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New Zealand national rugby union team
New Zealand national rugby union team
from Wikipedia

New Zealand
Shirt badge/Association crest
NicknameAll Blacks
EmblemSilver-fern frond
UnionNew Zealand Rugby
Head coachScott Robertson
CaptainScott Barrett
Most capsSam Whitelock (153)
Top scorerDan Carter (1,598)
Top try scorerDoug Howlett (49)
First colours
Second colours
World Rugby ranking
Current2 (as of 6 October 2025)
Highest1 (2003, 2004–2008, 2009–2019, 2021, 2025)
Lowest5 (2022)
First international
 Australia 3–22 New Zealand 
(Sydney, Australia; 15 August 1903)
Biggest win
 New Zealand 145–17 Japan 
(Bloemfontein, South Africa; 4 June 1995)
Biggest defeat
 New Zealand 10–43 South Africa 
(Wellington, New Zealand; 13 September 2025)
World Cup
Appearances10 (first in 1987)
Best resultChampions (1987, 2011, 2015)
Tri Nations/Rugby Championship
Appearances30
Best resultChampions (1996, 1997, 1999, 2002, 2003, 2005, 2006, 2007, 2008, 2010, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2016, 2017, 2018, 2020, 2021, 2022, 2023)
Websiteallblacks.com

The New Zealand national rugby union team, commonly known as the All Blacks (Māori: Ōpango [ɔːpaŋɔ]),[1] represents New Zealand Rugby in men's national rugby union, which is considered the country's national sport.[2] Famed for their international success, the All Blacks have often been regarded as one of the most successful sports teams in history.[3][4]

The team won the Rugby World Cup in 1987, 2011, and 2015. They were the first country to retain the Rugby World Cup. Since their international debut in 1903, the All Blacks have played test matches against 19 nations, of which 12 have never won a game against the team. New Zealand has a 76 per cent winning record in test match rugby, and has secured more wins than losses against every test opponent. The team has also played against three multinational all–star teams, losing only 8 of 45 matches. Since the introduction of the World Rugby Rankings in 2003, New Zealand has held the number-one ranking longer than all other teams combined.[5] They jointly hold the record for the most consecutive test match wins for a tier-one ranked nation, along with England.

The All Blacks compete with Argentina, Australia and South Africa in the Rugby Championship, and have won the trophy twenty times in the competition's 30–year history. The team has completed a Grand Slam tour against the four Home Nations four times (1978, 2005, 2008 and 2010). World Rugby has named New Zealand the World Rugby Team of the Year ten times since the award was initiated in 2001,[6] and an All Black has won the World Rugby Player of the Year award ten times over the same period. Nineteen former All Blacks have been inducted into the World Rugby Hall Of Fame.

The team's first match took place in 1884 in New South Wales and their first international test match in 1903 against Australia in Sydney. The following year New Zealand hosted their first home test, a match against a British Isles side in Wellington.[a] There followed a 34–game tour of Europe and North America in 1905 (which included five test matches), where New Zealand suffered only one defeat: their first test loss, against Wales.

New Zealand's early uniforms consisted of a black jersey with a silver fern and white shorts. By the 1905 tour they were wearing all black, except for the silver fern, and the name "All Blacks" dates from this time.

The team perform a haka before every match; this is a Māori challenge or posture dance. Traditionally the All Blacks use Te Rauparaha's haka Ka Mate, although players have also performed Kapa o Pango since 2005.

