Rugby: Fekitoa fits in on centre stage

All Black centre Malakai Fekitoa showed he is at home at test level with his performance against...
All Black centre Malakai Fekitoa showed he is at home at test level with his performance against England last night. REUTERS/Nigel Marple
After the relative drought of the past fortnight, the points came in a first-half torrent against England last night.

So did the good news for Steve Hansen. A successful return for Kieran Read after the concussion suffered on this very pitch in Hamilton a couple of months ago? Check. Julian Savea carrying on his impersonation of a wrecking ball, albeit one with the finest of touches, steel fists in the proverbial velvet gloves? Check again. Ben Smith doing what Ben Smith does these days. Same answer.

Among the best of the best for Hansen, though, as he watched his men beat a very good England team to finish the series on the best of notes, would be the performance of Malakai Fekitoa, a player with immense promise, who had a taste of test rugby in Auckland a couple of weeks ago and who last night at Waikato Stadium showed he is at home at this level.

That's not always a given. As Hansen is fond of saying, not everyone is comfortable at the highest echelon, no matter their talent. The pressure can take its toll on even the most gifted.

Savea will rightly earn praise for continuing his extraordinary try-scoring record in tests -- 23 tries in 22 outings, including eight in four tests against England -- and so will halfback Aaron Smith for his all-round excellence, but Fekitoa deserves plaudits for helping to turn what was previously a suffocating white blanket of a defence in a tired and threadbare sheet of a thing.

"I was happy, I was nervous but I was a bit stressed as well," he said afterwards. "There was plenty of information to take in and ... Manu [Tuilagi] -- he's 110kg..."

His opposite is a powerhouse, but Fekitoa came out on top.

"I thought he did the basics really, really well, particularly in the first 30-40 minutes," assistant coach Ian Foster said. "He ran good, hard lines and held the attention of the defence. He might have passed a couple of times but carried instead, but he can be very pleased."

This was always going to be a difficult test for England and at one stage it looking like being a rout. They responded after the break in a way Ireland couldn't manage at this same stage on the same ground two years ago, but after scoring four tries -- and it should have been six -- in the first half, the All Blacks were also guilty of a slight mental shift.

That will leave Hansen with a "work-on" for his troops as he prepares for the first Rugby Championship match against Australia in Sydney on August 16. That, and a wobbly scrum in the final quarter, but in the 22-year-old Highlanders midfielder Fekitoa, who was replaced after 65 minutes, Hansen has a success story.

The All Blacks coach has found the most elegant of solutions for Conrad Smith's back-up, one who carries more of an attacking threat than the veteran centre and one which leaves Ben Smith where he belongs -- in the back three. His future looks bright.

- Patrick McKendry of APNZ

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