it at the current level of 70%.

Again, I’m not a huge fan of under 18 players being scouted and signed. I’d rather have French clubs create sub-academies in French territories like Wallis and Futuna, New Caledonia and other places that are culturally closer to RU and geographically closer to rugby lands. Mauvaka, Moefana, Taofifenua bros, Tolofua bros, Falatea - they all came to mainland after starting their rugby adventure back home.

They’re French, they come from economically struggling areas, and rugby can help locally, instead of lumping foreign talents.

And even though many national teams benefit from their players training and playing in France, there are cases where they could avoid trying to get them in the French national team (Tatafu).

In other cases, I feel less shame when the country doesn’t believe in the player like in Meafou’s case.

And there are players that never consider switching to the French national team like Niniashvili, Merckler or even Capuozzo, who is French and doesn’t really speak Italian.

We’ll see with Jacques Willis 🥲


But hey, it’s nothing new to Australia and NZ with PI!

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