2019 Rugby Championship
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My guess is Braydon Ennor must be impressing!
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Would love to see Nanai in the mix
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@booboo said in 2019 Rugby Championship:
Would love to see Nanai in the mix
Why? He's heading overseas. He's good but not so good that he will force himself into a farewell RWC squad.
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@Billy-Tell said in 2019 Rugby Championship:
@booboo said in 2019 Rugby Championship:
Would love to see Nanai in the mix
Why? He's heading overseas. He's good but not so good that he will force himself into a farewell RWC squad.
You'd think he has an out clause
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I think he’s re-found the form he needed to show about 2 years ago (thanks Tana!), so it’s probably too late for him to really get established before he runs out of gas; there are too many really good young outsides coming. I know he’s only 25, but most top out at 27, so that’s not much time; he’d be unlikely for the next RWC, for example.
That’s a shame for the Blues as he is a key piece of their puzzle right now. If I were him, I’d go get paid.
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Oh so let's assume that's the crusaders, who's your 23?
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- Tu’inukuafe
- Coles
- Laulala
- Retallick
- Tuipolotu
- Squire? If not frizell
- Cane
- Savea
- Smith
- Barrett
- Ioane
- Laumape
- ALB
- Bridge
- Barrett (assuming bender is injured still)
- Harris
- Moli
- Tuugafasi
- Hemopo
- Ioane
- Perenara
- Ioane / Plummer / whoever tf is playing well
- Nonu / SBW
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@Yeahtheboys 14 not Bridge (Crusaders)
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@Yeahtheboys seems reasonable, tho SBW will start of fit imo. Experience and all that. It's not as cut and dried as first reading, some will miss test, so maybe based on workload
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@Yeahtheboys I don't think any Blues players will be available for this game...
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@Yeahtheboys said in 2019 Rugby Championship:
Tu’inukuafe
I think the coaches will have him doing laps.
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Oh ye shit idk who at 14
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@Yeahtheboys Naholo
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@KiwiMurph rather not
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All Blacks coach Steve Hansen has lifted the handbrake on the idea of Scott Barrett being selected as a specialist No 6 for the World Cup. Public debate as to whether lock Barrett, who switched to the side of the scrum during the Crusaders' loss to the Chiefs in Suva on Saturday night, would better serve his country as a blindside flanker continues to gain heat ahead of the global tournament in Japan. Hansen remains unconvinced. He's well aware of those conversations, but says the All Blacks selectors are unlikely to be swayed from the view that Barrett is first and foremost a lock.
Barrett, who has made appearances on the blindside against England and South Africa in recent seasons, would be a popular choice if the selectors elected to start there in the Rugby Championship. But it seems that isn't likely to happen. Hansen still believes he's best suited to grafting away in the dark pit of the scrum.
"I think so, yeah," Hansen said. "That's where we believe his career is. Against those big sides, where you don't have hard and fast speedy games, he can definitely play there (at No 6). "The game in Twickenham (against England) he was outstanding and the game in North Harbour (against South Africa), which was a faster game but against a big pack he was outstanding. "Would you want to play him there if you were playing someone who had two sevens playing? Not sure. They are good conundrums we have got to solve."
In 2015 the All Blacks named just three specialist locks - Sam Whitelock, Brodie Retallick and Luke Romano - in their World Cup squad. If the selectors follow that template, Whitelock, Retallick and Barrett are expected to be invited to go to to Japan. If they take four, Patrick Tuipulotu will be among the front runners to fill the final vacancy. Hansen said Barrett can still cover lock and No 6, even if the selectors want just three second rowers: "He can still be a swingman, even if you take three (locks). That is one of the key things we have to sort out; whether we take four or we take three."
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The return of openside flanker Sam Cane, who was outstanding in the 40-27 win over the Crusaders and has clearly made a full recovery from his broken neck, has been welcomed by the selectors. So, too, has the form of Ardie Savea for the Hurricanes. Does putting them on the park as dual flankers appeal to Hansen? No way. However, he said there was a chance Savea could pack down at No 8 while Cane remained on the openside. "There's no chance of Sammy and Ardie playing six and seven, no. There might be a chance for them to play seven and eight."