'Nothing to lose': How Tyrel Lomax revived his All Black career at Ellis Park
All Blacks tighthead prop Tyrel Lomax travelled with the squad to South Africa with his international career stalled but may just kickstarted it dramatically.
The 26-year-old debuted for the All Blacks in 2020 after his first season at the Hurricanes after moving up from Dunedin after a stint at the Highlanders.
He has been primarily used off the bench with previously just three starts in his first 15 tests but missed selection for this year’s original Rugby Championship and Ireland series squads.
After a starring performance in a revamped All Black front row at Ellis Park, Lomax could now feature more prominently as the team prepares for a home stretch of two tests against Argentina.
“I think I’ve come away from [Ellis Park] with a lot of confidence,” Lomax said.
“They are a team I’ve always wanted to play against because of how dominant the forwards are, so to go against them and come away with a win, was huge.”
Angus Ta’avao was given the start in the first test in Mbombela, before Lomax was given a chance at tighthead in the second test.
The Hurricanes prop said he went in with a ‘nothing to lose’ mentality after missing out on the original All Black squad.
“Over those two weeks [in South Africa], I was just there as injury cover,” he said.
“I went in with the mentality that I didn’t have much to lose, I could play really well or really bad and might still end up in the same spot, back with Tasman.
“Obviously dealing with the disappointment of not making the team a couple of months ago, I couldn’t have my head in the sand for too long.
“I tried to get back on the horse and get some good games together.”
The Ellis Park victory was not just big for Lomax personally but the development of the pack as a whole under new forwards coach Jason Ryan.
After conceding multiple maul tries against Ireland the set-piece defence improved to deny the Springboks any rolling maul tries over the two tests.
They also largely stopped the South Africans from winning penalties at the set-piece as a means to get down the field.
“I think it was a huge step forward as a pack,” he said
“Jase [Ryan] talked a few weeks ago about the forward pack getting dented and to go out there and put together that sort of performance, it was good for us.”
The former Crusaders assistant coach has been able to quickly restore some pride in the All Black pack that looked second best against Ireland.
Lomax said that he has been able to form relationships quickly that has got the forwards committed to the cause.
“He is very passionate, he cares a lot about the team and a lot about the players,” he said.
“He’s just a guy you don’t really want to let down.
“Around the set-piece, the Boks were a team that wanted to meet us up front around the set-piece, maul and scrum, lineout so those were the areas that we really worked on.”
Many of the starters from Ellis Park are expected to have first rights on positions in this week’s test against Los Pumas, who are top of the Rugby Championship table after two rounds.
The All Blacks are expecting a physical encounter from the visitors who managed a record 48-17 win over the Wallabies in San Juan.
“They are quite an unorthodox team but one thing they do do well is play with a lot of passion and pride,” Lomax said.
“They will be up for it, they will be physical.”
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There's no easy fix here. From a geography standpoint, South Africa is kind of on an island alone in the rugby world, much like Argentina.
They don't have enough talent to have a top tier domestic league of their own, and it won't support the union financially. Best case you could hope for would be the five extant franchises (including Cheetahs) and perhaps a team from Namimbia. Gives you a 6 team league, that's not enough. Plus again, it's just not financially sustainable either.
At the same time, it's not really great for them to be involved in either the European or the Pacific rugby set up. That said, as bad as the travel is, at least Europe makes more sense from a time zone perspective. I still think it's the least bad option. Also has done wonders for the URC.
I don't think though, that it makes very much sense to have 4 teams from the URC excluded from European qualification. Not to mention, being able to compete in the Champions Cup was a big draw for the South African clubs anyway.
So yeah, I don't really see a change that makes more sense than the less than ideal situation that already exists.
Go to commentsMoriaty refused to play for wales also he’s injured, France’s is being coy about wales, North in the dark but Sam David and jerad are you joking their not good enough
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