All Blacks captain Scott Barrett out for rest of France series
New Zealand's Scott Barrett is ruled out of the three-match series against France.
– New Zealand rugby captain Scott Barrett was on July 8 ruled out of the rest of the three-match series against France because of a calf tear suffered in the first Test.
The 31-year-old lock left the field in the 58th minute during the 31-27 win over France in Dunedin on July 5.
It was initially feared to be an Achilles issue, but a scan confirmed a calf tear, which means Barrett will miss second Test in Wellington on July 12 and the final match in Hamilton a week later.
Ardie Savea will assume the captaincy. The 31-year-old back-row forward and 2023 World Player of the Year has been in outstanding form for Super Rugby's Moana Pasifika this season.
Assistant coach Scott Hansen said Barrett would be a big loss.
'We'll take it week to week. He'll be keen to get back as quickly as possible, but we've got to do what's right for him and the injury process,' Hansen said.
'We trust our depth. It will be an opportunity for someone else to step up, and Ardie will come in and lead us well.'
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Barrett was involved in line-out preparation during training on July 8 and did not show any obvious signs of injury, walking without a limp.
As his teammates left the field to get changed after training, Barrett was first to lift heavy tackle bags into the team's truck, clearing the practice field.
'He's the skip,' Hansen explained. 'He'd rather be out on the field with his men, but he's been through enough rugby to know these are the challenges that you get.'
The injury will force a reshuffle in the starting side, with winger Sevu Reece also confirmed out after suffering a concussion in the first minute of the first Test.
Rookie Fabian Holland played the full 80 minutes at lock, while Tupou Vaa'i, who started at blindside flanker, moved back to lock for the final 20 minutes.
Head coach Scott Robertson could bring lock Patrick Tuipulotu into the starting side alongside Holland.
Prop Pasilio Tosi said the team were ready for any changes, and needed to perform better than they did in Dunedin.
'We're ready to muck in,' he said. 'There was lots of talk about it being their B-team, but they really stepped up to the plate. The boys are ready to right their wrongs this Saturday , and we know we'll be going up against another good France team .'
Robertson will name his team for the second Test on July 10. AFP

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