Sonny Bill Williams' debut for the All Blacks on November 6th, 2010 made headlines for a number of reasons. The 25-year-old was yet to play a single game of Super Rugby, having played just one season of rugby union for Canterbury at NPC level, making the Rugby League convert just the fourth player to play for the All Blacks with no Super Rugby experience.
To fans' surprise, not only was Williams named in the 23 to start the All Blacks' opening match of the Northern Tour, he was handed the 13 jersey to partner Ma'a Nonu, making for the heaviest All Blacks midfield partnership ever.
The 26-16 victory also provided maiden Test starts for Sam Whitelock and Alby Matthewson, while Nonu and Williams were joined in the backline by a lethal lineup of Dan Carter, Hosea Gear, Joe Rokocoko and Mils Muliaina.
Williams' performance displayed hints of the physicality the former NRL star had become known for, delivering a number of offloads through the tackle of multiple defenders, enough to impress some fans while others remained sceptical of the newcomer's all-around game.
Williams' first touch of the match came within the opening minute, receiving a poor pass from Mils Muliaina as the fullback was rushed by the English defence, Sonny Bill was able to collect the ball and make a few meters with a leg drive aided by Ma'a Nonu and Brad Thorn.
The centre's next touch came with the All Blacks backline in motion, Williams found himself running the sideline and cutting infield to receive the drop-off pass from Joe Rokocoko, engaging two defenders before finding Nonu inside him and the ball was kept alive with more meters gained.
Impressively, Williams backed his instincts around the breakdown, a difficult element of the game to navigate coming from Rugby League. The Aucklander's physicality and willingness to swoop on loose balls saw him clean up some untidy rucks and retain possession for his team.
Williams' big highlight came in the 16th minute, as he received the ball at halfway, spotted a gap and burst into it, again engaging multiple defenders and getting the offload away to a rampaging Jerome Kaino who in turn delivered a wide ball to Hosea Gear who's pace ensured the try was scored in the corner.
Criticism of the debutant mainly mentioned his skillset as a distributor, noting an unwillingness to pass unless it was an offload while his history of dangerous tackles remained a concern.
The match alone wasn't enough to convince All Blacks coach Sir Graham Henry of Williams' readiness for the Test arena.
"They created a bit, didn't they? The first try was from a Sonny Bill break but I think the jury's still out," he said. "I don't think he'll be entirely happy with his game but he'll be better for the experience.
"What else would you expect? His first game, in front of 82,000 at Twickenham, is a pretty big ask. I'm pretty happy with what he displayed."
Williams' assessment of the match was well aligned with that of his coach, admitting his performance had some highs and lows and hoping for another shot in the black jersey to apply the learnings and make his mark on the match.
"I spent the few hours after the game feeling proud of myself for accomplishing what I said I wanted to do when I came across to rugby," he said. "But I was disappointed with my own game and I am looking for a bit more game time to improve on my performance.
"I pride myself on my work rate and the intensity was a huge step up from the national competition at home in New Zealand. It was a rollercoaster out there. I did a couple of good things and a couple of bad things. The biggest thing for me is feeling like you let the boys down.
"The only way you will improve as a player was through game time. We have class players but hopefully, I will get another shot. Hopefully, I can stay in that 22, keep learning and it will be like a snowball effect, so I can start expressing myself a lot more. If I do get another shot I will back myself a lot more."
Henry backed his man and Williams started in the 12 jersey the following week at Murrayfield, a 49-3 victory where Sonny Bill earned man of the match with his offload game setting up three of the seven tries.
Watch Williams' debut performance
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I'm honestly not so sure. I initially thought just reckless mainly because no player should be capable of doing that intentionally.
There's a strong argument that he's working both the eyes. It's his left hand he uses which is furthest from the ball he's contesting. His fingers are also clenched which I don't think is a natural way to try and rip a ball.
Go to comments"I see those teams, SA in particular, as only improving their performances in EPCR."
well, its gone the opposite direction so far!
"I don't like your model that requires them to reach Semi Final level in the Challenge trophy, given the bottleneck that will be URC with 16 teams playing for only 4 places."
my model would have given SA 3 spots in a 16 team CC this year, which is the same number as they have in the 24 team version that is actually taking place. But yes, if they keep getting worse it would get harder for them to get places. It would also get harder for you to argue that they deserve places though!
"I suggest by giving say Englands two semi finalist first seeds of the english teams, then the next best 4 on the league table as much better (it catches improving teams faster)."
interesting argument, but it doesn't always go that way. Gloucester are improving, but they improved in cup competitions before league fixtures started going their way. The same is true of Sharks, and the same was true of la Rochelle. I think maybe this is just an argument for allowing more teams to qualify via the challenge cup!
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