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'We just felt Saturday's the right time to try that particular part of the plan'

Richie Mo'unga and Beauden Barrett. Photo by Hannah Peters/Getty Images

Steve Hansen believes the time is right to field gifted playmaker Beauden Barrett at fullback and won’t rule out other profound positional changes to the All Blacks in World Cup year.

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Hansen has potentially played his trump card two months out from the tournament in Japan by shifting five-eighth Barrett back to the open spaces for Saturday’s Test against the Springboks in Wellington.

It will be the 28-year-old’s first start at fullback in six years and creates an altered dimension to New Zealand’s attacking makeup, with Richie Mo’unga bringing a more classical style to the No.10 jersey.

Hansen has retained just three starting players from the team who opened the Rugby Championship with a nervous 20-16 win over Argentina in Buenos Aires.

One of them is Barrett and another Ben Smith, who moves from fullback to wing. Lock Brodie Retallick is the lone forward retained.

Mo’unga faces his biggest assignment, having started just two of nine Tests in his rookie international season last year but his sheer weight of form for the Super Rugby champion Crusaders has almost forced Hansen’s hand.

Critics have long said the free-running Barrett is an inferior game manager to Mo’unga and should return to fullback, where he shone as a junior and in his early All Blacks years off the bench.

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Hansen believed two-time world player-of-the-year Barrett can shine there again in a move he has long considered.

“It’s probably time. We’ve got a plan with a whole lot of things that we want to do before we get to the nitty gritty business (World Cup) and we just felt Saturday’s the right time to try that particular part of the plan,” he said.

“Obviously to replace Beauden at first five you’ve got to have someone that’s pretty good.

“Richie’s been playing very well for the last couple of years … you’ve got two ball players on the park and you’ve got two world class players.”

Hansen was guarded when asked if he may consider another momentous World Cup change by fielding veteran captain Kieran Read at blindside flanker, rather than the No.8 jersey he has owned for a decade.

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Speculation around such a shift has mounted following the monstrous 2019 form of No.8 candidate Ardie Savea and a lack of blindside options.

“You’ll have to wait and see. There’s no point in me telling the world what we’re doing,” Hansen said.

“They can find out. It’s a good question but I can’t answer it.”

Read is the only proven force in this weekend’s experimental loose forward mix, with gun flankers Sam Cane and Savea omitted.

Matt Todd and Shannon Frizell get rare starts on the side of the scrum while Dalton Papali’i and Vaea Fifita are bench options.

– AAP

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Tom 6 hours ago
Will Bristol's daredevil 'Bears-ball' deliver the trophy they crave?

Also a Bristol fan and echo your sentiments.


I love watching Bristol but their approach will only get them so far I think. Exeter played like this when they first got promoted to the prem and had intermittent success, it wasn't until they wised up and played a more balanced game that they became a consistently top side.


I really want Bristol to continue playing this brand of rugby and I don't mind them running it from under their posts but I don't think they need to do it every single time. They need to be just a little bit more selective about when and where on the pitch they play. Every game they put themselves under so much needless pressure by turning the ball over under their posts trying to do kamikaze moves when it's not required. By all means run it from your goal line if there is a chance for a counter attack, we all want to see Bristol running in 100m tries from under their posts but I think until they learn when to do it and when to be pragmatic, they are unlikely to win the premiership.


Defense has been a real positive from Bristol, they've shown a lot of improvement there... And I will say that I think this kamikaze strategy they employ is a very good one for a struggling side and could be employed by Newcastle. It's seems to have turned around Gloucester's fortunes. The big advantage is even if you don't have the biggest and best players, what you have is cohesion. This is why Scotland keep battering England. England have better individuals but they look muddled as a team, trying to play a mixed strategy under coaches who lack charisma, the team has no identity. Scotland come out and give it full throttle from 1-15 even if they struggle against the top sides, sides like England and Wales who lack that identity drown under the relentless will and synergy of the Scots. If Newcastle did the same they could really surprise some people, I know the weather is bad up there but it hasn't bothered the Scots. Bristol can learn from Scotland too, Pat is on to something when he says the following but Scotland don't play test matches like headless chickens. They still play with the same level of clarity and ambition Bristol do but they are much better at picking their moments. They needed to go back to this mad game to get their cohesion back after a couple of seasons struggling but I hope they get a bit wiser from matches like Leinster and La Rochelle.


“If there’s clarity on what you’re trying to do as a team you can win anything.”

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