Cully saying what I feel a lot of us are thinking wrt AB's 10 issues...
Linked article is paywalled but goes on:
But that’s symbolic of the deeper mess New Zealand rugby has got itself into over the past decade in the key position, when the template left by late-career Dan Carter - a tactically astute playmaker and strong goalkicker - has been chipped away by the erroneous belief that hybrid No 10-15s are the way to go.
That scrambled thinking has been a strategic error and has left the All Blacks effectively hanging for the return of Richie Mo’unga to lift their Rugby World Cup hopes.
Mo’unga’s comeback next year will at least provide the All Blacks with a specialist in the position, but the pecking order beneath him looks to be in a state of flux and it’s quite possible that New Zealand rugby doesn’t actually know what it’s looking for or has gone so far down the wrong track that it’s too late to turn around.
Is Beauden Barrett a No 10 or 15? Ditto Damian McKenzie. And will Love, Josh Jacomb or Rivez Reihana even be the starting No 10s at their Super Rugby clubs next year?
The fact that no one can answer any of those questions with certainty is a huge concern, especially as the New Zealand rugby system is supposedly set up in a centralised fashion to prevent this sort of muddied thinking.
To be fair to Love, if he starts for the All Blacks against Cardiff, he has to be the Hurricanes No 10 next year come hell or high water.
The idea that anyone can consistently play No 10 at test level without years of seeing the pictures at the next level down isn’t just naive, it’s setting the player in question up to fail.
The other part of the No 10 issue that is troublesome is that New Zealand rugby as a whole has decided that it wants run-first, X-factor No 10s without the alternative model ever being tested.
What would the All Blacks have looked like over the past two tests with a No 10 with a big boot, tactical smarts and a simple desire to get them into the right areas?
The simple answer is: better. And yet, when this type of player - Harry Plummer - won Super Rugby with the Blues in 2024, there was still this underlying, borderline-arrogant narrative that he “wasn’t an All Blacks No 10”.
Plummer got five minutes off the bench for the All Blacks against the Wallabies in Sydney last year and was never seen again.
But he was just included in the Top 14 team of the month for October for his exploits for Clermont in France, so the 27-year-old can play and his retention would have at least provided the All Blacks with some tactical variety at No 10 - the possibility of a plan B.