Friday, August 31, 2007

First match next week!

In 4 hours and 7 days, that will be the beginning of the World Cup.

Tomorrow, the countdown will be : D-Day 7 for the All Blacks vs. Italy...

Do not forget our fan survey, and whoever you cheer on, don't forget to support your team at 1000% !!!!

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http://richie-mccaw.blogspot.com/2007/07/fan-survey-how-will-you-live-this-2007.html
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Jour J moins 7 (et pour etre precis : H moins 4 avant France Argentine)

Donc, c'est aussi Jour J moins 8 pour le debut de la revanche pour les Neo Zelandais a Marseille.

N'oubliez pas notre 'fan survey' (lien ci dessus) ou on ne vous demande que de nous dire comment vous, vous allez vivre cet evenement. Et rappelez vous que quelle que soit votre equipe 'chouchou', soyez un vrai supporter!!!!

Bienvenue en France!!!

They are here! and they will stay here for the next two months... Don't worry, we'll take good care of them :P

If Wayne Smith doesn't bring the cup home, he's found a new job, so I think he'll be fine!

No Richie pic on getty for the moment -and maybe it's better this way 'coz they all look really tired (& they surely were!)

Note to the Byron Girls : today's L'Equipe edition states that he can speak French with a Southern accent (which is quite nice to hear, trust me!) So you can all register for your French class with BK :P

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Added later in our afternoon...
"I still don't know how she does that, but even 20.000 kms away, Izzy remains the local spy! & actually our best spy... Thank you Izzy ;)"

Thursday, August 30, 2007

They are home...or rather, they are safe now!

If our schedule is good, the guys have landed on the soil of the Old Continent.
But here are pictures from yesterday (at Auckland's airport)

*no national pressure on the guys' shoulders. Even at the airport, nobody knows why they have to take the plane and be away from home for the next 8 weeks!!!

*even the All Blacks must checking before boarding on the plane...

*maybe Byron's last departure from home...
* say "bye bye home" & "bonjour la France"....
*lovely blankets
*now, the photographers have to go ; their colleagues in France are ready to work :)

-------
Does anyone know why the ABs wear a green bracelet? what is it for?
Thank you...
marykoala@hotmail.fr

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Pour les Corses : les All Blacks atterrissent à Ajaccio vers 21h. Soyez la! (information entendue par maman Mary sur RTL... bon, on va la croire, c'est ma maman quand même!)
Pour les autres, ne vous inquiétez pas, on aura bien deux, trois photos demain...

Wednesday, August 29, 2007

Christchurch star, Wednesday 22.08.07

With the pressure rising as next month’s RWC in France draws near, Matt Smith profiles ABs captain Richie McCaw.

Two decades have come and gone without ABs success at the RWC, and now our hopes will be led by a Cantabarian raised in the remote North-Otago valley of Hakataramea.

Richie McCaw (RMC) has been in possession of the chalice, poisoned or otherwise, of AB captain since May 2006, taking over from the retired Tana Umaga as the man in one of the most powerful positions in the country.

Gary Whetton, Sean Fitzpatrick, Taine Randell & Reuben Thorne have all failed before him in seeking the country’s the country’s fist WC win since 1987. The expectations have not gine unnoticed by the humble 26-year-old who grew up in the Haka. Valley –especially since he was involved in the disappointment of the 2003 campaign.

“It’s been there for 4 years –it hasn’t changed a whole lot to be honest,” RMC said. “I guess as it comes closer, there’s a bit more talk about it, but everything we’ve done so far has been about getting ourselves ready. At the time, you focus on each campaign, but in the bog scheme of things, hopefully you get better and better. We can only control what we can control –that’s what we’ve got to keep telling ourselves –and not let the weight of expectation and what people outside our group are saying (affect us), because it ain’t going to help us.”

RMC’s memories of his junior footy aren‘t too dissimilar from most young North Otago kids into their rugby in the late 1980s –they revolved around travelling.

“We used to travel on the bus to Oamaru most Saturdays,” he said. “We had a good wee team that had been together since about under-nines through under-13s and we has a good coach –we used to win most games, which was good. The only sport there was, was rugby and if you were going to play sport, you were going to play rugby and most guys did that.”

RMC’s drive has never been far away when he’s stepped onto the paddock, even as a six-year-old at ball skills sessions in 1987. The “good coach” RMC refers to was Barney McCone, who described the Haka. boy as a fast learner.

“He was always very quick to pick anything up,” McCone said.

Passion and competitiveness continued to stick out in RMC’s games in the North Otago JAB rugby competition prior to the departure for Dunedin, to board at Otago Boys’ High School –and McCone could always picture RMC as someone who would go far. “I was always quietly confident that he’d make it”, McCone said.

RMC agrees his tireless quest for improvement was something which pulled him through grades. “That’s the thing –as young kids, there are a lot of kids that are talented enough to make the ABs, it’s just when you get to high school and leave school, it’s about who wants to put the time in”, he said. “There were better rugby players than I was at school, but they decided on other things –and I guess that’s the way it is. And that’s the key to enjoying it I think –it’s what I had when I was young.”

Andrew Gard, 26, played alongside RMC right through the grades for the Kurow JAB club section. Gard reckons RMC’s legendary work ethic was in place back in his early days –even if he got onto trouble for it.

“He was just a real hard grafter”, he said. “He used to get a barrel for getting his uniforms and knees dirty before he played, and he was bloody good at bulrush at school. He might have actually got (bulrush) banned because he was flattening too many people.”

RMC will probably be back to visit Kurow in the near future –although the boots might stay at home in Ch-ch. With another attractions for RMC –gliding –based just up the road at Omarama, a grin came across his face as he contemplated the likelihood of appearing in the red of Kurow again.

