'Took a little while': Foster's verdict on All Black debutants Stevenson and Finau
It was a baptism of fire for Ian Foster's new look All Blacks which included two new debutants in a heavily changed line-up for Bledisloe II in Dunedin.
The home side got off to the worst possible start as the Wallabies exploded out of the blocks with a rapid start, scoring inside three minutes through winger Marika Koroibete.
The fired up Australians didn't stop there, with barnstorming loose forward Tom Hooper crashing over in the same corner minutes later to extend the lead to 14-0.
Debutant Shaun Stevenson was under fire with two tries conceded down his channel while new flanker Samipeni Finau was also feeling the heat, lacking accuracy around the breakdown giving away two penalties in the first half.
All Blacks head coach Ian Foster was proud of the way the pair bounced back in the second half, with each of them playing an important part in the 23-20 comeback win.
"I thought some of the new guys played better in the second half and that's a good sign too," Ian Foster said of his new players.
"Sometimes when you come into a Test match you can do everything that you are good at and it shines, this one you had to work hard.
"I thought they took a little while to adjust to the pace of the game.
"As the game unfolded they got more involved and we started to see what they could contribute."
In the game of two halves, Stevenson's afternoon immediately looked a little brighter as he scored the All Blacks first try of the afternoon just three minutes in the second forty.
Bursting onto a Damian McKenzie's cutout pass, he powered through the cover tackle of Andrew Kellaway and contorted through the next man Koroibete to finish in the corner.
Samipeni Finau began to make an impact with his carry game as the game wore on, creating front foot ball for the All Blacks. He powered through four Wallabies defenders to score the go-ahead try in the 64th minute.
"Particularly Samipeni, he came back. He finished over the top of them a little bit, which was nice to see," Foster said.
Veteran All Blacks halfback Aaron Smith credited the debutants with adding something to a 'special' performance which although he said was 'ugly' at times, is the kind of game that he will remember.
After wrapping up the campaign with four wins from four, each player will be waiting for the call on Monday as the World Cup squad is announced.
"I thought the new boys really added something tonight," Smith said.
"Unreal, I'm really happy for them. That's the beauty of our squad, the next man up has to do a job.
"It was an amazing Rugby Championship, a special one. Special for our team.
"We were looking to make changes from last year, and we are taking some positive steps.
"We are definitely not the finished product. I think we are all waiting for Monday night now."
Ian Foster's bold selection for the second Bledisloe Test was done with the bigger picture in mind.
The All Blacks head coach explained his reasoning in his post-match press conference which helped the team get 'World Cup ready'.
"The overall objective was to win this Test but also get the squad to the starting line of the World Cup," Foster said.
"If we didn't do this game the way we did, the danger was we would've had a number of players in a World Cup squad that hadn't played serious Test match for eight to nine weeks.
"We knew what we were doing."
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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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