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The All Blacks have drunk from the Bledisloe Cup enough times in recent years that they know its exact capacity. And, with fullback Mils Muliaina on Monday labelling it more prestigious than the Tri Nations trophy, the All Blacks are intent on sipping its contents for a seventh consecutive year on Saturday night.
Coach Graham Henry will on Tuesday name his side for the Bledisloe Cup/Tri-Nations Test at ANZ Stadium knowing victory will retain the symbol of trans-Tasman supremacy for 2009 with two matches to spare.
New Zealand took possession of the cup back in 2003 with a 2-0 series victory before stumbling to Australia in the World Cup semi-finals later that year in Sydney.
“It was massive. Back then, you only had to win it once to retain it, so we had to win both games. The emotion after we won it was something different,” Muliaina said.
“To have it in the changing rooms … we still have the saying now that there’s 32 Steinlagers that fit in the Bledisloe so you want to be drinking out of it, I tell you, it tastes good.”
Muliaina was quizzed at length by Australian reporters about the prestige of the Bledisloe Cup which the Wallabies held for five seasons before the All Blacks’ latest run.
He didn’t hesitate when asked if it was more important than the Tri Nations competition, now in its 13th year.
“The Bledisloe Cup, obviously. There’s a lot of history behind it and certainly it means a lot to us.
“We’ve kept it for a long period of time and when the Australians had it for a long time we desperately wanted it back.
“The Tri Nations series is special but the Bledisloe, Kiwis and Australians, is something different.
“It’s a double. If we can win this week, we keep it for another year, and the Tri Nations for us is still very much alive.”
All Blacks captain Richie McCaw on Sunday declared the Tri Nations title hopes gone for the losers on Saturday night.
Even if the All Blacks win, they’ll have to topple runaway leaders the Springboks and Wallabies at home, and hope the Wallabies can beat the Boks in Perth.
Key pivot Daniel Carter slotted back into five-eighth at training on Monday and will return for his first Test of 2009, while Luke McAlister (for Ma’a Nonu) and Kieran Read (for Rodney So’oialo) also looked good bets to start on evidence of the two-hour session at North Sydney.
In contrast, the Wallabies will be missing injured captain and centre Stirling Mortlock in a crucial swing in key personnel.
“Stirling being out is a massive blow to them. The experience he has, and he’s their go-to guy when things aren’t going so well,” Muliaina said.
“In terms of our approach, we’ve got a lot of things we need to work on that we haven’t quite nailed and this weekend gives us an opportunity. “
Still, Mortlock was absent, as was McCaw, when the Wallabies won 34-19 in Sydney last year for their third victory from their last four trans-Tasman Tests at the 2000 Olympic venue.
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QC said | August 18th 2009 @ 10:09am | Report comment
Mark
If I were asked to choose between the two cups Bledisloe or Tri-Nations I would without a doubt pick the Bledisloe.
In saying that I am from the generation who grew up without the prescence of South Africa due to their barring from international rugby.
My father on the other hand would lean towards South Africa being the old foe however he too agrees with Mils that the Bledisloe is more prestigious.
The rivalry between NZ and Australia is also something that cannot be denied and it is represented in every single sporting fixture that the two countries come up against each other in. I have travelled the world and have had people comment on the intense rivalry between the two countries something that is so intense it is special and adds that little extra to a fixture even something as tame as lawn bowls.
No disrespect to the South Africans but times have changed and as the older generations disappear the younger generations emerge and the Wallabies and Australia are firmly the greatest foe for those under the age of 40.
Rugby purists can argue all they like about historical trends but sadly most people don’t live with their noses in the history books they live in the now.
Ziggy said | August 18th 2009 @ 2:09pm | Report comment
Agree with QC. Pity then that numerous posters still keep dragging in South Africa’s past as part of their bias – Spiro is a prime example of that. History is history and let us remember it is the victors who get to write history from their perspective.
BAS said | August 18th 2009 @ 2:09pm | Report comment
Yeah OZ for me is like my big brother. We have the greatest rivalry he likes to sledge, hassle and generally feel he is better at most things than me but is pretty bitter and ungracious when I beat him at them… nothing better than beating your big brother for bragging rights