“It’s probably unlikely –my folks don’t live down there anymore, (but) I get down Omarama way, so who knows –you never rule it out, but I can’t see it at the moment.”

That’s doesn’t bother Andrew Gard too much –who is just stoked to see one of his former team mates pulling on the black and leading world’s No 1-ranked side onto the famous rugby paddocks of the world.

“It’s good to see someone from here licking on like that and doing a lot of things for NZ, and representing the rugby culture that is here in Kurow,” Gard said. “There are a lot of guys that have kicked onto representative footy from here –RMC’s just gone that extra bit”.

And if, fingers crossed, RMC happens to lift the William Webb Ellis Trophy?

“We’d be proud if someone from here has gone on that far, and it would highlight us as a good place for young rugby players.”
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Thank you Izzy...

Pour les francophones, si vous voulez la traduction complete, demandez moi, parce que la, j'ai pas le courage...Y'a fallu que je tape l'article deux fois (ah les ordis qui mangent les doc', j'aime ca!!!) Dsl...mais bon, y'a rien de super nouveau : les gens de Kurow sont fiers de Richie (et on les comprend!)

The All Blacks have left New Zealand...

They are flying over somewhere, maybe sleeping. I do hope they have changed their tux. for more comfortable clothes because it's gonna be harsh up there to remain 'class'...

Here are some videos from today's last meetings with the people/press.

(Izzy news) : the lady who got $5.000 on MoreFM this morning will use it for her wedding. I hope Richie is invited (he made her win!!!)

I hope the earth was double-checked by the foreign offices before leaving the home soil... We are not very demanding but the British can be very awful with import...they live on an island, remember? If the guys won't to offer the earth to France just after the final, not sure Bernard Laporte will appreciate, but there are other gardens available in France....

But now, the links ;)
*ABs feel weight of expectations (1.56)

*All Black prepare to leave for France (1.34)
*ONE News at ABs farwell (2.45)

*ONE News extra with Richie McCaw (1.22)
*TV3 Rugby: All Blacks rock out before World Cup

*TV3 Rugby: All Blacks farewelled for World Cup

*TV3 Rugby: All Blacks leave for the World Cup

Friday Aug. 24th, 2007 : A PERFECT PAIR (NZ Rugby World)

http://www.nzrugbyworld.com/article.aspx?articleid=2730

As dynamic duos go, you simply don’t get any better. The indefatigable forager and inspirational leader who knows no limits, and the outrageously talented playmaker who makes the sublime look ridiculously easy. They’re the two finest rugby players on the planet, and they both just happen to be All Blacks with a World Cup in their sights.

Story: MARC HINTON
SO DIFFERENT, and yet so alike. One’s a rugged forward whose forte is in rolling up his sleeves and getting down and dirty. The other’s a slick back who has soft hands, sweet skills and magic in his left boot. One’s all graft and grunt. The other’s 100 percent gas and guile.

That’s on the rugby field. Off it the contrasts don’t stop either. One models underwear and has been known to send grown women weak at the knees with his dazzling looks. The other’s a model citizen who’s never happier than when he’s on his own with his head in the clouds. One exudes urban sophistry. The other drips with country charm.

But scratch beneath the surface a little and you find they’re not so different after all, this Richie McCaw and this Daniel Carter. They’re both fabulous rugby players for starters, and thoroughly decent blokes with it. They’re rare talents who just happen to play at the same time, for the same teams, and live in the same city. They’re both rural types too, men of the heartland whose values have been ingrained in them by families who believe those sort of things matter.
They’re also the two finest players in an All Blacks team full of men of outstanding ilk. In fact, so good are they at what they do, so influential in their team’s pattern, it’s no stretch to say that they’re a duo who may well decide with their actions the fate of their country at the upcoming World Cup.


It may be sacrilegious to say such a thing in rugby, which is in many ways the ultimate team sport. Nothing happens without all 15 men playing their part. Scrums, rucks or lineouts must be won, and ball shifted through many sets of hands, for dashing wingers to stride over in the corner; bodies must be cleaned out for foraging flankers to work their stuff; tackles must be made all over the paddock for any side to build pressure; and, of course, every man plays his part in giving the playmaker the forward momentum he so craves.

But McCaw and Carter are not just exceptional players, they’re exceptions to any normal rugby rule. Take either of them out, heaven forbid, and this All Black team is not the same. Could the New Zealanders still win the World Cup without either or even both of these footballing geniuses? Of course they could. But would it be a lot more comfortable with them there? Damn right.

History will one day validate this supposition, but it’s possible we should all be pinching ourselves and then counting our lucky stars when we realise we haven’t dreamed up this rare confluence of events. Yes, the All Blacks do possess two once-in-a-lifetime players, and, yes, they’re both there in the vanguard as they head to the World Cup looking to bring an end to 20 years of emptiness.
For the rest of this great story including personal stats, great Richie and Dan photos see NZ Rugby World September 2007 issue....

Tuesday, August 28, 2007

Some videos

Hey -it's me again... (the guys are leaving tomorrow...sending them some free hugs!)
1. Izzy our local spy has some mailing issues but she still found time to do her job (thank you!) and sent this video she found on TV3. Some people wish they could play guitar or sing sometimes, don't you???
2. Izzy's article is about to be transcribe -I think tomorrow (French time), it will be online...

3. A new Richie Girl (but long time ABs fan) from France (Cecile) has just contacted me because she wanted with the other RGs a report, Au Coeur des Blacks, broadcatsed in France last June and soon released on DVD in France. She 'cut' it in 7 parts.

