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Common theme emerges as All Blacks laud Sam Cane ahead of 100th cap

By Ned Lester
Sam Cane of New Zealand looks dejected as the players of New Zealand form a huddle at full-time following the Rugby World Cup Final match between New Zealand and South Africa at Stade de France on October 28, 2023 in Paris, France. (Photo by Michael Steele - World Rugby/World Rugby via Getty Images)

Former All Blacks captain Sam Cane is set to become the nation’s 13th Test centurion on Saturday night in what will be the 32-year-old’s final run in a black jersey on home soil.

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Having concluded a tumultuous captaincy tenure with a trip to the Rugby World Cup final last year, 2024’s schedule only became Cane’s impromptu farewell tour in May this year when the Chiefs centurion made a shock announcement, signing a long-term deal with Suntory Sungoliath in Japan from the upcoming season onwards, requiring a release from his New Zealand Rugby contract to do so.

Now, set to farewell another great after a Rugby World Cup exodus in 2023, Cane’s teammates have started to share testimonials and within them, a common thread is easily identified.

Cane’s leadership has not been limited to his tenure as captain and it appears his leadership style has been a steady presence throughout this year’s campaign.

His successor, Scott Barrett, spoke on Cane’s contribution to the team at Friday’s captain’s run at Sky Stadium.

“Sam’s been huge since coming back into the team after going to Japan. He’s got a huge amount of respect and mana within the group and he challenges the group when needed,” Barrett said.

“He’s been great for me to bounce ideas off and challenge me at times as well. He’s hugely valuable to this group and this team wants to go out and put out a performance that does him justice on his 100th.”

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The captain wasn’t the only one to mention Cane’s willingness to offer brutal truths, as head coach Scott Robertson followed a similar line of thought when asked how the man himself compared to his public perception.

“He’s one of those guys you’ve got to get to know,” Robertson said. “I think from afar you’ve got an opinion but when you’ve actually seen him, met him in and around the environment… he’ll say things that others won’t. And I don’t say that lightly.

“I mentioned it earlier, he’s a bit of a sheriff; he’s got it in the holster and he’ll ‘bang’, he’ll fire and say ‘no, this is how it is’ and ‘I’m going to call you out’ or ‘this is the All Blacks standard’.

“His ability to do it week after week in a tough position, he’s broken his neck, he’s bounced back, he’s consistent on the field.

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“The leadership part is something that I really respect. He’s been great for us in our environment and he’s performed, more importantly. It’s great that we can give him 100 (caps) off the back of playing well and what he’s done over his 10-odd year career.”

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Robertson was then asked by RugbyPass contributor Gregor Paul if Cane was being judged as an openside flanker while playing and developing his game more in line with the blindside flanker role.

“I haven’t thought of it that way but you could say that. He knows his way around the field, he’s got a good GPS on him. He turns up in the right positions, you saw him get that hard ball on the ground last week against Aussie; he anticipates the game really well but he reads it and that’s what we need around that leadership. That’s a big thing I’ve learned this year.”

Along with the theme of Cane being a straight shooter, the former captain’s quality of character and reliability on the field were also applauded.

“Sam’s a great man. I played schools with him, 20s, and played against him a lot through Super Rugby and with him in this team a lot too,” halfback TJ Perenara explained.

“His influence on this team won’t be forgotten. He’s been an amazing captain for this team and an amazing player, he’s someone you can rely on and you know that he’s going to show up for you week in, week out.

“Sam’s been someone we can always rely on in this environment and that says a lot about him as a man and as a player, that we can always count on him.”

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Comments

1 Comment
T
TT 23 mins ago

Congrats Cane! Hat off to you. Deserved most of your 100, especially in your earlier years.


But for balance, criticising AB public, tripping a kid(!) post match & the 1st ever & as a captain BUT ALSO in a RWC final, a red card showed, as the Irish captain said once in-match, quote, ‘ you’re no McCaw’… but no one else was, ever.


But again, Congrats Cane! Hat off to you. Deserved most of your 100.

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TT 57 minutes ago
How the All Blacks are enduring pain now in readiness for 2027 RWC crusade

Off topic 1st, Crusader’s ’24 SR shocked everyone. But the failure carried on all SR. I assume Penny got back in by the skin of his teeth.

 

Back on ABs.

 

Plummer - Sorry, but Plummer orchestrated the SR Blues championship.

 

Hotham didn’t play for the All Black?? It was actually V Fiji. & a shocker, as was the test of his ’24 SR. I remember his errors stood out. A boy among men. Club standard at best. Every SR  halfback, & the replacement, is a mile ahead of him. I mean it, I hope I’m dead wrong. https://www.allblacks.com/news/all-blacks-team-named-to-play-fiji-in-san-diego

 

Fainganuku – forgot him? He’d be 1st pick every time. 1 of best in world. BUT he’s not there / available! It’s pathetic & disrespectful for Razor to talk about him while not even giving current new ABs even a run.

 

Fihaki – his SR pretty lame but no need to call in while Narawa and Proctor a mile ahead, so again, pathetic & disrespectful for Razor to talk about him they not even run. So much for Mr Team man, Razor.

 

Nth tour – ABs play rank 1 (Irel), 4(France) & 5(England) + 8 (Italy).  All at home grounds obviously. Hardest ranked tour in AB history. The ABs & a full squad of back ups should have run multiple times by now to even be warmed up to a hope of winning?? France will also likely field a B team. Why?! Your source? They have a point to prove after another failed RWC. & their own! The RW Champions of Choking.

 

I agree Mounga got a rough deal under both Hansen & Foster. But most new ABs did. Hansen & Foster were the worse new AB developers in history hence their failure in the end. They were just given high quality teams.

 

Razor choose to be AB coach. In afft behind Foster’s back. Like Foster, there's no training in period. That’s done at there endless camps. He's meant develop new ABs asap & get results. He’s so far failing worst in history. Yep hope he’s got a ‘cunning plan’, but that does not excuse failing to develop new ABs & get results, eg against 10th ranked Wallabies, especially more than just the 1st 15min, the next 65min wilted (again) & lost.

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