spinofflive
Ben-Lam-ABs

SportsMay 9, 2018

Scotty Stevenson: Ben Lam is good enough to make the All Blacks

Ben-Lam-ABs

Hurricanes winger Ben Lam has been a revelation this season, but looks unlikely to be in the All Black’s thinking for June. Scotty Stevenson discusses the reasons why, and what it says about how tough it is to make the team.

In Wellington, at least, they love him. Ben Lam, the big winger on the end of a superstar Hurricanes backline, is on course to make a mockery of his teammate Ngani Laumape’s season try-scoring record set last year. Laumape crossed for 15 tries in 2017. Ben Lam has scored 12 already, and it’s only May. That is his job, to finish what others have started, but that does not seem to be enough these days to take the next step up.

The All Blacks will play France in June, and while there is genuine concern about the lack of depth at loosehead prop – don’t be surprised if Wyatt Crockett’s ride into international retirement takes an abrupt U-turn – there are no such concerns with the outside backs. Jordie Barrett, Ben Smith, Rieko Ioane, Damian McKenzie, and Waisake Naholo are all likely to feature against the French. There is the return of Nehe Milner-Skudder to consider, too.

So where does that leave Lam? Seemingly nowhere near selection, which is quite the conundrum to have. Some will look at the list of names above, shrug their shoulders and ask, “well, who would you leave out to make room for him?” It’s a fair question. Both Ioane and Naholo have performed well for the All Blacks, and with Jordie Barrett back in the mix, Ben Smith will likely move to wing on a permanent basis for the national side. It’s a case of five into four don’t go, and Lam is at best the fifth in this particular mix.

There are others coming through who the All Blacks are also running the eye over as they prepare for this upcoming series and the all-important World Cup season. Solomon Alaimalo has been dazzling for the Chiefs this year, and Manasa Mataele is making good on his potential at the Crusaders. Add to the mix players such as David Havili, Seta Tamanivalu and Matt Duffie and Lam’s pathway to test match rugby seems a damn sight tougher than his pathway to the Super Rugby try line.

STEVE HANSEN TALKS TO SOMEONE ON THE RADIO. PHOTO: GETTY

It is understandable that for the year’s first series the All Blacks selectors would prefer to choose players that have already been in the system. They have not the time nor the inclination in June to be acclimatising too many new faces to what they consider a very unique set of norms, even if that player is on a scoring tear like very few before him.

What is less understandable is the chatter around Ben Lam’s supposed deficiencies on defence – claims that Hurricanes coach Chris Boyd dismissed after Saturday night’s match against the Lions during which Lam scored a hat trick. If those deficiencies do exist, they are not measured in his tackling percentage which, at 82%, is above all but one of his Hurricanes backline team mates in a list of those who have made 20 or more tackles this year. That list includes Jordie Barrett (77%), Beauden Barrett (75%), and Ngani Laumape(72%), all of whom are considered guarantees for All Blacks selection.

Perhaps it is unfair to compare Ben Lam’s defensive percentage with those who are working much closer to the gain line, so it would pay to also benchmark him against other wingers who have been widely tipped to get the nod ahead of him this June. That list includes Waisake Naholo (76%) and Rieko Ioane (76%). In fairness, Ioane has played out of position for much of the season, so we need to allow for that in this exercise.

There is also the assertion in some quarters that Lam may not be working hard enough off the ball, but if that is true (and as we don’t have access to GPS numbers, we can’t make much of an empirical case against the claim) then he certainly makes up for it when he has the ball in his hands. Apart from scoring those 12 tries, he also is only bettered by just one New Zealand winger – Manasa Mataele – in average gain per carry. At 9.18 metres per carry, that’s an awful lot of momentum for a team to enjoy.

Oh, and there was that other chatter floating around that he is not so good under the high ball. I’m not entirely sure which teams are dumb enough to kick to him in the first place, or whether we also make mention here of overall turnover rate, but if so, here goes. Ben Lam has turned the ball over a staggering… two times. All year. If those two drops are from high kicks then it would be punitive to say he is no good at catching. In fact, it would be downright spurious.

Just to add some context, Lam has also won five turnovers, more than any winger bar Waisake Naholo, who has a net return of zero based on the fact he has also lost the ball eight times. Damian McKenzie has turned the ball over 21 times – the most of any New Zealand outside back, followed by Alaimalo (19). Also on the list of those who have lost the ball more than Ben Lam are: Jordie Barrett, Nehe Milner-Skudder, Matt Duffie, David Havili, Rieko Ioane, Ben Smith and Seta Tamanivalu, otherwise known as every other player ahead of him in the All Blacks pecking order.

We all know that the All Blacks have their strategies in place for selection and are already a long way down the road as far as the French series is concerned. That Lam may not make it should not be cause for alarm, and should not dishearten the man himself. He will be able to accept whatever comes his way, except claims he’s not good enough. Because at another time, in another scenario, he most certainly would be.


