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James Parsons queries Leicester Fainga’anuku’s role at No.7


Leicester Fainga’anuku of the Crusaders is tackled during the round 11 Super Rugby match between Crusaders and NSW Waratahs at One NZ Stadium, on April 24, 2026, in Christchurch, New Zealand. (Photo by Hannah Peters/Getty Images)
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Former All Black James Parsons isn’t fully convinced with Leicester Fainga’anuku’s No.7 selection for the Crusaders, despite impressing in the opening game at One New Zealand Stadium in Christchurch.

Fainga’anuku was a standout in their important 35-20 triumph over the Waratahs, making a game-high 19 carries and recording eight stops on the defensive side of the ball.

But it was the exact position in the back-row that Parsons questions, describing the specific needs defensively for each of the loose forward positions, and why a different number on the back could be more effective.

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The former Blues hooker says he was surprised Rob Penney and the Crusaders coaching staff didn’t put him at No.6, due to what that role entails at scrum time.

“I’m convinced he could still do a similar role in a 13 or an 11 jersey, in and around that pod work he does and his ability to sort of move around those options off short line outs,” Parsons said on the Aotearoa Rugby Pod, which can be found on RugbyPass TV.

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“Because I think when you look at the intricacies, like I was surprised they didn’t put him on the blind side at scrum time, like I know he’s open side, but I thought they probably could have moved Christian Lio-Willie or Dom Gardner there defensively.

“A couple of times the Waratahs got on the edge really easily, because he was sort of caught scrummaging and didn’t get off so it doesn’t free the defence to get to that edge.”

Although Parsons questions the position of the 12-Test All Black, he was impressed with the way Fainga’anuku went about his work in the forward pack, providing some more stats around his carries.

“I felt like he played amazing. There’s no question he did the job within the game plan that he was given. You know what he can do defensively, you know he’s good in around that breakdown.

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Player Carries

1
Hunter Paisami
16
2
Harry Wilson
16
3
Sam Darry
12

“But yeah, look, it’ll be interesting to see how it goes in a derby and he had 23 touches and 19 carries and then when you look at McReight, he had 15 touches and carried eight times. Du’Plessis Kirifi, 22 touches, he carried eight times.

“So I think if he could get that balance, because teams will find it a little bit predictable, and they’ll load up on them defensively. So I think if they have the ability to evolve that role of him playing more of that ball playing role, even off set piece, man, I think he could be more destructive in that role.

“I just think they could give him a hand and maybe put him at blindside flanker and just help him out a little bit, and the Crusaders.”

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Comments

4 Comments
J
Jordon 44 days ago

LF is a world class winger and could be a world class centre. I’m not really sure what the point of all this is when they could be developing his skillset as a back in the areas where he is lacking.

B
B 44 days ago

Coaching and game time experience is all Leicester needs to increase his proficiency for when it will matter between 1 October and 13 November 2027…


Focusing on keeping hmself 110%+ physically, mentally fit, healthy and injury free helps to make the positional challenge a whole lot easier for him going forward…


c
cnw 44 days ago

In reality he is being groomed to be a genuine hybrid who can cover 6-7-8 and 12-13-14. The key for me is whether he can scrum / maul well because as Parsons says he can play the attacking “pod” / carrier role from centre. I have not read or heard anything negative about this, save that he was a bit slow defensively at scrum time. If he can play that role well then he represents a genuine chance for the ABs to go 6-2 with confidence they have a player who can be used to maintain forward power and intensity or slot into the backs as needed. It means also that the ABs can afford to go 4 x 4/5 and thus maximise their tight five power for 80 minutes with Fainga’anuku covering the loosies.

R
RD 45 days ago

He didn’t really play like a flanker. He got the ball more times than playing as a back but he didn't do the hard yards or multiple tackles in a row that loose forwards often manage.

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