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'No roof' to Savea ability for ex-All Black Kaino before France Tests
'No roof' to Savea ability for ex-All Black Kaino before France Tests

France 24

time02-07-2025

  • Sport
  • France 24

'No roof' to Savea ability for ex-All Black Kaino before France Tests

Savea has been at his ball-carrying best this season after leading Moana Pasifika to a record high finish of seventh place in Super Rugby Pacific. Despite his impressive form, the 31-year-old missed out on the All Blacks captaincy with head coach Scott Robertson keeping Crusaders lock Scott Barrett in the role. "He doesn't have a roof, he's that good," Kaino told AFP. "He's always looking to improve. His skill set is amazing," the 81-time All Black added. Savea made his Test debut in 2016 as a substitute with Kaino already on the field. Wellington-born back-rower Savea was named World Rugby player of the year in 2023 before continuing that form last year scoring four tries in 13 Tests. "When you've got a mindset and you've got a skill set like that, I don't think you have boundaries of what you're capable of," Toulouse assistant coach Kaino said "I think he still can get better, even though he's world class at the moment," the 42-year-old added. 'Unleash' France talent Savea announced earlier this month he will return to Japan to play for Kobelco Kobe Steelers next season underlining his status as one of world rugby's most in-demand talents. In 2018 he had agreed in principle to join French club Pau before choosing to stay in New Zealand for family reasons. The deal in Japan has not stopped Kaino from selling a possible future move to France for Savea. "Well, I do send him the old cheeky WhatsApp and give him a little bit of a wink," Kaino jokingly said. "I'll be saying that he'd be pretty expensive to try and sell over here. He'd do amazing." Savea is set to have a big influence on the upcoming three Tests against Les Bleus, who have sent a second-string squad to face the All Blacks. Only four of the 23 from France's Six-Nations-winning side in March have flown to New Zealand with the likes of No 8 Gregory Alldritt and full-back Thomas Ramos rested. Kaino knows the landscape of French rugby well having joined Top 14 giants Toulouse in 2018 before becoming their assistant coach after his retirement from playing three years later with a league and Champions Cup double to boot. "I think it'll be really exciting to be able to unleash some of the young talent that they've been able to breed over here," Kaino said. "But I think leaving this summer weather and heading to cold New Zealand where they'll probably be at full strength, I think it'll be a tough tour," he added. Galthie has 21 uncapped players in his squad including abrasive flanker Alexandre Fischer, quick-footed winger Tom Spring and 24-year-old prop Paul Mallez. Mallez has spent two seasons on loan at second-tier Aix-en-Provence from Toulouse, having worked closely under Kaino at Stade Ernest-Wallon. "He's evolved a lot and he's excelled in his time away at Aix and he put in some amazing performances," Kaino said. "He definitely deserves his crack at the next level and I'm really proud of the way he's been going. "I ran into him a couple of weeks ago and he's obviously really hungry to just dive straight back in after only about a week and a half of holiday," Kaino added. © 2025 AFP

Ex-All Black Kaino's Toulouse not expecting 'walkover' in Top 14 final
Ex-All Black Kaino's Toulouse not expecting 'walkover' in Top 14 final

France 24

time27-06-2025

  • Sport
  • France 24

Ex-All Black Kaino's Toulouse not expecting 'walkover' in Top 14 final

Kaino's side hammered Bordeaux-Begles 59-3 12 months ago but have lost three straight games to the newly-crowned Champions Cup winners. On the way to lifting the continental crown in May, Bordeaux-Begles beat Toulouse in the semi-finals leaving the record 23-time French champions with just the league to play for this season. "We never walk into a finals game thinking that it's going to be a walkover like that one, but if history repeats itself like the semi-final, it's going to be a tough one," Toulouse assistant coach Kaino told AFP. "Bordeaux-Begles have definitely been improving. "They're not the same team as the team that we played in the Top 14 final last year," the 42-year-old added. Kaino joined Toulouse in 2018, a year after winning the last of his 81 Test appearances, which included Rugby World Cup success in 2011 and four years later. He retired from playing in 2021 with a Top 14 and Champions Cup double before transitioning into coaching as a skills specialist with the aristocrats of French and European rugby. "Oh, it's been amazing," Kaino enthusiastically said of the change. "I wouldn't say easy because the coaches definitely put in a lot of work and it's definitely challenging coming from player to coach because when you're a player, you worry about yourself, what's needed for you to be at your best come Saturday or come the weekend. "But as a coach, you've got to worry about 50 to 60 other players for them to be at the best on the weekend and that juggling act is a bit of a challenge sometimes," he added. 'Gnarly' The stand-out name among the 60 or so squad members Kaino works with at Stade Ernest-Wallon is France poster boy Antoine Dupont. Scrum-half Dupont will miss this weekend's blockbuster in Paris however as he continues to recover from a serious knee injury suffered in March. Centre Peato Mauvaka and flying wing Ange Capuozzo are also out of action. Dupont's childhood friend Paul Graou will again stand-in for the 28-year-old, having scored three tries in his past five games including one in last Friday's semi-final win over Bayonne. "He's improving. He works really hard to be able to get out there," Kaino said. "How could you not get out there and work when you're replacing one of the best players ever to lace up rugby boots? "He's driving the team really well and he's been able to put us into another final," he added. Standing in the way of Toulouse and a third-straight title are Bordeaux-Begles' superstar backs, including international wings Damian Penaud and Louis Bielle-Biarrey, who was pronounced "fit" on Wednesday following time out with concussion, as well as their monstrous set of forwards, led by Tonga captain Ben Tameifuna in the front row. "Big Ben. King of Tonga. He's got a million nicknames," Kaino joked. "They've been building really nicely and obviously they've proven that with their Champions Cup title. "I could sit here all day and talk about their pack, but they've also got some gnarly backs as well which are able to counter-attack with the speed they have. "They've been on fire recently," he added. Fixture © 2025 AFP

