All Blacks vs England: Bring it on!

By Digby / Roar Guru

I have not been this excited about an upcoming Test match in New Zealand since the 2005 British and Irish Lions series on these very shores.

This week has simply dragged by as I have waited in anticipation for the second Test against England. At last, with the naming of both teams to play, I have finally had something to chew on.

The English have named what looks a very strong squad with a number of their first choice players joining the playing group.

In the starting team, the forwards have seen minimal changes to the starting pack with Tom Wood coming in for James Haskell at blindside who drops out of the match day twenty three altogether.

The backline however sees four changes to the starting team from last weekend with only Mike Brown, Marland Yarde and Manu Tuilagi retaining their places although in Tuilagi’s case a positional change.

Halfback sees the return of Danny Care from injury, Owen Farrell to first five with the impressive Freddy Burns to the bench, Billy Twelvetrees and Luther Burrell are a new look midfield combination on tour. Manu Tuilagi is shunted out one place to the right wing with last week’s starters Eastmond and May dropping out of the match day squad altogether.

It is hard not to feel for a number of these players who have lost their starting spots from last weekend, especially Freddie Burns who I thought cut a very impressive figure at first five.

This gives us an indication of the growing depth and competition within this English team, which will only serve them well into the future.

Of real concern for All Blacks supporters is the depth and quality England have sitting on their bench, with four players normally considered starters ready to be introduced to the fray come Saturday night. Solid performers from the first Test are also ready and waiting to have another crack at New Zealand if afforded the opportunity.

Courtney Lawes and Dylan Hartley will add some real steel to the tight five when called upon, Billy Vunipola offers considerable impact from the bench and Chris Ashton can provide x-factor to the back division if required.

The inform Ben Youngs and Freddie Burns provide further quality options for Lancaster and we are likely to get our first look in New Zealand of Kieran Brookes with Matt Mullan completing the English bench.

This is a very strong and exciting English team and with a back three that has the perfect balance and mix of speed, power and skill, I envisage England to play a ball in hand game and come hard at New Zealand.

Of particular interest will be how Tuilagi is used. The more touches he has will be of real value to England and I expect he will be given a roving commission to throw himself at the All Black defence as often as possible.

Perhaps of slight concern is the changes made to the backline from halfback through to centre and English fans will certainly be hoping they click into gear quickly and smoothly along with the fresh faces on the bench.

The All Blacks in stark contrast have made minimal changes to their matchday 23, although they have made very important one with the return of Julian Savea to the left wing.

With Israel Dagg unable to overcome a niggling injury, Ben Smith moves back to his preferred position of fullback and Cory Jane move over to the right wing, which is also his preferred position.

Although many have suggested a few changes to the starting line-up this week I am quite pleased that these players have been afforded a second opportunity after performing so well for New Zealand over the last two seasons. I imagine they will all be very hungry to put in a vastly improved performance from last week as Steve Hansen has indicated in no uncertain terms that players need to perform this weekend.

I expect New Zealand to dramatically lift their intensity at the breakdown this week where they were found wanting at times. They must improve their handling which was particularly poor for this team last Saturday night while continuing on with the solid display from the set piece in the first Test.

I felt like there was a collective sigh of relief around the country once it was announced Savea would be fit to play. His powerful runs and expert finishing was sorely missed last weekend and with Nonu in the same backline, the English defence will be more acutely tested in Dunedin, even more so if the All Blacks can get their offloads away in contact.

This coming Saturday has all the promise of a classic with two teams full of confidence and everything to play for. The English are ready to announce to the rugby world they are the real deal and the All Blacks will be wanting to prove that this successful era is not ready to come to an end just yet.

Both teams are sure to have improved from last week’s scrappy but intense first Test. Playing under the roof at Forsyth Barr we are guaranteed perfect conditions for this mouth-watering clash.

Savea clashing with Tuilagi is worth the price of admission alone and I am struggling to contain my excitement and it is fair to say my work has suffered this week as a result.

I am picking the All Blacks to win this match in a tense thriller but I am incredibly nervous and excited about what we have in store on Saturday night. Geez I love rugby! Bring it on!

Is it time for kick-off yet?

The Crowd Says:

2014-06-14T07:23:41+00:00

Jerry

Guest


He's got decent acceleration, top line speed is nothing special. In a straight foot race, Savea would leave him for dust but rugby isn't a foot race.

2014-06-14T07:03:33+00:00

Birdy

Guest


A win means you're better 'on the day'. However, I took the question to be broader than that. When answering broader questions about who's better than who, you have to take more than one-off games into account.

2014-06-14T07:00:24+00:00

Birdy

Guest


The bench is very strong apart from the props, who are both 4th choice. Lancaster had to leave Marler and Wilson on too long last week, and I think this had a significant effect.

2014-06-14T06:57:40+00:00

El Gamba

Roar Guru


Agree Digger and I think you're right about the depth. That being said, the more players that are exposed to McKenzie's systems the better as time goes on. See you on the blog mate.

AUTHOR

2014-06-14T06:47:55+00:00

Digby

Roar Guru


There is some exciting seasons ahead Jeff for sure!!

