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Christian Lealiifano not certain he can manage three games in a row

(Photo by Dan Mullan / Getty Images)

Christian Lealiifano has cast doubt over his physical capacity to start three straight games if the Wallabies go all the way to the Rugby World Cup final.

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Cancer survivor Lealiifano said it’s “hard to say” if he is ready for that sort of load after having been carefully managed through the pool phase of the tournament.

Coach Michael Cheika this week indicated the 32-year-old had the inside running to take the problematic playmaking role in Saturday’s quarter-final against England in Oita.

Cheika indicated Lealiifano hadn’t played there more because of the need to cater for his wellbeing.

Bernard Foley started against Wales and Matt Toomua against Georgia last week, sparking criticism that the Wallabies were suffering through rotating the most important link position on the park.

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Such methods may continue into the knockout phase after Lealiifano revealed his health is a day to day proposition.

The Brumbies veteran was asked if he felt ready to play three consecutive games.

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“It’s hard to say. As we’ve gone, it’s just been managing each game as we go and seeing how I feel day to day,” he said.

“I guess I’d be confident to if I was called upon but I think it’s just about coming back to a week-by-week case and seeing how they go.”

https://www.instagram.com/p/B3e6SmrgFda/

Lealiifano took a year off rugby after being diagnosed with leukaemia in 2016.

He was one of the stars of Super Rugby this year, steering the Brumbies to Australian conference honours.

Lealiifano started all 18 games and played more minutes than any player in the entire competition aside from his teammate Tom Banks.

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That load may have caught up with a player who has been given a different regime to his teammates in Japan.

Strength and conditioning coach Brad Harrington revealed early in the tournament that Lealiifano was faster and stronger than earlier in his career but faced challenges in terms of recovery time.

“It’s just probably the intensity of the game takes more out of him and he’s getting older too, so we’ve got to manage our older athletes a little bit differently,” Harrington said.

“That’s the sort of balancing act with him but it’s something that the Brumbies did really well this year and we’ve learned a fair bit off them.”

Lealiifano said on Tuesday that he was grateful at the flexibility afforded him.

– AAP

After Canada’s final game of the World Cup was cancelled, the squad got out and about to help out the Kamaishi community:

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M
MA 3 hours ago
How the four-team format will help the Wallabies defeat the Lions

In regards to Mack Hansen, Tuipoloto and others who talent wasnt 'seen'..

If we look at acting, soccer and cricket as examples, Hugh Jackman, the Heminsworths in acting; Keith Urban in Nashville, Mike Hussey and various cricketers who played in UK and made the Australian team; and many soccer players playing overseas.


My opinion is that perhaps the ' 'potential' or latent talent is there, but it's just below the surface.


ANd that decision, as made by Tane Edmed, Noah, Will Skelton to go overseas is the catalyst to activate the latent and bring it to the surface.


Based on my personal experience of leaving Oz and spending 14 months o/s, I was fully away from home and all usual support systems and past memories that reminded me of the past.


Ooverseas, they weren't there. I had t o survive, I could invent myself as who I wanted, and there was no one to blame but me.


It bought me alive, focused my efforts towards what I wanted and people largely accepted me for who I was and how I turned up.


So my suggestion is to make overseas scholarships for younger players and older too so they can benefit from the value offered by overseas coaching acumen, established systems, higher intensity competition which like the pressure that turns coal into diamonds, can produce more Skeltons, Arnold's, Kellaways and the like.


After the Lion's tour say, create 20 x $10,000 scholarships for players to travel and play overseas.


Set up a HECS style arrangement if necessary to recycle these funds ongoingly.


Ooverseas travel, like parenthood or difficult life situations brings out people's physical and emotional strengths in my own experiences, let's use it in rugby.

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