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The winners and losers from the 2024 All Blacks XV

Quinn Tupaea and the All Blacks XV. Photos By Brendan Moran/Sportsfile via Getty Images

A two-from-two Northern Tour from the All Blacks XV has displayed the depth of New Zealand’s talent stocks once more, with no shortage of emerging stars making their case for higher honours.

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With the changing of the guard in the All Blacks coaching box came a changing of selections in the development squad, with just five forwards and one back – Quinn Tupaea – from the 2023 squad earning selection in 2024. Clayton McMillan also succeeded Leon MacDonald as head coach.

With injuries and the birth of babies keeping various players from both the All Blacks and All Blacks XV in New Zealand or requiring them to leave Europe early, the initial 29-man development squad was quickly broken up and there were players coming in and out every week.

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Hoskins Sotutu got injured before the team left, Peter Lakai and Josh Lord were called into the All Blacks, and Christian Lio-Willie followed soon after.

Brodie McAlister, Harry Plummer and then AJ Lam were called up after the first game against Munster and Du’Plessis Kirifi, Fabian Holland and Chay Fihaki have all joined the All Blacks in Paris following the Georgia win.

It’s an exhaustive list from an exhaustive schedule, and clearly, there are plenty of players benefitting from it with opportunities to don a black jersey.

Here are the winners and losers of the 2024 All Blacks XV squad.

Winners

The Captain

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Du’Plessis Kirifi has been on the outskirts of the All Blacks conversation for some years now, but even after being pushed to the bench for the Hurricanes this season due to the emergence of Peter Lakai, the 27-year-old was named captain for the 2024 All Blacks XV tour.

That faith was well rewarded, as Kirifi chewed through just shy of 30 tackles in his two games, was a constant threat around the breakdown and didn’t get called for a single penalty. That latter point is a significant one, as size and ill-discipline have been considered Kirifi’s Achilles heel throughout his career. A handful of dominant tackles across the two contests will help ease concerns over his size, too.

Kirifi offers a real point of difference to other leaders currently in the New Zealand rugby landscape, wearing his heart on his sleeve and playing with emotion. He’s a bulldog of a player, and in the post-Dane Coles and Brodie Retallick era, that’s something that could appeal to All Blacks selectors. If not, his consistent world-class performances should do the trick.

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The Second Row

All three locks for the All Blacks XV were outstanding across both games of this tour, claiming all but one of their 28 lineouts while holding their opponents Munster and Georgia to 88 per cent and 65 per cent lineout success respectively.

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Fabian Holland has been rewarded with an All Blacks call-up just three months after becoming eligible for the black jersey and won Man of the Match in his start against Munster. The 22-year-old proved once more to be a workhorse with double-digit carries and tackles in that game while providing both mobility and physicality around the park.

Isaia Walker-Leawere was a physical beast around the breakdown and while he was handed a yellow card for collapsing a rolling maul against Munster, he made a game-high four dominant tackles in that game and was then squeaky clean against Georgia.

Naitoa Ah Kuoi started the second game and made a team-high 16 tackles while contributing nine carries and 11 lineout wins.

The Backline Bruiser

14-time All Black midfielder Quinn Tupaea was superb against both Munster, where he started at inside centre, and Georgia, where he started on the right wing.

Tupaea was physical and direct with ball in hand, accelerating hard into contact with no hesitation about getting his hands dirty. He led his side with 13 carries in Limerick.

On defence, the 25-year-old put up loose forward-esque numbers with a dozen tackles against Munster and nine tackles made against Georgia while looking like a rock over the ball in the breakdown.

His strength and energy were influential in both games and while it was AJ Lam who was called into the All Blacks as midfield cover for Billy Proctor – after Harry Plummer went down – Tupaea certainly looks ready for the bright lights of the international arena again.

Losers

The Front Row

The All Blacks XV scrum did well against Munster, not so much against Georgia. Perhaps that should be expected, the Georgians are notoriously strong scrummagers, but this wasn’t some young up-and-coming starting front row from the Kiwis.