This story originally ran on RugbyPass.com – the premier destination for rugby fans in Asia, streaming International Test Matches including The Rugby Championship, Super Rugby and more to your device wherever you are in Asia.

Ali Riley and Abby Erceg playing for the Football Ferns at the Olympics (Getty Images)
Ali Riley and Abby Erceg playing for the Football Ferns at the Olympics (Getty Images)

SportsMay 8, 2018

Equal pay for women (soccer players): The Football Ferns score pay parity

Ali Riley and Abby Erceg playing for the Football Ferns at the Olympics (Getty Images)
Ali Riley and Abby Erceg playing for the Football Ferns at the Olympics (Getty Images)

The Football Ferns are about to get equal pay to the male All Whites when they represent New Zealand. It’s a huge step for the sport, but will it lead to genuine equality across football? Read on in today’s cheat sheet. 

What’s all this then?

For what is believed to be the first time in the world, a women’s international football team will be paid the same amount to play for their country as the male team. And it’s happening in New Zealand. Under a new collective agreement Football Ferns players will get equal pay for international games, prize money for wins, and payment for use of image rights as the All Whites.

That seems massive. Is it?

It is, in a way. Being an international footballer for New Zealand alone isn’t massively lucrative. Both teams play reasonably infrequently, and the vast majority of games are in clumps for tournaments and short tours. The All Whites for example had the Confederations Cup and some World Cup qualifying games last year, and apart from that played three times. For the women, there were four games in the invitational Cyprus Cup, and two two–match tours. It’s not a lot of footy, but then again no countries really play huge numbers of international games in any given year.

That doesn’t make it sound massive at all.

Where it is significant is the recognition of the fact that football in New Zealand is a sport that absolutely should be equal, and that needs to be encouraged. Football participation rates for both girls and boys are whopping between the ages of 5–14. But that starts to drop away for girls in their mid to late teenage years, and adulthood. Why? Well, everyone has dreams, but some are more realistic than others. For a teenage boy who’s reasonably good at football, there is a huge potential upside to keeping on playing. You might get fame and fortune! Or even just be able to eke out a living as a pro. But the possibility is there. For teenage girls, that’s only recently been any sort of possibility.

Hang on, aren’t footballers generally wildly wealthy? 

Two problems there. Firstly, no. The average footballer is not on 50,000 pounds a week, like All Whites striker Chris Wood earns for his club Burnley. A few of course are on even more than that but outside of the big European Leagues, the salaries are a bit more modest. Take for example the pay rates of Wellington Phoenix players back in 2012: The salary cap for the whole team, for the whole year, was a bit over $3 million. The guaranteed minimum was $60,000. With about 20 in the squad in any given year, that doesn’t give a lot of room for millionaires.

Secondly, all of that applies to male players. For women, it’s nothing like that at all. The first fully professional women’s football league was formed in 2000. It called itself soccer and was based in the USA. Two professional women’s competitions folded before the formation of the National Women’s Soccer League, which has shown promising signs since it was formed in 2012. Most teams have average match attendances in the mid–thousands, though the Portland got about 17,000 fans per game over 2017. To put those numbers in context again, the hardy Phoenix get a shade over 6,000 a game through the doors.

Three New Zealanders are scattered across the NWSL, and one of them, Rosie White, had to switch teams after her club folded. The salary levels aren’t amazing either – a minimum pay over the season of $15,000 USD, out of a $350,000 total salary cap. And it’s not much better in Europe either, where an average salary is about $30,000 a year.

How does anyone make a go of being a professional woman soccer player? Sorry, football. Football.

For more than a few incredibly good Football Ferns players, it just wasn’t possible. Jasmine Pereira had to walk away from the game at the age of just 20 – she had already played 10 games for New Zealand. And absolute ball–kicking boss Abby Erceg retired from international football, because “without being able to justify my involvement any longer, I will be stepping back in the hopes to create change for the current and future generations of NZ footballers.” But there’s an upshot to that too – citing a change in attitude from NZ Football towards the women’s game, Erceg announced in February she was coming out of international retirement, and will continue adding to her record number of caps.

Does any of this matter though? Aren’t New Zealand crap at football?

It’s a delicate one. The men are undoubtedly miles off the pace in world football. Bus parking defence at the 2010 World Cup aside, there has been little to celebrate from the All Whites for a long time. But that’s not quite the same for the Football Ferns. They’re currently ranked 20th in the world, and picked up a win against the rather impressive Colombia at the last Olympics. The World Cup record remains fairly poor, but the spartan conditions of their standard travel as a team has long been considered a factor in their tournament results. And travel is being equalised too, which means business class flights.

The final word.

The Football Ferns play will play in Wellington against a likely classy Japan in June. Go and watch them play! There’s no reason why they couldn’t go on to become one of our more successful international sports teams, so like a true football fan, jump on the bandwagon before it gets too crowded.


The Bulletin is The Spinoff’s acclaimed, free daily curated digest of all the most important stories from around New Zealand delivered directly to your inbox each morning.

Sign up now