I'm sorry, there is no subtitle & I won't translate it but you can hear the guys' voices -except the background voice that is in French (but it's just to the Glory of the ABs, nothing bad, so just listening to the beauty of my/our native language...

NB : after viewing that report, the guys were very proud of it! Hopefully, you'll share their views :P









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Maintenant en francais : ce reportage sera bientot a la vente en France (s'il ne l'est pas deja...) Moi, je l'acheterai pas (tout bon fan doit avoir un magnétoscope toujous pret a l'emploi et des cassettes toujours pretes a etre visionnees! OK?) mais, vous, vous pouvez y aller!

A noter aussi a la vente, un livre sur les All Blacks (All Blacks, les Seigneurs du rugby (Broché) de Lagisquet Patrice (Préface), Sein Pierre (Auteur) )
Eh oui, la coupe du monde, ca va faire vendre!!!

Monday, August 27, 2007

Mitch has a beef with Burger

http://www.rugbyheaven.co.nz/4179645a22363.html

By RUPERT GUINNESS - SMH
Monday, 27 August 2007

Springboks flanker Schalk Burger is the real villain at the breakdown that World Cup referees should target for illegal play, not All Black Richie McCaw.

That is the staunch view of McCaw's 2003 World Cup coach John Mitchell, who rates the Kiwi No.7 as one of rugby's most intelligent players.
McCaw, the All Blacks captain for the World Cup in France that starts on September 7, has been constantly criticised for stretching the laws of the game at the breakdown - and no more so than this year in the build-up to the Cup.
But Mitchell, now Western Force coach after being axed from the All Blacks following the 2003 World Cup semi-final loss to Australia, said he thought the attacks on McCaw were a ploy to ensure tournament referees judged him harshly.
"There are people out there who are creating a focus on him," Mitchell said.

"Burger is one person you want to focus on. He doesn't keep his feet well. He plays right on the line. But I don't think he is as accurate as Richie in that area.
"[Richie] is very long in the upper body, so his greatest asset is that he keeps his feet as long as he can. While you are a fetcher of ball, if you keep your feet, you are going to get more favourable decisions than ones that go against you.
"When he is told to release, or given a chance and he has created the slow ball, I guess half of his body doesn't roll away. That's the thing most opposition coaches and opponents get annoyed with."
However, Mitchell warned that McCaw should be better as a ball-scavenging flanker in France because of the added focus that has been put on him.
"He reads his ruck drill pretty well. What I guess the punter in the lounge doesn't quite see is that rucks do form and also go," he said. "Once the ruck forms it is not just a continuous ruck. Sometimes there is another entry. He is very good at reading and sensing those things. He makes good choices.
"Through his maturity, he probably gives away less penalties than he has ever done in the last 30 metres. But he will be highly motivated going into this World Cup.
"[Referee] Chris White, in the last World Cup semifinal, pinged him four times in a row at the breakdown. He will look to be more accurate at this World Cup."
Mitchell said the All Blacks' woes of 2003 would help McCaw's captaincy in France. "He raises the bar and is a very intelligent man," Mitchell said. "That is reflected not only in the way he plays his football in terms of adapting and adjusting his game. He [also] flies an aeroplane and plays the bagpipes and all that kind of stuff. He gets that balance.
"He is also ably supported by people like Aaron Mauger, a good leader, Reuben Thorne [who] will be an excellent foil for him. Anton Oliver will also.
"And when you have Jerry Collins on your left side most of the time, it is handy to have. And Chris Jack."
Mitchell said the All Blacks would not make the mistake of underestimating what was at stake in the event of a semi-final clash against Australia.
"[After] the experience a lot of those guys had in 2003, they will respect the occasion so much more," Mitchell said.
He warned against assuming Australia's win against the All Blacks in June was to the Wallabies' advantage. "That has to be helpful, but in some ways it probably made the All Blacks learn," he said. "[They have] probably gone back and had a good look at things."
Mitchell also predicted the benefits of the All Blacks re-conditioning program would kick in during the tournament. "There is going to be a physiological boost at some stage," he said. "The All Blacks would like to believe it is going to be in the knockout rounds."
While Mitchell last week said he wouldn't seek a head coaching position at test level until his Force contract expired in 2011, he admitted that "something still burns deep within" because of the semi-final loss to Australia in 2003.
And he said he rated "getting a team up the next week to win a third and fourth play-off" against France "to play something totally meaningless" after that loss as a massive feat.
"It was very important to us as a group. [It was] about the All Blacks jumper and the character each individual needed to display to go on to this World Cup."
But Mitchell said he had never looked at the bronze medal he and the side got for winning it. "I've never opened it up. It's at home. But I don't know what it looks like."

An All Black already world champion in France...

No, it's not an rugby player, it's not even a man!

Valerie Vili is the woman who gave NZ its second world gold medal in an athletics World Championship. But why France then? For the good reason that Valerie's hubby is French!

So tiny message to the machoes supporting the national rugby team :
if a woman can do it, a man must do it!!!
Cheers, boys!!!

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Back to serious now :

- Congratulations Valerie!!! and thank you for not answering to the ABs question on national French TV 'coz your victory belongs to you & your family only...

- Izzy sent me an article a couple of days ago.
I will try to transcribe it as soon as possible but I can't give you a special day for now (pretty busy preparing the Wolrd Cup...)
So for now, it's just the scans for you...Forgive me!
- The World Cup starts in 10 DAYS.... but no pressure on our guys! Just on us!!!

BTW, message to the TVNZ reporter : who are you, ONE News European Correspondent Melissa Stokes ?