History

[edit]

Introduction of rugby to New Zealand

[edit]
Photo of team players and management all of whom are seated or standing, in three rows, wearing their playing uniform and caps.
The New Zealand team that toured New South Wales in 1884

Rugby union, known almost universally in New Zealand as just "rugby", was introduced to the nation by Charles Monro in 1870;[7] he had discovered the sport while completing his studies at Christ's College in Finchley, England.[8] The first recorded game in New Zealand took place in May 1870 in the city of Nelson, between the Nelson rugby club and Nelson College.[9] The first provincial union, the Canterbury Rugby Football Union, was formed in 1879,[10] and New Zealand's first internationals were played in 1882 when the "Waratahs" from New South Wales toured the country.[11] The Australian team did not face a New Zealand national team but played seven provincial sides; the tourists won four games and lost three.[12] Two years later, the first New Zealand team to travel overseas toured New South Wales, winning all eight of their games.[13]

A privately organised British team, which later became the British & Irish Lions, toured New Zealand in 1888. The visitors only played provincial sides and no test matches were played.[14] Wales and Scotland were represented in the British team, but the players were drawn mainly from Northern England.[15]

International competition begins

[edit]

In 1892, following the canvassing of provincial administrators by Ernest Hoben, the New Zealand Rugby Football Union (NZRFU) was formed by the majority of New Zealand's provincial unions, but did not include Canterbury, Otago or Southland.[16][b] The first officially sanctioned New Zealand side toured New South Wales in 1893, where the Thomas Ellison captained team won nine of their ten matches.[17][18] The following year New Zealand played its first home "international" game, losing 6–8 to New South Wales.[c][19] The team's first true test match occurred against Australia on 15 August 1903 at the Sydney Cricket Ground in front of over 30,000 spectators and resulted in a 22–3 victory.[20]

The Original All Blacks that toured the British Isles, France and the United States during 1905–06. The team won 34 of their 35 tour matches.

A representative New Zealand team first toured the British Isles in 1905. The side is now known as the "Originals", as the "All Blacks" name emerged during this tour when, according to team member Billy Wallace, a London newspaper reported that the New Zealanders played as if they were "all backs".[21] Wallace claimed that because of a typographical error, subsequent references were to "All Blacks". This account is most likely a myth: because of their black playing strip, the side was probably referred to as the Blacks before they left New Zealand. Even though the name All Blacks most likely existed before the trip, the tour did popularise it.[21]

The Originals played 35 matches on tour, and their only loss was a 0–3 defeat to Wales in Cardiff.[22] The match has entered into the folklore of both countries because of a controversy over whether All Black Bob Deans had scored a try that would have earned his team a 3–3 draw.[23][d] In contrast to the success of the Originals on the field, the team did antagonise some in the Home Nations' rugby establishment; both administrators and the press complained that the All Blacks did not play the game within the amateur and gentlemanly spirit promoted by the International Rugby Football Board. This complaint continued to dog New Zealand teams until the 1930s.[24]

The success of the Originals had uncomfortable consequences for the amateur NZRFU. In 1907, a party of professional players was assembled to tour the British Isles and play rugby league – a professional offshoot of rugby union that was played by clubs that split from England's Rugby Football Union (RFU) due to disagreements over financial compensation for players.[25] When the "All Golds", as the team came to be known, returned they established rugby league in New Zealand, and a large number of players switched to the professional code.[25][26] English and Welsh authorities were alarmed by the threat of professionalism to rugby in New Zealand, and in 1908 an Anglo-Welsh side undertook a tour to New Zealand to help promote the amateur values[e] under which they believed sport should be played.[28][29][f] The tourists were defeated 2–0 in the three-test series by New Zealand, but the Anglo-Welsh did manage to draw the second test 3–3.[30]

Development of a legacy

[edit]

International rugby was suspended during the First World War,[31] but a New Zealand Services team did compete in inter-services competition known as the King's Cup.[32] After their departure from Europe the side toured South Africa before their return to New Zealand, and that tour paved the way for a South African team to tour New Zealand in 1921.[33] The Springboks – as the South African team is known – played New Zealand in a test series that ended all square. New Zealand conducted a return tour to South Africa in 1928, and the test series was again drawn; both teams winning two tests each.[34]

"The Invincibles" All Blacks that toured to the British Isles and France in 1924–25

