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EARLIER
France must withstand the fury of a wounded New Zealand when they meet in their last rugby test of the year on Sunday, two years before facing off at the same venue in the opening game of the Rugby World Cup.
Sunday morning's showdown at Stade de France will either shake the self-belief of Fabien Galthie's resurgent side or condemn the All Blacks to a rare second-straight loss after last weekend's 29-20 defeat in Ireland.
"These boys are a very proud bunch, and they love this jersey more than anything," New Zealand assistant coach John Plumtree said. "When they feel that perhaps they've let it down it upsets them, and that will turn to hurt and anger. The best way to channel all that is to use it as fuel for the game."
After the intensity of Ireland in a typically charged-up Lansdowne Road, the All Blacks reacted to their blown game plan by recalling veterans Aaron Smith, Dane Coles and former captain Sam Cane.
Seven changes were made, although two were forced by injuries to Beauden Barrett (concussion) and Anton Lienert-Brown (shoulder).
"It's a big statement game for us, and we know we have to respond," All Blacks coach Ian Foster said. "(We) have changed things up a bit for this final test to maximise the energy within the whole group."
Smith starts his 102nd test with backup from Brad Weber, Coles displaces Codie Taylor at hooker, and Cane and Akira Ioane are the fresh flankers.
Galthie's side is after its own statement win after beating Argentina and modest Georgia.
He's returned Romain Ntamack to first five after playing him outside Matthieu Jalibert in dual playmaker roles in those games.
"It's a question of performance and collective experience, rather than a default choice," Galthie said. "We decided after these two matches and a dozen training sessions, to change by moving up Romain to No. 10. Antoine Dupont has a lot of experience alongside Ntamack."
Ntamack created one of France's tries in last weekend's 41-15 over Georgia, and Galthie dropped Jalibert to the bench and restored Ntamack to where he made his name at the Rugby World Cup two years ago.
Galthie has focused far ahead on to World Cup victory on home soil in 2023, but this move shows he recognises the need to wind back and be more pragmatic against a far stronger opponent than the Pumas and Lelos this autumn.
Galthie knows he needs steel to go with the silk in his side, so the burly Jonathan Danty gets the nod with Gael Fickou in a robust midfield.
"They played together for three years at Stade Francais," Galthie said.
He saw enough of Cameron Woki's switch from flanker to lock against Georgia to keep him there against the All Blacks alongside Paul Willemse.
"We think he's the player who's in the best form there right now," Galthie said. "It's his ability to mix power, to hustle and bustle and be strong in the air."
A rib injury to hooker Julien Marchand means the in-form Peato Mauvaka starts, having scored two tries against the Lelos and one against Argentina off the bench.
Teams
All Blacks: Jordie Barrett, Will Jordan, Rieko Ioane, Quinn Tupaea, George Bridge, Richie Mo'unga, Aaron Smith, Ardie Savea, Sam Cane, Akira Ioane, Sam Whitelock (capt), Brodie Retallick, Nepo Laulala, Dane Coles, Joe Moody.
Reserves: Samisoni Taukei'aho, George Bower, Ofa Tuungafasi, Tupou Vaa'i, Shannon Frizell, Brad Weber, Damian McKenzie, David Havili.
France: Melvyn Jaminet, Damian Penaud, Gael Fickou, Jonathan Danty, Gabin Villiere, Roman Ntamack, Antoine Dupont (captain); Gregory Alldritt, Anthony Jelonch, Francois Cros, Paul Willemse, Cameron Woki, Uini Atonio, Peato Mauvaka, Cyril Baille. Reserves: Gaetan Barlot, Jean-Baptiste Gros, Demba Bamba, Romain Taofifenua, Thibaud Flament, Dylan Cretin, Maxime Lucu, Matthieu Jalibert.