Coach has unearthed new talent, revived veterans, invented new set-piece attacks, and reinforced All Blacks as No 1 team in the world
How wrong you can be. A year ago, this newspaper raised doubts over whether Steve Hansen should be the man to take over as head coach of the All Blacks. In an editorial written before the World Cup was won, we wondered if a coach of his irascibility and longevity under the Graham Henry reign would be the right man to take the All Blacks on anew. Suspicions at the time that he would work with failed Chiefs coach Ian Foster did not, then, encourage optimism.
It was a view that was arguably valid at the time but has been invalidated on many levels this year. Hansen has steered the team, and himself, through a near-flawless season. Backed by Foster, Brian "Aussie" McLean and selector Grant Fox, he has rapidly refreshed the All Blacks and created a style almost as impressive as Alex Wyllie's unbeaten side in the year after our previous World Cup victory in 1987.
On the field the team is unbeaten and, combining the tail-end of the Henry era and the start of Hansen's, is on the cusp of equalling the longest test-winning sequence by an All Black side. Brilliant new talent has been unearthed, veterans revived, new set-piece attacks invented, and the status as the No 1 team in the world emphatically reinforced.
Off the field, Steve Hansen has, if anything, done better. He managed the "will he stay, will he go" dilemma of Sonny Bill Williams with aplomb, not too proud to call on SBW's talents when the team had injury woes after the star player had nominally signed off from the All Blacks.