Bruce Ross
Ken Catchpole (46)
With rugby being the most cerebral of sports, post-game press conferences in our sport are usually characterised by eloquence and erudition. By all reports Bledisloe IV was no exception.
Richie McCaw set a high standard with his pithy: "When you have a bad day at the office you just have to get straight back on the horse." That would have given the assembled journos cause to compare notes in case they had misheard.
But then Robbie Deans appeared to be almost channelling Donald Rumsfield's legendary "known unknowns" speech when he observed:
"James is one of those blokes who wants the ball in those moments as you saw with his carry, and that's what you want.
"The bloke who's got the ball you want to want to have the ball."
Kiwis are believed to have a genetic predisposition for these flights of oracular oratory, but if the discriminator is the degree of mindbogglingness, we are entitled to claim that our Kiwi out-performed their Kiwi. Robbie was certainly not found wanting.
Richie McCaw set a high standard with his pithy: "When you have a bad day at the office you just have to get straight back on the horse." That would have given the assembled journos cause to compare notes in case they had misheard.
But then Robbie Deans appeared to be almost channelling Donald Rumsfield's legendary "known unknowns" speech when he observed:
"James is one of those blokes who wants the ball in those moments as you saw with his carry, and that's what you want.
"The bloke who's got the ball you want to want to have the ball."
Kiwis are believed to have a genetic predisposition for these flights of oracular oratory, but if the discriminator is the degree of mindbogglingness, we are entitled to claim that our Kiwi out-performed their Kiwi. Robbie was certainly not found wanting.