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The Beta Blacks: Alpha days are gone for New Zealand and their aura with it

about 15 hours ago
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Thursday afternoon, and the All Blacks are out on the training ground around the back of the Lensbury hotel on the banks of the Thames, it’s a warm autumn day, and the mood is pretty free and easy,Will Jordan is practising catching high balls, Beauden Barrett is taking shots at goal, the forwards are packing up after running some drills, head coach, Scott Robertson, is chatting happily with the media before his press conference,Someone asks if his team are looking to make a statement against England on Saturday, the sort that reminds everyone exactly how good they are,“A statement performance?” Robertson says, perplexed,“We’re just looking for a result.

” Time was when every All Blacks performance was a statement performance, and their head coaches didn’t go looking for results against England, or anyone else, they expected them.The remark hung in the air for a moment.It’s only Robertson’s manner.For 20 years the All Blacks press conferences have felt like being called in for an audience with the family patriarch in the back room of a wedding, Robertson’s are more like a catch-up chat with the uncle you are pleased to bump into at the buffet.His predecessor, Ian Foster, is the surly son of a Presbyterian minister, who got the job because he was the assistant to his predecessor Steve Hansen, who was a former policeman, who got the job because he was assistant to his predecessor Graham Henry, who was a former headteacher.

For two decades, there was a continuity of character, and a deliberately consistent team culture.Robertson, who took over after the last World Cup, represents a clean break.Which is one reason why this feels like a different sort of All Blacks team to the ones we are used to seeing up here on tour in the north every autumn.There are others.For a start this New Zealand side are very much the second best in the world, behind the back-to-back world champion Springboks.

South Africa have beaten them in four of their past five Tests, including the last World Cup final in Paris,Most recently they put 43 on them in a 33-point thrashing in Wellington,No one had ever beaten the All Blacks by more than 15 at home before and once upon a time a result like that would have precipitated some kind of national crisis,But the mood among the players, coaches and travelling media seems muted, mollified, perhaps, by back-to-back wins against Australia, Ireland and Scotland,Which feels pretty odd for all the rest of us.

For the large part of this century, the All Blacks were always the best in the world whether or not they were actually at the top of the rankings or had won the last World Cup.They were the Alpha team.Not any more.There is an intimidating All Blacks XV out there, only most of them are ineligible for selection because they’re playing their club rugby in Japan.After the most recent World Cup final, eight of their senior players left.

A few, such as Sam Whitelock, Aaron Smith and Dane Coles, were ready to retire, but some of the rest should have had plenty of Test rugby left in them.Brodie Retallick and Sam Cane are only 33, Richie Mo’unga and Shannon Frizell are both 31.Since then TJ Perenara, 33, and Mark Tele’a, 28, have moved to Japan, too.Mo’unga is the only one of the group who has committed to a return.The squad the All Blacks put out in the last World Cup final was the most experienced they had ever fielded in the tournament, with 1,387 caps between the 23 of them.

The team they’ve picked to play England on Saturday has 984, but well over a third of the total belongs to just three players, Barrett, Ardie Savea and Codie Taylor.Injuries haven’t helped either.It’s not only Jordie Barrett, who went home after the Test against Ireland two weeks ago.Patrick Tuipulotu, Dalton Papali’i, Tupou Vaa’i and Ofa Tu’ungafasi have flown home too.There is a missing generation of 50-cap men.

Rieko Ioane, who has been dropped, is another,Sign up to The BreakdownThe latest rugby union news and analysis, plus all the week's action reviewedafter newsletter promotionIoane aside, there’s not a lot Robertson can do about any of this,The Springboks coach, Rassie Erasmus, has a free hand to pick whoever he wants regardless of where they play their club rugby, and you could argue that South Africa’s single biggest achievement has been in knitting together a coherent team when their players are scattered around the world for so much of the year,Robertson said he would push New Zealand Rugby to loosen its own selection criteria so he could pick overseas players, but nothing has come of it, and judging by the comments made by New Zealand Rugby’s executives, nothing is going to any time soon,Japanese rugby offers a shorter season and a bigger salary.

