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ABs blow apart Samoa in warning to Lions

Author
Gregor Paul, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sat, 17 Jun 2017, 5:55AM
(Getty Images)
(Getty Images)

ABs blow apart Samoa in warning to Lions

Author
Gregor Paul, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Sat, 17 Jun 2017, 5:55AM

In case anyone didn't know already, turns out the All Blacks can play rugby. Pass and catch stuff where players kind of make it up as they go along and trust in their basic skills.

They can see space, offload out the tackle, run good lines and score tries.

It's going to be hard to shake the suspicion that Samoa were fairly ordinary - maybe even quite bad - but still, even allowing for that, the All Blacks did a reasonable job in blowing them apart. They did, after all, score more tries and points in one than the Lions have managed have in four.

The All Blacks played enough good rugby to feel satisfied. There was enough awareness about what they were trying to do and enough precision to feel, that even when the stakes jump next week and the linespeed goes into hyper drive and the Lions come hard at them with the ball, the All Blacks are about ready.

Or as ready they can expect to be at this stage of the season. No one was expecting immaculate. No one was thinking it would be perfect. Other than winning, the All Blacks were there to lay down a foundation: to get the worst out their system.

Even the All Blacks can't click their fingers and come together in the space of five days. It doesn't work like that even for them.

It takes a little bit of time for teams to settle when they bring players together from different places. It doesn't matter how good the individuals are, they have to still find their cohesion and flow.

They still have to connect with those around them, get their timing sorted in the various technical elements and sense each other's movements.

The All Blacks are probably quicker than most international teams to find themselves and they will be happy enough with their progress in that regard against Samoa.

The lineout went well for them. Admittedly Samoa's didn't look great, but that may have had a fair bit to do with the pressure that was being exerted.

It was much the same story with the scrum. Except the All Blacks were especially good there. They were in total control and that was the beauty of having four of the tight five all playing regularly for the Crusaders.

Sam Whitelock showed his teammates how to deal with kickoffs - something no side that has played the Lions on this tour has managed to do so far.

Aaron Smith, picked because he's rated by the coaches as the best passing halfback in the world, proved they were right while also making a claim to be not so far behind Ireland's Conor Murray when it comes to tactical kicking from the base.

If there was another individual performance worth singling out, it would be that of Anton Lienert-Brown. The youngster has been a little quiet in Super Rugby but the big occasion got the best out him.

His ability to find space and play himself and others into it, was impressive. He's a natural footballing talent - so good at using footwork and offloads and so good at ensuring that half chances were converted into tries.

He showed that mid-way through the second half when he paused, looked up, saw the All Blacks had a four-man overlap and crafted a long, looping pass to Julian Savea.

New Zealand 78 (A. Lienert-Brown, B. Barrett (2), A. Savea (2), S. Williams, I. Dagg, J. Savea, C. Taylor, V. Fifita, TJ. Perenara, S. Cane tries; B. Barrett 7 cons; L. Sopoaga 3 cons)
Samoa 0

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