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JESSE BOYCE
Last updated 05:00
22/08/2013
Richard Hugh McCaw. To all those who were kicking dirt on to his rugby-playing casket last week? Shame on you.
Richie McCaw is the greatest rugby player of this generation - and when he decides to hang up his boots, he will be upheld as the G.O.A.T (Greatest Of All Time).
The match in Sydney was another example of why this statement is not far-fetched; another master class on how to influence a game, how to turn the ball over in the tackle, how to pick your moments at the breakdown. The guy is just out of this world. Indomitable.
It's hard to see anyone close to him in that G.O.A.T conversation, he's that good. Other players will give you great skillsets, but Richie will win you games, period.
Richie is something we have never seen before, doing things at a level the world's greatest players have never done. And the scary thing is - he looks far from finished.
If anything, the sabbatical he has just taken looks to have rejuvenated him. Scary thought.
Two things separate Richie from the rest of the rugby-playing world. His engine. He reminds me of Ironman - the superhero with the bionic heart. The man has only picked up the oval ball a handful of times over the last eight months. For 99 per cent of players that is not enough match play to step into the cauldron of test rugby.
But see that's the thing with Richie, the test arena is not a cauldron, it's his playground. The interview he had the day before the game was not with a man under pressure, under the bright lights, it was with a man who was coming home.
And his leadership is out-of-this-world. What he does for the players around him is just incredible. His presence makes good players great, and great players legends.
Have we ever seen leadership like this on the rugby field of this magnitude?
The team that dismantled the Wallabies last week is not the same All Black team that played the French earlier this year. His influence is that immense.
The way players buy into excellence when Richie is on the field is mesmerising.
So Richie's back everyone. Enjoy him while he's here.
The All Blacks were awesome on Saturday night. 47 points on the number three international team in the world is a strong statement.
The All Blacks are back to dominate world rugby. And their leader is going nowhere. Beware.
http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff-nation/...aw-the-G-O-A-T
80 Minutes, 15 Positions, No Protection, Wanna Ruck?
Ruck Me, Maul Me, Make Me Scrum!
Education is Important, but Rugby is Importanter!
He might be a goat, but I rate the eales higher.
Does Jesse Boyce have any tongue left?![]()
Proudly Western Australian; Proudly supporting Western Australian rugby
Id go as far as saying George Smith is as good if not better than Richie with Nobody in front of both of them.
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Justa one goat![]()
80 Minutes, 15 Positions, No Protection, Wanna Ruck?
Ruck Me, Maul Me, Make Me Scrum!
Education is Important, but Rugby is Importanter!
If McCaw played for the wallabies where would he then be ranked
Wests Scarborough 1st Grade juggernaut has played finals rugby each and every year since its inception and continues this remarkable feat yet again this season and unbelievably it's still rolling on and as an added little circle jerk for the masses Wests actually hold the record for the current longest unbroken finals record.
Somewhere below Kurtley Beale?
How quickly we forget - G.O.A.T. has to be Tom Richards.
Webb-Ellis?
Don't tell me the sky's the limit when there are footprints on the moon
John Eales' legendry status goes beyond the rugby field...
Tom Richards fought on the battlefield in the first world war, Played in South Africa, Played in England and of course the Wallabies.
80 Minutes, 15 Positions, No Protection, Wanna Ruck?
Ruck Me, Maul Me, Make Me Scrum!
Education is Important, but Rugby is Importanter!
GOAT is always subjective would love to know how you would go about measuring 'greatness'