Mark Telea stood down for quarter-final after breaching All Blacks ‘protocol’
In a major blow for the All Blacks ahead of their highly anticipated quarter-final with Ireland on Saturday, wing Mark Telea has been stood down for breaching team “protocol.”
Telea was a shining light for the All Blacks on a tough night against France in the tournament opener last month, and has generally been quite solid on the left edge for Ian Foster’s team.
But two days out from New Zealand’s biggest Test in four years, Foster confirmed that the speedy outside back has been dropped for disciplinary reasons.
"Yeah, he breached the protocol. Nothing major but enough to keep him out of selection for this week. He has trained well, happens,” Foster told reporters on Thursday.
"It is what it is. For us, it's pretty clean cut. I don't want to talk about it anymore. We have dealt with it as a team and moved on.
“We believe in what we stand for and that speaks volumes for the team that we make that sort of decision in this sort of week.”
Leicester Fainga’anuku will run out onto Stade de France with the No. 11 on his back. The utility will be full of confidence after scoring a headline-grabbing hat-trick against Uruguay a week ago
The other intriguing decision made by coach Foster is naming Finlay Christie on the bench ahead of rising star Cam Roigard. Roigard earned Player of the Match honours against Namibia but had an off night in the All Blacks’ final pool match.
"We just felt it was horses for courses for this particular game,” Foster continued.
“We think Finlay has an edge defensively. I think there will be a lot of action around the ruck defensively. We have been delighted with Cam's form and in a different type of game, it might have gone slightly differently. But this one here we have gone for that."
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Possibly. But this welsh team is no better than a good URC team at this point.
But a tough match is what is needed for the inexperienced in the group. Building depth etc.
Nobody learns anything pumping a team by 50.
Go to commentsJeepers. That’s a nuclear response given the context.
By all means back the man. But there’s no need to go overboard with calling him the world best coach.
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