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All Black Sam Cane’s candid assessment of Wallaby Fraser McReight

By Finn Morton
Fraser McReight of the Australian Wallabies scores a try during The Rugby Championship & Bledisloe Cup match between Australia Wallabies and New Zealand All Blacks at Accor Stadium on September 21, 2024 in Sydney, Australia. (Photo by Mark Metcalfe/Getty Images)

99-Test flanker Sam Cane insists the All Blacks will “have our hands full” on Saturday evening if Fraser McReight takes the field for the Wallabies. McReight was sensational last weekend in Sydney and is almost certain to suit up again at Wellington’s Sky Stadium.

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Following a stint on the sidelines with a thumb injury, McReight donned Wallaby gold for the first time since the 40-29 win over Georgia in July when Australia took on New Zealand for the first of two Bledisloe Cup Tests a few days ago.

McReight was superb on a sunny afternoon at Sydney Olympic Park, with the openside flanker leading the charge against the heavily favoured New Zealanders. The visitors led 21-nil after 15 minutes but McReight helped the Aussies hit back with a well-worked set-piece move.

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Rob Valetini combined with Nic White off a lineout, who in turn sent McReight through a gap. That try in the 17th minute was one highlight from an individual performance that had fans wanting more and more.

The Queenslander ended up finishing with 60 running metres from 13 carries, 18 tackles completed, only one tackle missed and a couple of dominant stops as well. McReight lined up opposite Cane that day, and the two will likely go head-to-head again this weekend.

“Yeah, he’s been awesome. For a few years, he was an awesome Super Rugby player and probably the last couple of years he’s really established himself at Test level,” Cane told reporters in Upper Hutt on Tuesday.

“He’s got a massive engine, gets around the field really well and competes – obviously awesome at the breakdown, his support play is wicked is well.

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“Yeah, he had a great game (last weekend). We’ll have our hands full trying to minimise his impact on the game again.”

McReight’s try midway through the first half was the catalyst for an incredible comeback from the Wallabies, who ended up rallying from their 21-point deficit to almost win the Test. It was a three-point game with just over 60 seconds left to run on the clock.

Head-to-Head

Last 5 Meetings

Wins
5
Draws
0
Wins
0
Average Points scored
34
21
First try wins
80%
Home team wins
40%

While the All Blacks held on courtesy of a late scrum, it wasn’t a flawless performance from Scott Robertson’s men. Instead, while they didn’t win, the Wallabies finished with a confidence-building second half.

But, Australia have still tumbled down World Rugby’s rankings to an equal-worst 10th place despite their impressive efforts on home soil. Argentina moved up a spot after shocking world champions South Africa 29-28 in the same round of The Rugby Championship.

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“I think we’ve seen that time and time again in terms of the rankings, there’s actually not a heck of a lot between the top teams,” Cane said.

“I think world rugby is in a pretty good place when you think about the quality (in) a lot of those top teams. It’s certainly not something we read into, the world rankings.”

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Comments

1 Comment
G
GM 2 hours ago

Hope to see McReight tested by someone other than Cane at 7 in Wellington. Last Saturday was one of Sam's most ineffectual games, and the only reason he'll be there again is sentiment. If Razor has to give him his 100th in NZ, can it please be off the bench? Let's see Savea at 7, Sititi at 8 and Barrett at 6, which would give us 2 loosies on the bench, one impact (ideally Blackadder or Papali'i) and one same old same old (Cane). Barrett at 6 would also give us more grunt around the field and at the line-out, with Tuiplotu starting lock with either Vai'i or his Blues mate, Darry.

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AllyOz 42 minutes ago
How the embattled Wallabies pushed the All Blacks to the brink

I am Australian. I have played under Scots, NZ, SA, and English coaches as well as Australian coaches. Some of them were high level players (Wallabies, ABs and one former English RL representative from the 1970s. The Scot was a Commonwealth Games Wresting Representative. And some of them never played much past lower grades. In fact, I personally know a coach who only played as high as 3rd grade in the Brisbane comp but who went on to work successfully as a head coach in English Premier Rugby and Top 14. I think I learnt something from everyone of those coaches without fail. Their nationality, cultural background and even their playing pedigree seemed to have little to do with their ability to coach. Most of it came down to how hard they worked and how readily they were able to communicate their message to the playing group. Good players, like good employees in any field, will buy in if they feel they can learn and grow and progress under a coaching group or a business leader. Joe Schmidt is upskilling this group and I think they are really buying in to what he is developing. I think you make a very strong point that he might need additional resources around defence. It is pretty hard to deny given that we have leaked points against not just three teams in the RWC semis but also a very understrength and rebuilding Wales and Georgia. But I still think Schmidt has already garnered an enormous amount of respect from the playing group, and, with obvious exception like OJ, I think most of us Aussie fans trust that he will continue to improve the group (perhaps with a few additions from OS).

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