# Marseille 3 hours from Paris? Are you sure? Probably by train...

# Where did you search & find the people for your interviews? Those who didn't know about the World Cup are just people who didn't want to answer your questions or who haven't listened to the radio or watched TV in the past 4 weeks since there is (on most channels/radios) daily a report about this upcoming World Cup...

Of course, we love the All Blacks! and everybody (our favorite captain included) want a final France vs. NZ...

Next time Melissa, don't ask people ; just ask us...

Saturday, August 25, 2007

Rugby Hebdo. Fan guide. 10 players during this world cup.

Sergio Parisse (Italy)
Voted sexiest player of the 2003 World Cup, this time his girlfriend Alexandra Rosenfeld (Miss France 2006 & Miss Europe 2007) will be drawing all the stares. Jealous?

Juan martin Hernadez (Argentina)
He's young, good looking and the World's best players. the guys is downright annoying! Plus, we'll have to watch him since is in the French group.

Lote Tuqiri (Australia)
As sharp on the field as he is on the dance floot, opt for a night on the town if you want a clore look at the Wallaby.

Bryan Habana (S-Africa)
Fiery support, lightening speed and breathtaking dives, the Habana show is about to begin! And, as always, with a smile.

Dan Carter (NZ)
The finest rugby player on the planet has already won everthing there is to win. On October 20th, he could go down history by rising the Webb Ellis cup. He has to put NZ in orbit.

Richie McCaw (NZ) -our favorite captain!
He looks like a cowboy, talks like a cowboy, and word has it he even learned to tackle sheep instead of women. The AB captain is one helluva he-man!

Fred Michalak (France)
Will the darling of French women replace Patrick Bruel? The groupies are warming up and waiting on the sidelines. The word "FREEEEDD !!!!!!!!!!" is about to resound throughout France.

Sebastien Chabal (France) -known as "Caveman" for the rest of the world ;)
Not recommended for children under 10. Send the kids to bed! Because beneath a physique like Jesus lurks the Dentist, who redid Ali Williams' jaw with his head.

Jonny "Wilko" Wilkinson
Like a true fashion victim, before contending for a second consecration, he went for a complete overhaul : shoulders, kness, ankles, elbows. The brand new Jonny is up and running;

Brian O'Driscoll -B.O.D.
He's the Clark Kent of world rugby. In town, he's the geeky intellectual with a straight part in his hair (& that suits him quite well...), on the field he's Superman only without the red BVD's.

Some good Sportingo articles

http://www.allblacks.com/index.cfm?layout=displayFanStory&newsArticle=6577

Why the All Blacks are so special - by a soccer convert from Germany
15/08/2007
James Carter


Last year, James Carter - a confirmed round-ball fan - spent six months in New Zealand. When he arrived, he knew nothing about rugby but now the All Blacks are his heroes. Here's why . . .

'It's the Haka before every game, the Silver Fern, the Black Jersey. It's the players standing for something that is bigger than themselves, for a name - a name with history and a name with tradition' I have to admit that I don´t know a hell of a lot about rugby. I haven't watched more than about 15 games and I still don´t get it when a player is offside.

In fact, I didn´t know anything about rugby before I came to New Zealand in July 2006 to stay for half a year. My sport was soccer - I loved it, like probably most Europeans and definitely most of the Germans in that year of the soccer World Cup.

Rugby - there was some sort of vague idea in my head; an idea about a game played with an egg-shaped ball which some fierce-looking guys try to get beyond some line, beating and hitting each other without obeying any rules. This was confirmed when I watched my first game - a Tri-Nations match where Australia ran all over South Africa and won 49-0.

I didn't understand a single move and tried hard to follow the confusing explanations of my host parents. To me, the game made no sense at all. It seemed to consist either of a dozen men lying all over each other or of a time-out in which the worst injuries were treated.

“Bring back soccer!” I prayed. How could people be so excited about this game? Well, I would find out. With a host family like mine, you can´t just ignore rugby. They were so into it with their regular seats next to the tunnel at Eden Park - and they were great supporters of Auckland and the All Blacks.

But it was not just their influence that made me hold my breath when I first watched New Zealand play. I wasn´t even in the stadium, I just watched the game on TV. Nevertheless I could feel that there was something special about the All Blacks. This team has something we call presence.

Before very long I became a big fan of the All Blacks. I got up at 3am to watch their games, spent a day in stunned dismay after the terrible 21-20 loss against South Africa at Rustenburg, cursed Rodney So'oialo for his fatal mistake, was full of enthusiasm when we defeated England, France and Wales in the end-of -year tour. I lived the All Blacks.

But what is it that makes this team so unbelievably…good? It´s not just that they play some pretty amazing footie, that they do it so well that it's a delight to watch them. It's not just hat they are the hardest team to beat and quite probably the next world champions. Success alone doesn't make a bloody good team, which is what they are.I don't want to go into individual players in more detail.

You could fill pages with the genius of Richie McCaw, the tireless captain, of Dan Carter, whose skills and style I admire, of Joe Rokocoko, Luke McAlister, Ali Williams, Chris Jack and all the other All Blacks. People have done that before. Although each player is a fantastic footballer in his own right, it's the team that makes up the All Blacks.

It's their perfect interaction, their fighting together for a victory and for a good game. It´s the Haka before every game, the Silver Fern, the Black Jersey. It's the players standing for something that is bigger than themselves, for a name - a name with history and a name with tradition. It's this team that gives us fans a feeling of unity and of belonging, that lets us suffer from every defeat and celebrate every victory, just as if we were part of the team - and somehow we are. It's the team that makes us proud to be a supporter, that inspires a whole nation. And more. It's the All Blacks.

http://www.allblacks.com/index.cfm?layout=displayFanStory&newsArticle=6659

World Cup preview - All Blacks
24/08/2007
Jimmy Mortimer


The world's number one team heads to the 2007 Rugby World Cup again as favourites. However, unlike other World Cups, the All Blacks head to France with an imposing record and coach Graham Henry has done everything possible to ensure that since the last world cup they are as well prepared as possible.

