Henry eyes redemption against Springboks

By Daniel Gilhooly / Wire

Coach Graham Henry is already talking up the All Blacks’ shot at rugby redemption against the Springboks next year. The prospect of a better run with injuries and some reinforcements from Europe have Henry quietly confident of footing it with the world champions.

Touted as a tight tournament before it kicked off two months ago, a clear pecking order emerged. South Africa whitewashed New Zealand, who in turn completed a clean sweep of last-placed Australia with Saturday’s 33-6 win.

The Springboks are in a different league to a young Wallabies side who appear to carry mental baggage into Tests against New Zealand.

Henry emphasised that point, doing his utmost to play down the scale of his side’s improvement, despite a fine all-round showing.

“We didn’t make the same sort of errors but we weren’t under the same sort of pressure,” he said.

“It’s a different game against different opposition. At the moment we’re struggling to handle that South African pressure, particularly if we can’t get solid first phase ball.

“It takes a wee bit of time for these guys to be competitive against a side that is choc-full of internationals who have played a lot of Test matches together.”

Henry estimated that injury had left him without 10-12 quality players who could make a difference against South Africa. The likes of prop Carl Hayman and other English-based former All Blacks such as Nick Evans, Aaron Mauger and Doug Howlett could yet be added to the mix either next year or leading up to the 2011 World Cup.

“There’s a lot of people coming back from injury, there may be one or two come back from overseas next year,” Henry said.

“When all those guys come back, and with the current squad, there’s going to be a lot of competition for places. That should improve the side immensely.

“The big test is when we play the boys from South Africa again and see how we function at lineout time.”

Competition begins on the tour of Japan and Europe starting in five weeks.

Henry’s next hurdle is another dead rubber Test against the Wallabies, in Tokyo on October 31.

The Crowd Says:

2009-09-23T06:03:17+00:00

Ben J

Guest


The thing about players returning from Europe is that it is rare for most of them to return in better shape than before. Has anyone seen how Hayman, Howlett etc are performing overseas because I have not. Will they make an impact? I can see Chris Jack make a strong comeback after his stint with Western Province.

2009-09-22T15:39:39+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


"Beat the Boks" will be the theme for next year. Should be fun.

2009-09-22T14:36:47+00:00

MM

Guest


Well it's happening now QC .... Can't you be positive about something just occasionally?

2009-09-22T08:14:28+00:00

QC

Guest


Yes South Africa being the Benchmark when if ever was the last time that happened? S

2009-09-22T06:19:44+00:00

BAS

Guest


yep as much as it pains me to say SA are the benchmark at the mo...

2009-09-22T01:50:39+00:00

Ray

Guest


Couldn't agree more me old mate!

2009-09-22T01:28:20+00:00

Willem

Guest


Lets hope it stays that way for a few years

2009-09-22T01:24:35+00:00

Ray

Guest


My my, how the wheel turns. You know things are looking up for SA Rugby when the All Blacks use them as a yard stick =)

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