Scott Robertson explains the new halves pairing for the All Blacks ahead of France
Scott Robertson and his coaching staff have made five personnel changes to the All Blacks starting team to play France, including a new halves pairing after beating Ireland 23-13 last week.
Form pair Asafo Aumua and Damian McKenzie return to the bench as Codie Taylor and Beauden Barrett return from head knocks, while Cam Roigard, Samipeni Finau, and Sevu Reece have been given a chance to start.
Finau and Reece were forced changes as Sam Cane and Mark Tele'a suffered injuries, but the elevation of Roigard is a chance to see more of the Hurricanes halfback.
Robertson said that Roigard's kicking game tipped selection in his favour, with the No 9 possessing a monster 60m boot from the base that rivals his opposite Antoine Dupont.
"He's been impressive, hasn't he?" Robertson said of Roigard.
"He's taken his opportunity, and we believe this is the match for him, just with the game management, the kicking, there will probably be a fair bit of kicking if the match goes to plan for both teams.
"And you know Beauden comes back in after playing extremely well against England. He's clear with his head knock."
Last week's man of the match Damian McKenzie returns to the bench to make way for Beauden Barrett.
After playing such a pivotal role against Ireland, Robertson said it was a decision they thought long and hard about.
Robertson labelled McKenzie "the world's best" bench player with his ability to come on and "change the game".
"It's great, it's a great discussion to have when you've got two 10s in form, and both good tacticians, you know, both kicking well," Robertson said.
"This the part that worked deeply at and, you know, the one thing about D-Mac is he's probably the best off the bench, we believe, in the world.
"When he comes on, he can change the game, and now he's doing it as a starter. So it's a good discussion to have."
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Nice one John. I agree that defence (along with backfield kick receipt/positioning) remains their biggest issue, but that I did see some small improvements in it despite the scoreline like the additional jackal attempts from guys like tupou and the better linespeed in tight. But, I still see two issues - 1) yes they are jackaling, but as you point out they aren't slowing the ball down. I think some dark arts around committing an extra tackler, choke tackles, or a slower roll away etc could help at times as at the moment its too easy for oppo teams to get quick ball (they miss L wright). Do you have average ruck speed? I feel like teams are pretty happy these days to cop a tackle behind the ad line if they still get quick ball... and 2) I still think the defence wide of the 3-4th forward man out looks leaky and disconnected and if sua'ali'i is going to stay at 13 I think we could see some real pressure through that channel from other teams. The wallabies discipline has improved and so they are giving away less 3 pt opportunities and kicks into their 22 via penalty. Now, they need to be able to force teams to turnover the ball and hold them out. They scramble quite well once a break is made, but they seem to need the break to happen first... Hunter, marika and daugunu were other handy players to put ruck pressure on. Under rennie, they used to counter ruck quite effectively to put pressure on at the b/down as well.
Go to commentsYes, probably why he still annoys me even now
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