Since Rugby World Cup 2003...
In the last four years the All Blacks have lost only 5 matches and won 38 (an 88% winning record). No team in history has compiled such a magnificent record, and only Martin Johnson's and Clive Woodward's 2003 England had a comparable record over a 3+ year period.

In this time the All Blacks have only lost to two teams, the Springboks and the Wallabies, and even against the latter were unbeaten in 2005 and 2006.They inflicted the heaviest defeat ever on the fabled British & Irish Lions with an impressive 3-0 whitewash, completed a rare home unions Grand Slam, have not relinquished the Bledisloe Cup in this period, and with their recent Philips Tri Nations victory, won the southern hemisphere's premier trophy for the third year in a row, and eighth overall (after 12 years of competition).

They have also conquered Europe - marching through the Northern Hemisphere to remain unbeaten against all of their nations with their last defeat coming at the hands of World Champions elect England in early 2003. They have in this time inflicted on England and France their heaviest home defeats in history (twice to France), with their performance in late 2005 against Les Bleus labelled by many purists as the most complete rugby football massacre of all time.Strange that no mention of the fact that this year's host France, have had their three worst defeats in history inflicted upon them by this All Blacks team in the last three years, twice in their own backyard.As their resume has become all the more impressive, so has expectation, both at home and worldwide. In 2007 the All Blacks have been labelled as a declining force, yet to hit their straps. Two heavy defeats against a depleted French outfit seemed to impress no one, and the All Blacks most recent nemesis, the Wallabies, seemed to, out of nowhere, come from behind to stun the world's best team 20-15 in Melbourne. Closing wins against a weakened Springbok team, and a solid shut out of the Wallabies in Auckland have silenced some critics, but not all....

Strengths
Their most obvious is their depth. New Zealand with their sound domestic structure has always had great talent, but Graham Henry has been possessed in his quest to ensure that there are at least two international class players in every position. This was spectacularly evidenced in their Grand Slam tour, where Henry rotated his entire starting fifteeen against Ireland after beating Wales, and the team looked no weaker for it.

This strength also corresponds to their bench, giving them tremendous strike power with no position being weakened when substituted.

This All Blacks team also has multiple gameplans, something not seen in the past, with the ability to run opposition ragged with a gifted back division, yet able also to grind teams down through the forwards or through the kicking of their gifted number 10 Dan Carter. While his form has been arguably down this year, he is still probably the worlds premier flyhalf - a position crucial to a team winning the William Webb Ellis Cup.They possess probably the strongest pack in world rugby - and are realistically the world's best scrummaging team. They have great pride in their ability in this set piece, and have their greatest depth in their forwards.
The All Blacks also field the best loose forward trio of all the world teams, with the 6,7,8 combination of Collins, McCaw and So'oialo being thereabouts the best in their respective positions in the planet. Their nous at the breakdown has been one of the keys to their dominance over these recent years, and this has led to them being an impressive defensive side, and a lethal counterattacking team. However, this innovation over the last few years has been duly noted by other world teams, and contestation at the ruck is very strong globally.

While some are casting doubts over the All Blacks recent form and others mutter the word "chokers" - the reality is that the All Blacks most dominant strength is the recent record they bring to the 2007 Cup. Diminishing or not, they have been the world's dominant team in a way that no other team has been before them, and bring with them a winning culture.

Weaknesses
Mindset. If the All Blacks remind themselves of their "failures" of 99 and 03 they will create doubt that is not needed. Never mind that Les Bleus and the Wallabies played their greatest games of all time to beat New Zealand in these Cups, the All Blacks carry a century old history of expectation and quite simply, their public expects them to win.

The word chokers will be muttered, nay yelled, by all the opposition teams, as they know that they have a greater chance of beating the All Blacks mentally than on the park. Graham Henry and his men have ensured that these mistakes will not be repeated, and reflecting on them will be at their own peril.Tana Umaga's retirement from international rugby probably hurt the All Blacks more than they care to admit. While players such as Nonu, Smith, Muliana and Toeava have done sufficient jobs as custodians of the 13 jumper - the abundant strength of all other positions of the team has probably glossed over the hole which has only emerged in their most recent defeat in Melbourne as an obvious one. It was Christian Cullen's and Leon Macdonald's (both first choice fullbacks) selections in these positions in the 99 and 03 Cup that was probably as much a reason for defeat as anything else - and this defensive channel will again be targeted in France.

Luke McAlister's emergence as an international level second five-eighth - while a benefit of New Zealand's depth, has created a problem with itself, with a selection dilemma between himself and Aaron Mauger. They both possess different styles of play, and as the above mentioned problematic 13 position requires strength and guidance from the 12 jersey, this could cause another potential weakness in the All Blacks' armoury.

For all of their strength in the set piece, the All Blacks' most glaring weakness is once again their lineout. Over the last decade despite world class locks and hookers, the New Zealand line out seems to periodically suffer and remains one of the only top ranked nations not to consistently compete against opposition throws. While it is not realistically a weakness that loses them games, it is an area that can and will be targeted.

Their greatest strength though has probably been ironically their greatest recent weakness, as being the world's best team over such a long period has meant that their competitors have watched them closely and the gap is not as wide as it was in 2005 and 2006. With their blitzrieg style of play and impressive forward dominance other nations have learnt and like any other sporting code, the better the team - or player(s) - at the top of the hill, the better the chasing pack will inevitably become.