The 1924 All Black tourists to the British Isles and France were dubbed "the Invincibles" because they won every game. However, the team was deprived of a potential grand slam when Scotland refused to play them because they were upset the tour was organised through the RFU rather than the IRFB.[35][36] The first British Isles side since 1908 toured New Zealand in 1930. Although the Lions won the first test, the home side regrouped and went on to win the series 3–1.[37] New Zealand toured the British Isles again in 1935–36, losing only three games – including two tests – during a 30-match tour.[38] In one of these losses, Alexander Obolensky famously scored two tries to help England to a 13–0 win; their first over New Zealand.[39]

In 1937, South Africa toured New Zealand and decisively won the test series despite losing the first test; this 1937 South African team was described as the best team ever to leave New Zealand.[40][41] It was not until 1949 that New Zealand next played the Springboks when they toured South Africa with Fred Allen as captain.[42][43] Although each test against South Africa was very close, New Zealand lost the series 0–4.[44] As part of this 25-match, 4-test series, an All Blacks 'second string' side[45] travelled up to Southern Rhodesia (now Zimbabwe) to face the Rhodesia representative side in two non-Test Internationals. The result of the first match saw Rhodesia run out winners, 10–8. Three days later, the second match resulted in a 3–3 draw. Two of the Rhodesian players were later capped for South Africa (being eligible due to Rhodesia's treatment as a province of South Africa, for rugby reasons) in the All Blacks second test of the tour. No International caps were awarded to either side for these two matches.[46][47]

The All Blacks at the climax of their haka before a 1932 test against Australia

At the same time as an All Black team was touring South Africa, Australia were touring New Zealand.[48] The two tours coincided because Māori players were not able to go to South Africa at the time due to apartheid (the All Black team in South Africa refused to do the haka in protest), meaning the Australians played against a New Zealand team made up of the best Māori and the reserve non-Māori players, while the South Africans encountered the best pākehā (white) players.[49][g] On the afternoon of 3 September New Zealand, captained by Johnny Smith, were beaten 6–11 by Australia in Wellington.[51] New Zealand then lost their second test 9–16, giving Australia a Bledisloe Cup series win in New Zealand for the first time.[48][49] 1949 was an annus horribilis for the All Blacks as they lost all six of their test matches, and the experience of playing two test series simultaneously has not been repeated.[48][52]

The two consecutive series losses to South Africa made their 1956 tour of New Zealand highly anticipated. New Zealand were captained by Bob Duff and coached by Bob Stuart, and their 3–1 series win was their first over the Springboks and the Springboks' first series loss that century.[53] During the series, New Zealand introduced Don Clarke, and brought prop Kevin Skinner out of retirement to help secure the win.[54] Skinner, a former New Zealand boxing champion, had retired from international rugby, but was convinced to return for the third and fourth tests.[55] One reason for Skinner's selection was to "sort out" the South African props, while Clarke become known as "The Boot" for his goal kicking.[56]

New Zealand's 3–1 series win over the Lions in 1959 proved to be the start of a dominant period in All Black rugby.[57] This was followed by the 1963–64 tour to Britain and Ireland, led by Wilson Whineray, in which New Zealand were deprived of a Grand Slam by a scoreless draw with Scotland.[58] The only loss on this tour was to Newport RFC, who won 3–0 at Rodney Parade, Newport on 30 October 1963.[59] The 1967 side won three tests against the home nations, but was unable to play Ireland because of a foot-and-mouth scare.[58] This tour formed part of New Zealand's longest winning streak, between 1965 and 1970, of 17 test victories.[60] This was also the longest test winning streak by any nation at the time; it was equalled by the Springboks in 1998, and surpassed by Lithuania in 2010.[61][h]

NZ then lost the 1970 away series in South Africa. Although the 1966 Lions had been defeated 0–4 in their New Zealand tour, there was a reversal of fortune five years later when the 1971 Lions, under the captaincy of Welshman John Dawes, beat New Zealand in a test series, which remains the Lions' only series victory in New Zealand.[62]