All Blacks legend says Ardie Savea is comparable to Jonah Lomu
All Blacks legend says Ardie Savea is comparable to Jonah Lomu

1News

time08-05-2025

  • Sport
  • 1News

All Blacks legend says Ardie Savea is comparable to Jonah Lomu

Jerome Kaino, a man who set new standards as a loose forward enforcer during his 81 Tests for the All Blacks, has described Ardie Savea as a once-in-a-generation talent worthy of being mentioned in the same breath as the late, great Jonah Lomu. Kaino, now a skills coach at Toulon in the south of France, was moved to tweet his admiration for the 31-year-old Savea after the Moana Pasifika's skipper's latest highlight reel of a performance in his team's 34-29 victory over the Highlanders at the weekend. 'Once in a generation! Jonah Lomu! Ardie Savea! Put that out in the media! Moana [Pasifika]. Loud and proud,' Kaino, who played his final Test in 2017, wrote. Savea's feats on a weekly basis, and his consistency for the All Blacks over the last five years, have become so extraordinary that he is worthy of the discussion about where he fits in the big scheme of things – and there is little doubt he will finish his Test career as a genuine great. At the very least, his achievements deserve to be celebrated as Kaino suggests because Savea makes the near impossible look almost the norm – so much so that they are in danger of being taken for granted. And while Savea doesn't have the global reach of Lomu – the wing who died at the age of 40 in 2015 was rugby's first true superstar – he is admired around the world and probably more so, for a variety of reasons, in New Zealand. Savea's form at openside flanker and leadership for his new Super Rugby Pacific side, who are in the playoffs mix for the first time, will inevitably lead to further scrutiny on not only whether he will wear the No.7 jersey for the All Blacks this year in the absence of Sam Cane but why he was not awarded the captaincy by head coach Scott Robertson in 2024. Robertson, the former Crusaders head coach, selected Scott Barrett as his man last year but while the big lock performed well overall, some of his decision making was questionable (including in the narrow defeat to France in Paris), and he has admitted he has not played well for the red and blacks in 2025. Meanwhile, Savea is showing that he thrives with the extra responsibility – albeit at Super Rugby level – and that it has in no way hindered his on-field ambition or creativity. Just as Lomu could do things that most wings had never considered, flankers are not supposed to score tries such as the one Savea delivered against the Highlanders last weekend – a chip off the left foot while being squeezed by the defence, a touch off the knee to control the ball, and the pace to win the race to the ball over the line. Few would have the ambition to even attempt it but for Savea it has become almost second nature. A week earlier against the Fijian Drua a similar effort from longer range was ruled out on the insistence of a television match official – the only sour note in a remarkable celebration of south Pacific rugby. It should be remembered that while Savea can easily play all three loose forward positions, and indeed could probably do a decent job on the wing or in either midfield positions, his preferred place is at openside flanker. Moving to No.8 after the retirement of former skipper Kieran Read at the end of 2019 was a compromise to allow new captain Cane to wear the No.7 jersey. In the modern game there is not a huge amount of difference between 8 and 7 but, having played 94 Tests, Savea, who will be the senior loose forward this year, deserves to play in his preferred place. The bigger question for Robertson, now that No.8 Wallace Sititi, World Rugby's breakthrough player of the year in 2024, is back playing for the Chiefs after making an earlier than expected comeback from a knee injury, is who will play blindside flanker. Given Savea is 1.90m tall and Sititi is 1.87m, Robertson will need a tall No.6 who can provide another lineout option. Chiefs flanker Samipeni Finau, at 1.93m, would fit that bill, although, after starting last year as Robertson's first-choice blindside, he perhaps did not make the most of his opportunities. Dalton Papali'i started at No.7 in Robertson's first Test as All Blacks head coach – a narrow win over England in Dunedin – but also dropped out of favour and the man known as Razor went with the experience of Sam Cane despite the former skipper's announcement he was heading to Japan at year's end. In the end, Robertson settled on Sititi at No.6, Cane at No.7 and Savea at No.8 as his preferred loose trio. Hurricanes 22-year-old Peter Lakai made a promising start to his career in Europe at the end of the year but is still developing, while Chiefs flanker Luke Jacobson will remain in the mix but appears more of a bench option. Crusader Ethan Blackadder's injury-riddled development has been further hampered by a hamstring problem. It may be that 25-year-old Finau, a bruising defender, is a late developer. Ironically, Kaino will admit that he was just that. It could be that Finau will come good at the international level this year - starting in the three-Test series against France in July. There is little doubt about who is in the ascendant, though. That's Ardie Savea, the charismatic leader on his way to greatness - if he hasn't already got there.

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