It’s not just the best players who have moved there, there are more than 100 New Zealanders playing in their top three divisions, and the union is understandably keen to protect its own domestic competition.But it’s at the expense of its national team.
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Your Guardian sport weekend: ATP Finals, Albania v England and NFL

Will Magee kickstarts the football weekend with our unmissable gateway to all the action, with breaking news and updates. The Premier League takes a break for the international programme and he’ll be looking forward to some key fixtures – Greece v Scotland, Switzerland v Graham Potter’s Sweden, Liechtenstein v Wales – as well as developments from the England camp as they prepare to face Albania on Sunday. Why not join the conversation?Round nine in the Women’s Super League brings a Manchester derby. Four points separate the rivals, with City at the summit on 21 and United in third. Andrée Jeglertz’s City – with no midweek European fixture to tax their powers of recovery – are on the hottest of streaks and seeking an eighth straight win in the league

about 14 hours ago
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The Beta Blacks: Alpha days are gone for New Zealand and their aura with it

Thursday afternoon, and the All Blacks are out on the training ground around the back of the Lensbury hotel on the banks of the Thames, it’s a warm autumn day, and the mood is pretty free and easy. Will Jordan is practising catching high balls, Beauden Barrett is taking shots at goal, the forwards are packing up after running some drills, head coach, Scott Robertson, is chatting happily with the media before his press conference. Someone asks if his team are looking to make a statement against England on Saturday, the sort that reminds everyone exactly how good they are.“A statement performance?” Robertson says, perplexed. “We’re just looking for a result

about 15 hours ago
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Ill-advised Benn-Eubank Jr rematch another example of boxing’s cynicism

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about 15 hours ago
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Who is your favourite cricketer in the history of the men’s Ashes?

It had to be one or the other: the man who has scored the most runs in Ashes history or the man who has taken the most wickets. In the end, Shane Warne’s 195 wickets beat Don Bradman’s 5,028 runs. But, Warne is about more than numbers. His style, humour and charisma made him the kind of player you rooted for even when he lined up against your team. He was a joy to watch

about 17 hours ago
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Ford and George urge England to make their mark by beating New Zealand

Maro Itoje’s England have been urged to cement their place in sporting legend by becoming only the nation’s ninth side to defeat the All Blacks.England head into Saturday’s crunch encounter as marginal favourites, aiming for a first Twickenham win over New Zealand for 13 years, and George Ford has revealed that the former captain Jamie George has issued a call to arms, imploring his teammates to carve themselves a slice of history.Steve Borthwick’s side are on a nine-match winning run but England’s men have lost their past three Tests against New Zealand and have not beaten them since the 2019 World Cup semi-final. The last time they defeated the All Blacks at Twickenham was in 2012, when Manu Tuilagi ran riot.Saturday’s match is the 47th meeting between the sides and England have triumphed on eight occasions in the fixture’s 120-year history but Borthwick’s troops sense their opportunity to make a name for themselves

about 17 hours ago
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Joe Root splutters but Ollie Pope prospers in England’s Ashes warm-up

Joe Root’s attempt to lay to rest the ghost of Australian failures past started with the addition of a fresh one, as his fourth Ashes tour started in brief and inglorious style. The world’s No 1 Test batter, the subject of much pre-series chatter because of his poor average on previous such trips, was the most notable failure as many of his teammates inflated their confidence along with their scores across another day of breezy cricket and indeed weather against the Lions at Lilac Hill, which the senior side ended, having been bowled out moments before the close, with 426, a lead of 51.Zak Crawley described it as “a flat wicket for sure” and with the atmosphere provided by the few dozen spectators similar, but with intense heat expected from the stands and pitch when the real action starts next Friday, it is not clear to what extent anyone is markedly more prepared now than they were a couple of days ago.“Cricket’s cricket, it’s time in the middle,” Crawley said. “We’re doing everything we can with what we’ve got and we feel like we’re going to be ready

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