The X factor
Graham Henry and others have spoken often of not repeating the mistakes of previous World Cups and in 2003 the All Blacks were brilliant in notching up 50 points against both the Springboks and the Wallabies in their backyards. Yet in the return games in New Zealand, the margins were traditionally tight. Many said that the All Blacks showed all of their Aces before the World Cup even started, and this was sensationally proven by Eddie Jones.

Has this lesson been learned? Have the 2007 All Blacks planned one of rugby history's great feints and been underplaying their hand to roll out artillery that the rugby world will be shocked by come October 20. Time will tell.The other X factor is the world's premier openside flanker, the All Blacks captain Richie McCaw. He has been instrumental in his team's success, and while other nations bemoan his "cheating", the reality is that it seems their claims are the only way other teams can beat him. Two crucial points. What happens if he is injured. Even Dan Carter can in theory afford to be injured as they have Nick Evans, a world class 10 in their squad. But there is no one (maybe bar Marty Holah, not in the squad or selector's frame) to replace their mecurial captain. But the other is his captaincy. He leads from the front, no doubt - but he does not seem the inspirational captain that Tana Umaga was, and is not yet an international captain (excluding his magnificent win-loss record) mentioned in the same breath as Johnson, Eales, Piennar and others. Can he inspire his team to win if they are 10 points behind with 10 minutes to go in a World Cup Semi-final? This remains to be seen.

The reality is if the All Blacks play to potential, execute a game plan with a contingency, don't defeat themselves in their heads, and don't select a full back or prop in the outside centre position, they should win this 2007 World Cup.

Friday, August 24, 2007

Last week at home for the guys. And they've been quite busy...

http://www.tv3.co.nz/VideoBrowseAll/EntertainmentVideo/tabid/312/articleID/33232/Default.aspx#video

All Black cereal cards a huge hit with fans
Fri, 24 Aug 2007 06:29p.m

A breakfast cereal promotion is proving a big hit with All Black fans.

Stat Attack cards have become a hot collector’s item - with some paying big money to complete their collections. And a game using the cards is a hit among school children.

A playing card comes in every Weetbix box with 42 player profiles needed to complete the set.
It is a marketing dream for Sanitarium.

Cards can be swapped, bought and sold but more often, fought over in a game called "Stat Attack", being played in school grounds across the country.

A typical question - how heavy is a particular All Black?

Or how many test points has he made?

Over four hundred listings for Stat Attack have been posted on Trade Me with full sets selling for over a hundred dollars.

Tracey Fitzwilliam paid nearly $2,000 for her set - framed and signed by the All Blacks.

It is that sort of enthusiasm that's proving Stat Attack's a big winner for Weetbix.
*****
Meeting with the fans/ People's press conference
Fri, 24 Aug 2007

Thank you very much to Campbell Live for putting these videos online so quickly after the show and allowing their world broadcast. Thank you very much to Izzy for warning us about the show... And still about our local fan : she sent us this scan from a local paper last week (Richie -when he was just a kid)

Six lucky All Black fans get the chance to get up close and personal with some key members of our Rugby World Cup squad before they head to France.

Tonight they're putting questions to Richie McCaw, Graham Henry and Doug Howlett on our People's Press Conference.

Part 1

Part 2 (France & their ABs jerseys...I told you we loved you...)

Part 3

nb : the links may not be the good ones, but if you find any of these videos, you'll find the 2 others ;)
******
YES, I'm a bit jealoussince I lost, but Hamish totally deserved it...
Rugby geek wins trip to World Cup
Fri, 24 Aug 2007 06:32p.m.
Thousands of kiwis will be making the pilgrimage to France as the All Blacks vie for that elusive Rugby World Cup.
Among them will be a Christchurch fan who never dreamed he would see "his" team in some of the great rugby-playing venues of the world.
In February it started as a hobby - tapping away on rugby articles on the All Blacks and the world cup.
Now Hamish McBrearty has beaten a host of writers from all over the world in an on-line competition. First prize includes return airfares to France, accommodation, access to games, and a daily allowance.
He predicts France will bundle out South Africa in one semi and the All Blacks will beat the Wallabies in the other, before repeating their triumph of 1987.

Some pre-World Cup investments...

First of all, those DVDs are All Zones (so wherever you are on the globe, you can buy them...)

-- So, the Adidas Legends DVD. Editions RH Prod

I have the French version only (with no subtitle, just a translator...I prefer subtitle but that's fine!). I hope it exists in English. So far I have just watched the Bonus interview of our captain. Other bonuses : interviews of Dan Carter and Jonah Lomu.

A noter que ce reportage n'est pas celui diffuse sur Canal+ au mois de juin. Je ne peux faire plus de commentaire (comme ecrit ci dessus, je n'ai visionne que l'interview de Richie -et la, j'ai une remarque, par contre : je ne sais pas qui est le cameraman, mais il a fait des plans bizarres. C'est soit des zooms sur le regards soit des zooms flous sur les gradins... Et croyez moi, quand on regarde le reportage sur l'ordi, ca fait mal aux yeux...)

Ce DVD est aussi en vente avec un DVD Bonus et un ballon de rugby des All Blacks -mais, comme le ballon m'interessait pas, je n'ai achete que cette version. Si vous avez le DVD avec le Bonus, donnez-nous des nouvelles...Merci

*****
-- Les grands duels du sport : France vs. All Blacks 1906/2006.
Editions RH Prod

What is fun here is that the teams met 43 times, France won only 10 matches but there is still a huge respect between the two teams and anytime they meet, les Bleus always believe they can do it (and they actually did it in '99... sorry!)