It was George Bower, Kurt Eklund and Marcel Renata who started against Georgia, none of whom are under the age of 30. Again, credit to Georgia for demanding the most experienced selections New Zealand could offer, but this is a development team at the start of a World Cup cycle.

The reserve unit of Bradley Slater, 26, Xavier Numia, 25, and Saula Ma’u, 24, is more in the age profile you’d expect to see from the All Blacks XV, but for Slater and Ma’u to only see 19 minutes of action against the kind of international scrummaging they will hope to one day face on a weekly basis is a missed opportunity.

24-year-old George Dyer did start in game one against Munster, pushing Ma’u out of the matchday 23 while again Numia and Slater saw bench minutes.

Honourable mentions

Loose forwards Corey Kellow and Devan Flanders were immense, while in the outside backs, Kini Naholo and Shaun Stevenson made magic happen with nearly every touch. Riley Higgins took the step up against Georgia in his stride and Noah Hotham showed why he’s already been capped by the All Blacks at just 21 years of age.

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Comments

2 Comments
B
BH 1 hr ago

Tupaea should be in the All Blacks ahead of Havili. Tupaea's versatility and his ability to steal turnovers at rucks sets him apart from Havili. NZ has enough players to cover the midfield and fullback positions that Havili usually covers.

B
Bruiser 6 mins ago

Agree, Havilli too lightweight and has had his moment

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JW 28 minutes ago
Scott Robertson explains the new halves pairing for the All Blacks ahead of France

More indecision and excuses from Razor.


You've given a spot at 6 to Finau whom you haven't even had the courage to use off the bench in the last two games. Now the young enforcer is going into a big much with no rugby, we should expect a similar result to how Aumua struggled to impact a game after he'd hardly been given any chances of the bench either.


Weve now dropped a back three player who also wasn't even given any game time off the bench for someone coming in cold when they really need to have been playing constantly to perform at their best. There are just so many better pictures that should have been present rather than this mickey mouse selection.


I really hope Finau can overcome this, it won't be the first time he's had to. How is the bench even made up? Could you not just have included these changes in the article as well? I actually like BB coming back in, it highlights how courageous he is after sitting out through another concussion that could just as easily sent him back into months of symptoms again.


Dmac was also off his game last week, as was Ratima, with the poor platform Razor and his team have been setting the players up with. He needs to freedom to clear his mind from the clutter that saw him make so many bad decisions last week. It will still probably be a net loss for the team performance not having him on from the start but it should be better for them in the long run if he's allowed to just come on late and play his game trying to claw things back for the team.


With Roigard starting that might prove an outlet for the team to actually get on top first however. Along with Ardie busting a gut in his new role and emptying the tank by halftime, and being replaced by another new star, might mean that Dmac is just icing on the cake at the end.

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F
Flankly 55 minutes ago
Jake White: If I was England coach, I’d have been livid

I am not an England fan, but still very disappointed at what Borthwick is serving up. Regardless of winning or losing, they should be executing the basics at a world class level. That was the reason they replaced Eddie with Steve. After two years England has not built the solid foundations that the RFU were presumably after. Its hard to see it as anything other than a coaching problem.


Having said that I really hope that Rassie has got his team fired up for the game. The Boks at maximum intensity and with no crises (eg red cards) would be expected to win this game. But it does not take much reduction in pressure for Bok teams to lose. The Boks lose when complacency sets in.


On Felix Jones, my guess is that they can't agree on a non-compete so they kept him on payroll for the duration of the Nov tests. The risk was that he would be hired by Rassie or Razor prior to the tests.


As relates to law tweaking, it feels like WR are more comfortable discussing changes in laws than insisting on implementation. For my money the biggest thing they could do is to be strict and consistent in officiating ruck behavior. In every game we see flopping, lazy lying, clearing of unbound players, making plays while off your feet, delays in placing the ball, side entry, offside line infringements, and similar nonsense. It's really really bad, and the WR attitude seems to be that we should turn a blind eye in pursuit of "flowing rugby". In truth it's just boring, because it randomizes the outcome.

9 Go to comments
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