Back to drawing board for defeated All Blacks

All Black captain Kieran Read reflects on the 19-7 loss to England in the Rugby World Cup...
All Black captain Kieran Read reflects on the 19-7 loss to England in the Rugby World Cup semifinal. Photo: Getty Images
North Otago won. So did the Otago Spirit.

That almost pales into insignificance, unfortunately.

The exit of the All Blacks from the Rugby World Cup on Saturday night, beaten 19-7 by a fired-up, physical and simply better England team in the semifinal, was a deflating experience and a big letdown at Labour Weekend.

The men in black conceded a try after just two minutes and never got a foot in the match.

The dream was to win a third World Cup in a row but it was not to be for the All Blacks, who will appear in the game nobody wants to play - the dreaded third and fourth playoff - on Friday night.

English players (from left) Henry Slade, Manu Tuilagi and Ben Youngs celebrate. Photo: Getty Images
English players (from left) Henry Slade, Manu Tuilagi and Ben Youngs celebrate. Photo: Getty Images
What happens now for the All Blacks?

Is their era of world domination over as richer and bigger countries come to the fore, and all our children are playing basketball and futsal?

That seems unlikely, but winning World Cups is not easy, and the All Blacks do not have a guaranteed right to win all of them.

What is going to be most interesting over the next couple of months is who is going to coach the All Blacks.

Steve Hansen is standing down after eight years. The smart money was on assistant coach Ian Foster taking over. But his stocks took a hit after 80 minutes in Yokohama and he is no longer a certainty.

Many fancy Crusaders coach Scott Robertson for the job. He is the new breed with his modern ways and is said to be popular with the players.

Sam Whitelock, Scott Barrett and Jack Goodhue look downcast in the dying moments. Photo: Getty...
Sam Whitelock, Scott Barrett and Jack Goodhue look downcast in the dying moments. Photo: Getty Images
But can a breakdancer be an All Black coach? Does he not need a couple of years of adversity to harden him up and add to his skills?

Lurking in the background are popular southern men - former Highlanders coaches Jamie Joseph and Tony Brown.

The duo have just coached Japan to the quarterfinals of the World Cup, and Brown is already tipped to be part of any future All Black coaching team, led by either Foster or Robertson.

Joseph is a head coach and that is what he wants to do. He has not committed - publicly, anyway - to the Japan role next year until the All Black job is sorted out.

It is going to be a fascinating couple of months. Hopefully, by then, the Yokohama performance will be a distant memory.

Comments

And while they're there, perhaps we could stop hearing about them? Maybe a moratorium on any further mens rugby reporting until, say, 2022? There is so much other sport happening with players who are more than just over primped brand ambassadors -- but it seems our media are either too lazy or too disinterested to focus on the full spectrum of activity out there.

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