Kieran Read came home to Christchurch today. Hero's welcomes aren't new to him now but the reception from a city broken by 12 months of earthquakes would have put into sharp relief just what the All Blacks have achieved.
Read, who turned 26 today, went through a range of emotions after the final whistle on Sunday night, and will do so again in the Garden City. At Eden Park he jumped into the air with a two-fist salute to the crowd and was "pretty close'' to shedding a tear or two at the relief of winning the World Cup after a 24-year drought for New Zealand.
"Just seeing the boys, and being around them, that's what makes you emotional and so much has gone on,'' he said. "I don't think we could have not won, it just wouldn't have been right. It was pretty great for us to get up and do it.
"For myself, you knew how much it meant to the country. Obviously coming from Christchurch, how disappointed they've been, missing out and everything going on so I suppose it was for the whole of New Zealand that drove you to succeed.''
Read made his intentions clear right from the kick-off against France, colliding with a white-shirted forward when charging and leaping for the ball only to miss and clatter to the ground.