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How All Blacks planned ahead for Ireland showdown

Author
Liam Napier, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 9 Oct 2023, 1:43pm
Photo / NZ Herald
Photo / NZ Herald

How All Blacks planned ahead for Ireland showdown

Author
Liam Napier, NZ Herald,
Publish Date
Mon, 9 Oct 2023, 1:43pm

By Liam Napier in Lyon

Ian Foster apologised for arriving late to his final press conference in Lyon, saying he got distracted in his office deciding which game plan to adopt after Ireland confirmed their presence as the听听quarter-final opponents.

While New Zealand鈥檚听听focus has only now zeroed in on the threat Ireland pose, the All Blacks鈥 planning for Ireland began long ago.

Foster鈥檚 quip should not be taken literally. There鈥檚 zero chance the All Blacks arrive at a World Cup quarter-final unprepared, on a whim.

The All Blacks don鈥檛 do casual. They plan everything to the nth degree.

The All Blacks knew they would face South Africa or Ireland in their quarter-final. Foster will now bring forth the Irish dossier.

听鈥 to start their 17-test unbeaten surge 鈥 because they were meticulously prepared, organised and accurate. They expertly picked apart the All Blacks weak spots 鈥 their maul, breakdown and defensive holes - in the second and third tests with Jonathan Sexton pulling the strings.

All Blacks coach Ian Foster shakes hands with Ireland captain Johnny Sexton. Photo / Photosport

All Blacks coach Ian Foster shakes hands with Ireland captain Johnny Sexton. Photo / Photosport

In the wake of that home series defeat, Foster remoulded and significantly strengthened his coaching team to launch a major rebuild mission.

This year, well before the All Blacks first test of the season in Mendoza, Foster and his selectors, Joe Schmidt and Jason Ryan, travelled north to watch the Six Nations. With the World Cup front of mind the coaching trio attended matches in Dublin and Paris, adding detailed notes to documents that will, some eight months on from that fact-finding venture, shape this week鈥檚 quarter-final approach.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a difference between your scouting planning and your planning when you actually know you鈥檙e playing them. When you know 100 per cent you鈥檙e looking at their trends the last two or three weeks and pulling all that apart and seeing how that fits with what we knew earlier,鈥 Foster said.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got a clear idea about the strengths they bring but seeing them play live helped confirm some of those things. It鈥檚 a layer of the painting as you watch more and more games as the year goes on.

Ardie Savea runs in to score against Ireland at Eden Park last year. Photosport

Ardie Savea runs in to score against Ireland at Eden Park last year. Photosport

鈥淲e know them pretty well. They know us pretty well. There鈥檚 no doubt both teams will try and surprise around the edges but the game is going to be about discipline defensively, the intensity at the breakdown and body height and winning corners. We know that about Ireland, and they鈥檒l know that about us too.

鈥淲e鈥檝e got massive respect for how they鈥檝e grown the last few years. We鈥檝e been on the receiving end but we鈥檝e also been able to overcome that so it鈥檚 a great mental challenge, isn鈥檛 it?鈥

For all the historic feats Ireland have achieved a World Cup semifinal 鈥 let alone a maiden crown 鈥 remains elusive. This is the moment Andy Farrell鈥檚 men have built for the past four years.

A generation of influential figures 鈥 from Sexton to Peter O鈥橫ahony, Tadhg Furlong, Josh van der Flier and adopted New Zealanders Bundee Aki, James Lowe and Jamison Gibson Park 鈥 won鈥檛 get another chance to claim a World Cup.

Get through the All Blacks, and with Argentina or Wales in the semifinal, Ireland would be odds-to reach the final.

Knockout rugby is a fraught beast, though.

With a host of veterans and management departing post World Cup, the All Blacks are highly driven too.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e got a group of players 鈥 this is probably their moment. If they鈥檙e ever going to win a World Cup they probably feel like it鈥檚 now,鈥 Foster said. 鈥淲e鈥檝e got some players and as a team we鈥檙e in the same mode so it鈥檚 pretty exciting.

鈥淚t鈥檚 the stage we want to be on. The fact it鈥檚 Ireland, playing well, world No 1, on top of their game, just makes the challenge nice and simple.

鈥淭hey鈥檝e got their game well sorted. They鈥檙e on a massive winning streak and got a clear goal to create history for themselves this tournament and are playing accordingly. They鈥檒l be confident so I kind of love that challenge.鈥

The All Blacks don鈥檛 need to dig into their dossier to know cool heads will be needed against Ireland. O鈥橫ahony last year told Sam Cane 鈥測ou鈥檙e a shit Richie McCaw pal鈥. Sexton loves to rile his opponents and often clashes with referees, too.

Ireland鈥檚 dominant victory against Scotland offered another timely reminder of the vocal jibes they will bring in an attempt to rattle the All Blacks.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot at stake,鈥 Foster said. 鈥淭hat shows in players in different ways. We鈥檝e had a really good focus on our control and how we go about things. That鈥檒l get tested. Whether it鈥檚 tested with players who have a crack at you, jersey pull somewhere, a refereeing decision or people in the sides of rucks, those are the things that get people fired up. You鈥檝e got to be bigger than that and control it. We know we鈥檝e got to be disciplined in that space.鈥

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