Bon, celui la, je ne l'ai carrement pas encore ouvert (eh, minute, je viens de les recevoir! mais des que j'aurai bien tout regarder, promis jure -pas crache quand meme-, je vous dirai ce que j'en pense...

Thursday, August 23, 2007

World Cup or nothing (The Man said...)

http://www.stuff.co.nz/4174533a10295.html

By MARC HINTON - RugbyHeaven
Thursday, 23 August 2007

JOHN SELKIRK/Dominion Post (picture)

Richie McCaw may be the best player in world rugby, voted so by his peers, pundits and public, but the All Blacks captain says the next couple of months in France will define him as a player.

That, said McCaw as he reflected after the first day of the All Blacks' final pre-World Cup training camp in Auckland, was a reality of the modern rugby environment where World Cup success is paramount.

So all the individual accolades (and McCaw has won pretty much them all, including a clean sweep of the international gongs last year) and all the team trophies that the All Blacks have collected over the past four years in effect count for nothing.
To be considered a true great, McCaw knows he must lift the Webb Ellis Cup in Paris on October 20.

"It's definitely going to (define me), it's going to define this team," he said yesterday.
"A lot of the guys have played a lot of rugby over the last four years and we've been pretty successful over the four years.
"But what happens in the next six weeks will be how you remember what this team is about.
"We're pretty proud about what we've done so far and that can't be taken away from us now. But it'd be nice just to put the icing on the cake. That's what this World Cup is about. Once you get to the knockout stage its three big games you've got to win and I know we've got the ability to do that if we get it right."

McCaw also revealed the approach being taken by the All Blacks to help them best handle the pressure that will be heaped upon them when they arrive in France next week.
They are overwhelming tournament favourites, yet they haven't won the global title in 20 years, which is a theme they'll hear repeatedly until they end that drought.

"I always say if you could pick any team, any guys to run out with, you wouldn't pick anyone else ... Graham (Henry) says having pressure's a privilege. If you haven't got it you might as well do something else," McCaw said.

The 26-year-old openside flanker said he was happy with the physical and mental state of his team as it assembles in Auckland, going through its first training run in the morning before attending an official farewell luncheon.
The players will have a hitout in Auckland today against a scratch "Barbarians" side comprising club and fringe provincial players.
The skipper wasn't worried about the low-key nature of preparations this time around.
He said the All Blacks would have plenty of time to build form and momentum through their pool and following a tough campaign he felt the players needed some down time ahead of the intensity of a World Cup.

"It would have been bloody tough if we didn't have a break after the Tri Nations. That was two months of pretty tough rugby. We had to have a break, and I think it's going to work pretty good for us."
All Blacks assistant coach Wayne Smith said the signs in Auckland were positive.
"We're tracking really well," said Smith.
"I think (that) physically we're good. We're a lot sharper than we were in the Tri Nations, plus there's a monkey off the back in terms of a bit less anxiety.
"We've done a lot of work on our execution. We understand we were making too many errors, and we've just got to look to keep nailing that."

*****
What if.... what will happen then?
Well, we will still be here. But will the guys be able to accept the result?
I have always said that a final would be just enough (it would be the best result for the ABs during the World Cup in 12 years...) But don't worry guys, whatever the result :

We will still be here!!!

All Blacks World Cup farewell (operation Dinner out)

http://www.nzherald.co.nz/section/4/story.cfm?c_id=4&objectid=10459387
see also the video & some pics on the same page

5:00AM Thursday August 23, 2007
By Alanah May Eriksen

It was a woman's dream come true - talking handbags over lunch with Richie McCaw.
Nine staff and clients of Soiree Events Management got to sit with the All Black captain for the Rugby World Cup Farewell Lunch yesterday. Tickets for the corporate lunch cost $275 a head plus a $500 table fee, but it was well worth it, said diner Sarah Lee.
"He's way hotter than what you see on the TV.
"He's beautiful and he can hold a conversation, he's a charming gentleman."
It was luck of the draw that McCaw was assigned to sit with a bunch of single women while other All Blacks sat with groups of men, said Ms Lee. "We got there and they announced 'Richie, go to table 69'. We were all screaming and jumping up and down.
"Of course we wanted to get him."
Ms Lee, 32, said none of the women at the table was a rugby fan and didn't talk about the sport with McCaw.
"We asked him if he had a girlfriend and talked about handbags and I think he was pretty happy with that."

Ms Lee said now that she had met the 27-year-old, she would probably watch some World Cup games.
She also had a chance to chat to Luke McAlister and Mils Muliaina, who said they sat with groups of men who only wanted to talk about rugby.

"They said they just wanted to talk about normal things, like the top 10 songs at the moment or something, anything but rugby."
Bernadette Hoani, also at the table, got to speak to Ali Williams, Doug Howlett and former All Black Wayne Shelford.
"They were all very jealous Richie got to sit with a whole bunch of girls."
All Blacks spokesman Scott Compton said: "As luck would have it, Richie got to sit with a bunch of enthusiastic young women. It was fortuitous."
The squad of 30, with three coaches, selector Sir Brian Lochore and manager Darren Shand, attended the event at Eden Park.
Entertainment included All Blacks coach Graham Henry and McCaw as guest speakers and an auction, including tickets to the Steinlager Rugby Awards, rugby memorabilia and a signed rugby ball.
Premier Hospitality managing director Ian Fraser said the event, attended by 800 people, raised about $50,000 which will go to the New Zealand Rugby Union's national charity Save the Children.
The All Blacks leave for the World Cup in France on Wednesday.