The 1972–3 tourists narrowly missed a Grand Slam with a draw against Ireland.[58] The tour was notable for the sending home of prop Keith Murdoch, who was alleged to have been involved in a brawl in a Cardiff hotel while celebrating the defeat of Wales.[63]

In 1978, Graham Mourie captained New Zealand to their first Grand Slam, including a 13–12 victory over Wales. That game generated controversy after New Zealand won as the result of a late penalty. Lock Andy Haden had dived out of a line-out in an attempt to earn a penalty, but referee Roger Quittenden insisted the penalty was against Welsh lock Geoff Wheel for jumping off the shoulder of Frank Oliver.[64] New Zealand's only loss on the tour was the famous 12–0 defeat by Irish province Munster at Thomond Park.[65] A play that focused on the loss was later written by John Breen, called Alone it Stands.[66]

Controversial tours

[edit]
Police outside Eden Park prior to a New Zealand match during the 1981 Springbok tour

For the 1960 All Blacks tour of South Africa, the South African authorities insisted that Maori players be excluded from the team. The subsequent controversy led to the New Zealand Rugby Union refusing any other tour of the country for the following 10 years until the 1970 tour, when Maori players were accepted as "honorary whites".[67][68]

The 1976 All Blacks tour of apartheid South Africa generated much controversy and led to the boycott of the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal by 33 African nations after the IOC refused to ban the team.[69][70] New Zealand again failed to win the test series in South Africa, and did not secure another series victory until 1996, after the fall of apartheid and the introduction of neutral referees. The 1976 tour contributed to the Gleneagles Agreement being adopted by the Commonwealth Heads of State in 1977.[71]

The All Blacks playing the Pumas during their 1985 tour of Argentina

The 1981 South African tour to New Zealand sparked a protest movement against South Africa's apartheid policy; this type of protest had not been seen in New Zealand since the 1951 waterfront dispute.[72][73] The NZRU had invited the Springboks to tour because the Muldoon government refused to involve politics in sport.[74] Although New Zealand won the test series, two of the tour's provincial games were cancelled and the whole tour was marred by violence and protest.[75] The third and final test match of the tour is sometimes known as the Flour Bomb test, as an anti-apartheid activist in a Cessna light aircraft dropped leaflets, flares, a parachute-supported banner reading "Biko", and flour bombs, into Auckland's Eden Park throughout the match, felling a New Zealand player. The country experienced unrest during the tour, which had a significant impact on New Zealand society.[72][75][76]

The 1985 All Blacks tour to South Africa was cancelled after legal action on the grounds that it would breach the NZRU's constitution.[76] In 1986, a rebel tour to South Africa took place that had not been authorised by the NZRU and the team, named the Cavaliers, included many All Blacks.[77][78] Those that participated in the tour received a ban for two tests from the NZRU when they returned to New Zealand. Allegations that players received payment for the tour were never proved.[79]

Early World Cups

[edit]

New Zealand hosted and won the inaugural World Cup in 1987 beating France 29–9 in the final. New Zealand conceded only 52 points and scored 43 tries in six games en route to the title, beating Italy, Fiji, Argentina, Scotland, Wales and France.[80]

The All Blacks suffered a dual blow in early-mid 1990. Undisputed test fullback John Gallagher switched codes and signed to play with English rugby league club Leeds. This came after his 1989 tour understudy Matthew Ridge had signed to play rugby league with Sydney-based club Manly-Warringah less than a week earlier. Around this time union also lost other goal-kicking All Blacks to rugby league including John Schuster (Newcastle Knights in Australia), Frano Botica (English club Wigan) and Kurt Sherlock (Sydney club Eastern Suburbs). New Zealand rugby also lost Waikato goal kicking fullback Daryl Halligan who signed to play league for the North Sydney Bears. As it turned out, they were also very close to losing Zinzan Brooke who was set to join Ridge at Manly when (according to Ridge) a personal dispute between the two saw Brooke back out on a signed contract with Manly (allegedly worth AU$100,000 per season) to stay in rugby union.[81]

