LAIDLAW: What's next for Richie McCaw?

By Chris Laidlaw / Expert

Is Richie McCaw simply too good to be true? On the face of it the answer is yes. No player in the rugby world comes anywhere close when you add up the list of virtues that this extraordinary individual possesses.

The stats speak for themselves of course. The most successful captain in rugby history, the most capped, and the most decorated.

Usually such records are tempered by a darker side: misdeeds on or off the field. Remarkably, McCaw has never put a foot wrong – organisationally, socially or politically.

He has never been anything less than utterly gracious in defeat and he has always exhibited that most precious of Kiwi qualities: personal humility.

To New Zealanders this is a prerequisite of success. It is the formula that keeps John Key out of political danger. It was the essence of New Zealand military leadership in wartime, and it was personified by Edmund Hillary and later in a rugby context by Brian Lochore. McCaw is in effect a re-invention of Lochore and his stunningly high popularity. Rating reflects this.

Cynics often ask whether McCaw’s self-deprecating, ‘aw shucks’ style is natural. If it isn’t he’s managed to maintain a pretty convincing façade for a long time. The fact is, he is exactly what he seems to be, a supremely gifted player whose ability to turn up wherever the opposition finds it least convenient has become a mixture of art and science. He moves so adroitly around the margin between onside and offside that referees are never quite sure whether to penalise him or not.

The referees’ hesitations aren’t shared by opposing players however. Over the years the need to try and take McCaw out of the action has loomed larger and larger. Ever since he started 16 years ago he has been targeted, attacked, stomped, punched, eye-gouged and late tackled by opponents who have sought, premeditated or otherwise, to neutralise him.

Occasionally they have succeeded. There have been at least 15 major incidents and several players, not least Australians, have paid a price for that. Quite a few others have got away with it and there is a prevailing sentiment among players that since the referees won’t stop McCaw they must do it themselves.

To my memory he has only reacted with real anger once, and that was in 2011 when Quade Cooper kneed him viciously in the face and screamed at him in doing so. McCaw leapt to his feet and made as if to wallop Cooper, something a very large proportion of those watching would have thoroughly enjoyed. But he restrained himself, knowing he had too much to lose by losing his rag.

It is now obvious that opposing teams try to rough him up from the beginning. This season alone there have been a number of targeted assaults on him, and there will be plenty more to come in the run-up to the World Cup. McCaw has come to expect nothing else.

The big question is what’s his next act after the World Cup. If New Zealand can miraculously win it then he will obviously retire. He has made it plain he has no desire to try and make some fast twilight time bucks abroad, so that means he could stay on with the Crusaders for a year or two.

Nobody knows what his exit strategy is, or even if he has one. The truth is he probably doesn’t need one; he will of course be eagerly sought by business interests. He already appears – slightly sheepishly – in a variety of TV commercials, and he has made more than enough money to be able to pick and choose what to do next.

Interestingly, he was being talked of as a possible Rhodes scholar a decade or so ago, and as a top-stream student he would probably have been a shoe-in. McCaw playing for Oxford however would have been akin to an international rock star performing at a village pub.

There has been talk of getting him into politics, which would be the worst of all options for a personality like McCaw as the loss of stature and dignity would be immediate and irreversible.

He is a qualified pilot and that too could be an option, but would that be enough for someone who has come to personally embody the New Zealand persona and from whom so much is expected?

The Crowd Says:

2015-02-28T07:36:24+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


None.

2015-02-28T07:34:19+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


Having a day job would be way easier than going to training

2015-02-27T01:40:12+00:00

Jibba Jabba

Guest


My oldest daughter is half Kiwi and half Aussie, I tell her the top half is Kiwi where the brains are and the bottom half is Aussie where the s..t is. (In the nicest possible way !)

2015-02-26T22:26:07+00:00

AussieKiwi

Guest


That deserves a "like".

2015-02-26T19:01:15+00:00

richard

Guest


Probably a bridge too far for Richie.And if you consider the BIL's will have Lancaster/Cotter/Schmit to select as coaches,NZ will have to get things right.That means no passengers,and I think Richie simply won't be up to it by then.

2015-02-26T18:43:38+00:00

Graeme

Guest


On a serious note, he is a true gentleman of the game. Hated, admired and respected by most of us Aussies.

2015-02-26T18:42:12+00:00

Graeme

Guest


He sounds too good to be true. I refuse to believe that anyone can be that perfect. He must have a girl tied up in a basement or something horrific we don't know about.

2015-02-26T13:00:29+00:00

wardad

Guest


Was my thougts to a 'T'

2015-02-26T11:01:48+00:00

Hermann Dill

Guest


Throwing out a bone: What about 2017 B&I Lions tour to NZ?

2015-02-25T22:11:48+00:00

Jerry

Guest


Oh yeah, he was guilty of taking himself too seriously at times. To be honest, I suspect the famous chant may have had a bit of truth to it.

2015-02-25T21:55:09+00:00

andrewt

Guest


Yep I agree guys that he didn't let it affect his bowling performance ... remember him destroying aus all too well ... just meant that he didn't handle it well in the media which wasn't a good look (rightly or wrongly)... NZ v Aus (cricket) should be a great game on the weekend!!!

2015-02-25T21:36:17+00:00

Misha

Guest


Like the Wizard he is - correct :-)

2015-02-25T20:52:51+00:00

BBA

Guest


Agreed. He is a long way ahead of Eales, and Eales was a great.

2015-02-25T20:51:54+00:00

Sorted

Guest


Do you really know what you're talking about. My understanding is that Catchpole was lying on the ball in a ruck, with bodies all over the place. Meads pull his leg to get him out of there, not knowing that the other leg was pinned. Meads was a tough no nonsense player, at a time when players sorted out issues on the field, and he sorted out a few. In those days it was not a good idea to be on the wrong side of the ruck. Injuries happen in rugby.

2015-02-25T20:47:33+00:00

BBA

Guest


Agreed, Hadlee didnt like it, vocalised it (which perhaps he shouldnt). However the more hate he got from the australian crowds the better he seemed to play against them, I think they were very motivating to him. So I dont think he had any problem handling it or letting it affect his performance. It was very motivating for NZ fans in terms of getting them into cricket (along with the underarm incident really) and more than anything to me lifted the whole trans Tasman rivalry across all sports. The really unfortunate thing about it is that now NZ cricket crowds act like Australian crowds and behave extremely boorishly to Australian cricketers now.

2015-02-25T20:15:34+00:00

richard

Guest


They could be offering McCaw $ 10 M per season and I don't think he would take it.I think it is all about legacy,so he will probably stay put. Somehow I don't think Richie will ever be struggling to make a buck in NZ.

2015-02-25T19:16:50+00:00

richard

Guest


Correct.So make that 2002 onwards.

2015-02-25T18:48:24+00:00

Norway Matt

Roar Rookie


Best comment ever, and I'm a kiwi.

2015-02-25T15:04:11+00:00

Gilbert

Guest


Pau is willing to pay McCaw $1.5 M per season. Making him the highest paid player in the planet. His current records will go down in history as priceless. Stuff of dreams that only an all black player can break.

2015-02-25T13:43:42+00:00

taylorman

Roar Guru


OBs being sly, Tane Mahuta is the celebrated Kauri tree in Northland in case the question is genuine... http://www.newzealand.com/int/waipoua-forest/

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