*****
Well, of course, he can hold a conversation! He is the captain for God's sake!
But I'd have been curious to know the whole anwer about the handbag...
Talking about that, if you watch the video, you will remark that the WAGs question is asked to Graham -and I did appreciate his answer :P

Message to Ms Lee : "Good to see that you needed this meeting to see that your guys were worth a look! and even more than a look..."

No more fake RGs pics... it's for their own safety! Who knows how a jealous real RG can react ???

News of the week

First of all, I'd like to say that I couldn't update yesterday -that's why the pics were not online before (it was a problem with Google...) So here are the official & training & dinner pics ;)

To Anonymous : my email address is marykoala@hotmail.fr
Thanks ;)

*****
PART ONE / OFFICIAL PICTURES


The man came in

and the light be...
and my All Blacks Awards for :
- best haka leader in the squad : Carl
- youngest dad : Luke

-best Play Station player : Keven
- best host for the show, 'On the couch' : Jacko
- oldest All Black in the squad : Anton (first cap in 1996)
*****
PART TWO / TRAINING SESSION


Rugby: ABs still hamstrung by injuries 7 days out from departure
Wed, 22 Aug 2007 06:49p.m.
Tvnz : Last hit out for the ABs
*****
PART THREE / OPERATION : DINNER OUT

Note : unfortunately, these women are not the official Richie Girls. We promise to have our own meeting for another dinner. We know that Richie was pretty upset about that (but the problem is about to be solved...)

http://tvnz.co.nz/view/video_popup_windows_skin/1317175
One News : Richie McCaw fronts the media during a farewell lunch in Auckland (the sound is not very good...)

Monday, August 20, 2007

Hey everyone!


You just did a really great job with the exam, and once again : THANK YOU!

Thank you for sending me the links for pictures and articles and videos and everything...
The Richie Girls community is growing every day, Baby Richie is also growing up! Woaw!
Just for this, or maybe because of this, this video is for you ;)
I love you all (and please, don't laugh : I know, I look tired!)

or

Support helps McCaw tackle loneliest role (stuff.co.nz)

http://www.stuff.co.nz/bayofplenty/4170237a6459.html#Scene_1


Sunday, 19 August 2007


It can be one of the loneliest places on earth captaining an All Blacks team at a World Cup. Ask Taine Randell. Ask Reuben Thorne. When it's all going well, it's a breeze; but when things start to unravel you can feel as helpless as George W Bush with the Times crossword.

The captain is the spiritual guiding force. It's to him the troops turn in times of crisis. The thing is, of late the All Blacks' captain hasn't had a lot of answers when the rot has set in at Rugby World Cup time.

In 2003 Thorne was in charge when his side came out flat and couldn't gain any sort of control of the ill-fated semifinal against Australia in Sydney. He was unable to institute the changes needed. In short, he had no plan B.

In many ways it was worse in 1999 when Randell's All Blacks completely unravelled in the face of a stirring French second-half comeback in another semifinal shocker. Once again the leader was helpless as the tide turned against him.It's an unforgiving position, no doubt.

Around 99 per cent of the time all you have to worry about is what to say at the post-match press conference. The on-field stuff takes care of itself. You are skippering the All Blacks after all.

But if there's a lesson from recent history, it's that the All Blacks have lacked decisive leadership when they've needed it most at World Cups.
It's one that coach Graham Henry has had fairly high on his list of priorities as he's groomed Richie McCaw for the job.Two years as Tana Umaga's deputy was a key part of the apprenticeship.

But Henry has also ensured McCaw's is not a lone voice when it comes to leading the All Blacks. There is, of course, the leadership group which has been designed principally to share the load in this area and encourage a wider responsibility.

Plus, it's helped that the All Blacks captain is also their best player or at least one of the two truly global superstars they have in their midst. The other one, the princely Dan Carter, believes his Canterbury, Crusaders and All Blacks teammate has emerged as just the captain his country needs as another World Cup looms on the horizon.

"He's a great leader," says Carter of his friend. "The reason he's a great leader is the way he plays the game. He doesn't change anything because he's the captain. He just goes out there and puts his body on the line.(He) just inspires you to push your body to the limit, just like he does every game."

The ice-cool first-five says one of McCaw's attributes is his ability to handle the pressure that goes with the position.
"It's a credit to him," says Carter. "People expect a lot. But he hasn't changed in any way. I think he handles it all really well."

In fact it's no stretch to say that McCaw and Carter the two key figures in the All Blacks' cup campaign lean on each other. Empathy, after all, is the ultimate bond.
"But it's more a case that the whole team are here to support both of us," says Carter.

"There's some pretty experienced guys within the team, with a lot of knowledge. It's great knowing that support's there when you need it."
It's one of the principal reasons Thorne is still there. So too Anton Oliver, another former captain. Sure, they can play a bit. But they're also huge crutches for McCaw.

"Having been in his situation before, I know how important it will be to have good support around him," says Thorne.
"Myself and Anton and a number of other senior guys will try to get behind him and try to make his life a little bit easier."
This will be vital for McCaw. Unlike previous skippers, he'll have a network of support when the acid-test inevitably comes during this campaign.

Sir Brian Lochore, who knows a little about leadership, describes McCaw as "very comfortable" in the role, where he commands "total respect".
"He's a highly intelligent person and a very good rugby player and he's very well liked by his fellow players. I think he has grown in the role very well."

Just how much, we won't know for sure until that moment comes when a response is required. McCaw, by all accounts, is prepared for it.


******
I have no idea if Richie has a plan B ; but I know that whatever the result, he will always have the Richie Girls!
So, there is no problem...