AUTHOR

2014-06-14T06:47:02+00:00

Digby

Roar Guru


:D

AUTHOR

2014-06-14T06:45:54+00:00

Digby

Roar Guru


I think the wallabies are tracking in the right direction mate, looked very sharp on attack last week and while not really tested defensively I feel that this team has the belief and right attitude so I dont feel that will be an issue for them and we should find out more tonight against a presumably stornger French team. For me the big issue for the Wallabies is the depth and I feel this has been highlighted in recent seasons with the unfortunate injury toll and again this season but with Ewen McKenzie he seems to be able to get the best out of his charges so I dont think this will be as big an issue as in previous seasons. One area of concern is what they get from the bench as I felt that was poor last weekend and showed in the last 15 mins or so. That is the big area for me to show improvement and complete a solid 80 minute performance. All in all I think a bright future for this Wallaby team and I do think they will win tonight despite the quality changes made by France. Hopefully they can get a decent run of injury free players!

2014-06-14T06:06:23+00:00

JeffRo

Roar Pro


International rugby is looking exciting this year. The Wallabies look organised and have feel of team on the rise. The Boks have been honing their squad for a couple of years and are very strong. And England.... Tonight.... Great test. All Blacks trying to prove their still number 1, England looking to prove they are the real deal, for more than 1 week. All Blacks in front and number 1, but the pack is chasing!

2014-06-14T05:59:31+00:00

El Gamba

Roar Guru


What do you think about the Wallabies Digger? I was concerned initially with there changes but on second thoughts we should be ok, at least on paper. Our back row should still beat theirs, our halves should be a better combo with a game under their belts, especially in defence where they missed a few tackles last week, and Basteareud won't catch Izzy on the slide. That's the on paper bit, the interesting part, and important part for Australia, is how mentally strong they are under Link. I got the seat next to Brendan Cannon at suncorp last week, a lovely bloke who I chatted to throughout the whole game. He noted that you can't let the French get their tail up, the flip side is if you can get on top early it helps. An interesting night of footy!!

2014-06-14T05:33:53+00:00

JimmyB

Guest


I meant 'worth' it from a purely partisan perspective. ;)

2014-06-14T05:33:00+00:00

Chopper1

Guest


Ps I don't plan to fear anyone except the ABS. Neither Aus nor the Poms... Not sure where that misunderstanding came from?

2014-06-14T05:30:51+00:00

Chopper1

Guest


Agreed bebop, highly unlikely. As for today though, the frogs could give Aus a little shakeout. Last week won't repeat.

2014-06-14T05:29:19+00:00

Chopper1

Guest


Not this time. One day, perhaps, but not today...just realistically. Wales have faded and didn't win when they were peaking.

2014-06-14T05:15:12+00:00

Chopper1

Guest


ChrisT - the quoted sentences are from the bbc website per guscott. For your reading pleasure. But for some additional support of the fact not view, that the English press see this weeks squad as a big step up in player complement: will greenwood - "What did the Saracens and Northampton players in the stands think as they watched the England side of stand-ins last week? " And how about mick cleary: "England have been reinforced with the arrival of the Aviva Premiership contingent." I'm not making it up mate. Why would I? I would love an upset chink in the armour... But some level of experimentation aside, this side is explicitly acknowledged by your press as having been strengthened with the premiership players. Now they must deliver at least as good a performance as last week or today will be a failure.

2014-06-14T05:12:33+00:00

TheSnake

Guest


ohtani's jacket, I don't like Kaino, why go back in time and use a player that has a use by date stamped on his forehead. Hansen had the balls to drop Sitiveni Sivivatu in favor of Richard Kahui, so why is it that Kaino is picked over our other established loose forwards.

2014-06-14T05:04:15+00:00

Chopper1

Guest


I think he's starting the season sensibly. Heineken likes to get the runs on the board and I'm cool with that. Starting with du Preez at half is the right change to make. He's been superb. Pienaar provides utility so given the midfield issues he's not a bad option for the bench as he can slot into 10 in need or wing or full back. Good kicker of the ball as well. So that might be what HM is thinking. But for pure brilliance at 9, once the team has settled a little, reinach. Or pollard. Or kockott. But for today's game I'm comfortable...

2014-06-14T04:54:31+00:00

TheSnake

Guest


ChrisT, you don't seem to be excited about the chances of your team, why is that? I am an All Blacks supporter, and I am fearful of this England side. Is there something that I am missing. There is no doubt in my mind that this is a very strong England side

AUTHOR

2014-06-14T04:53:08+00:00

Digby

Roar Guru


Interesting isn't it Magic? Can see all sorts of different results tonight. Love Test footy!!

2014-06-14T04:52:18+00:00

ohtani's jacket

Guest


Todd's been out injured for some time and was only called into the squad as cover for Cane. I don't think you'd see him start and McCaw switch to blindside. Switching McCaw to blindside is unnecessary when you have Jerome Kaino in the side. Regardless of whether you think Messam is better than Kaino, when does Messam play long range defence and attack for the All Blacks? That's not the role he's asked to perform.

AUTHOR

2014-06-14T04:49:20+00:00

Digby

Roar Guru


Sounds good to me!

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