All the focus might be on the Barbarians stars and Richie
McCaw, but a fair few All Blacks will be quelling test
match-like nerves as they run onto Twickenham for Sunday's
tour finale.
At least half the All Blacks side have points to prove at the
end of what the coaches dubbed a six-week "selection tour".
For first five-eighth Stephen Donald and tighthead prop John
Afoa, it's their first start of the tour after several bench
cameos while others have really only had the
scrum-and-kickfest against Italy to show their wares.
For the likes of Donald, Brendon Leonard, Rodney So'oialo,
Liam Messam, Jason Eaton and Afoa, it's a chance to ensure
the red pen doesn't hover over their names before the summer
break.
So'oialo, 30, is the interesting figure in the side, with the
62-test All Black having been clearly overtaken by Kieran
Read in the No 8 pecking order after a frustrating year.
A heavy workload and a pesky neck injury saw him below his
best, but the Wellingtonian vowed he would fight all the way
to retain his black jersey next year.
"It is a good battle. It's easy to get into a team but to
stay there is bloody hard. A true test of someone's character
is how well you can bounce back from things," So'oialo said.
"I've done that many times. I'll simply work hard to come
back next year and play really well in Super 14."The man who
captained the All Blacks four times last year in McCaw's
absence, and also led them against Italy, admitted fatigue
got to him after the Super 14 and he would enjoy his
four-week break at tour's end.
"It's one thing I didn't do that well this year, I wasn't
smart on the body. I've been abusing it for many years for
the All Blacks and I probably didn't listen to it well
enough."The clear advantage the All Blacks have over the
Barbarians - dominated by top Springboks and Wallabies - is
the fact the second-stringers trained together for much of
the six-week tour.
The Victor Matfield-captained Barbarians assembled on Sunday,
enjoyed some social sessions and negotiated a first training
that coach Nick Mallett labelled "a shambles".
Still, with a big pack and the class of Fourie du Preez, Matt
Giteau and wingers Bryan Habana and 60-test All Black Joe
Rokocoko, it's no stroll. A year ago the Baabaas, including
McCaw, ran the Wallabies to 18-11 at Wembley.
Donald will marshal the All Blacks' backline before making
way for Mike Delany at halftime or soon after.
He was determined to make it count after just 26 minutes in
three tests off the bench.
"It's a Barbarians game but we're pretty focused on going out
and doing the job. We'll try to be entertaining but we've got
to finish this tour right," Donald said.
"It's up to us to go out and look after ourselves and it's up
to them to play how they want to play."The scrum will also be
under scrutiny, with Afoa heeding coach Graham Henry's advice
to improve his efforts and Wyatt Crockett keen to make up for
his Milan nightmare.
Afoa said a heart-to-heart with Henry when he was dropped for
the Cardiff test was a wakeup call.
"It was a real shock to the system. We and had a chat and he
gave me things to work on and I've been doing that the last
four weeks," Afoa said.
"He told me I've got everything, I can pass, a good runner
with the ball, but my scrums can wobble a little bit, up and
down, so we just really worked on getting good scrums back to
back."
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