Scott Robertson’s All Blacks are three from three after the opening month of Checks within the 2024 worldwide season, a cross grade by any metric, however maybe not fairly as convincing as many followers have been hoping for.
One pundit who solely had reward to sing after the Steinlager Extremely Low Carb Sequence was former All Blacks coach Laurie Mains.
Mains was positive Robertson would proceed to develop the workforce after displaying some key, promising attributes within the wins towards England and Fiji, and professed his perception in Robertson’s imaginative and prescient for the workforce.
“Yes, I do (believe in Robertson), for two reasons. What he achieved with the Crusaders; I don’t care how good the players were or where they got their players from. It doesn’t matter. To win that championship seven times in a row is sensational. That makes me know that he’s going to get this All Blacks team performing at their best,” Mains told Newstalk ZB’s Jason Pine following the San Diego win.
“What I saw was they had to fight like hell to win both of the Tests against England. And that just showed me that those players were totally committed to the team and that’s the first achievement for a coach, is to get his players totally committed to the team and to the gameplan.
“Each time they’ve played, you can see more about what they’re trying to achieve.
“That first Test against England I think would have been one of the hardest Test matches to play in. England were good. Defensively they were very aggressive and very strong. Then in that second Test, once Beauden (Barrett) came on it started to open up and he created opportunities.
“Against Fiji, we saw more of that shorter play. There were some beautifully constructed tries in that game.
“So, I’m incredibly optimistic about where this team is going to go. The best I’ve felt for a long time.”
Robertson has stressed the desire for adaptability and ability to win games multiple ways since taking the helm of the All Blacks, and it’s fair to say the team beat two very different teams in July in very different ways.
While the opening stretch of any new leadership group is always going to throw different challenges and performances forward, Mains says Robertson needs to hit the ground running, noting while the next Rugby World Cup is three years away still, there is no time like the present to lay the foundations for the next cycle.
“The first two years of a World Cup cycle I think is where a coach and selectors really need to get a foundation and the basis of the team. It’s based on maybe the 10 best players, who are all automatic choices.
“From them, you know what style of rugby you can best play. And then, you have to bring in players that complement the strength of those 10.”