By the 1991 World Cup New Zealand were an ageing side,[82] co-coached by Alex Wyllie and John Hart. After beating hosts England in the tournament opener, they struggled during pool matches against the United States and Italy, and won their quarter-final against Canada.[83] They were then knocked out by eventual winners Australia 16–6 in their semi-final at Lansdowne Road. In the wake of the tournament, there were many retirements, including coach Wyllie, who had enjoyed an 86 per cent win rate during 29 tests in charge.[84]

Laurie Mains replaced Wyllie in 1992, and was given the job of preparing the side for the 1995 event in South Africa. New Zealand were again one of the favourites to take the championship. Their status as favourites was enhanced when a young Jonah Lomu scored four tries against England in the 45–29 semi-final win.[85][86] They managed to take hosts South Africa to extra time in the final, before losing 12–15 to Joel Stransky's drop goal.[87][88]

Professionalism

[edit]

The professional era in rugby union began in 1995, spurred by creation of the SANZAR group (a combination of South Africa, New Zealand and Australia)[89] which was formed with the purpose of selling broadcast rights for two new competitions, the domestic Super 12 competition and the Tri-Nations.[89] The first Tri-Nations was contested in 1996, with New Zealand winning all four of their tests to take the trophy.[90] After a 1996 Tri-Nations match hosted by South Africa, won 29–18 by New Zealand,[91] preceded a separate three-match test series between the two sides.[92] Under new coach John Hart and the captaincy of Sean Fitzpatrick, New Zealand won a test series in South Africa for the first time.[93] Fitzpatrick rated the series win higher than the 1987 World Cup victory in which he had participated.[93]

The next three seasons saw mixed results for New Zealand, who won all their Tri-Nations tests in 1997 before losing the title for the first time in 1998.[94] In 1998 New Zealand lost all five tests in the Tri-Nations and Bledisloe Cup series (two to South Africa and three to Australia), the first time they had lost four tests in succession since 1949.[95] The following year they suffered their worst test loss, 7–28 to Australia in Sydney.[96] At the 1999 World Cup later that year, the All Blacks dominated their pool, handing England a 16–30 defeat at Twickenham. They advanced past Scotland 30–18 in the quarter-finals to play France at Twickenham. After New Zealand finished the first half 17–10 ahead,[96] France then produced a famous half of rugby to which New Zealand had no answer, winning 43–31.[96] Hart subsequently resigned as coach and was replaced by co-coaches Wayne Smith and Tony Gilbert.

Under Smith and Gilbert, New Zealand came second in the 2000 and 2001 Tri-Nations, and in neither season did the side reclaim the Bledisloe Cup – which had been lost in 1998. Both coaches were replaced by John Mitchell on 3 October 2001, and he went on to coach New Zealand to victory in both the 2002 and 2003 Tri-Nations, as well as regaining the Bledisloe Cup in 2003. Mitchell's abrasive personal manner and management style, together with his coaching techniques, were the subject of some controversy both at the time and subsequently.[97] Despite losing to England earlier in the year, the All Blacks entered the 2003 World Cup as one of the favourites and dominated their pool, running up wins against Italy, Canada and Tonga, before winning one of the most competitive matches of the tournament against Wales.[98] They defeated South Africa in their quarter-final, a team they had never beaten at the World Cup, 29–9, but lost to Australia 10–22 in the semi-final in Sydney. Following the team's lacklustre showing in the tournament, the NZRU terminated Mitchell's contract[99] and installed Graham Henry as national coach.[100]

Henry era

[edit]

Graham Henry's tenure as coach began with a double victory over 2003 Rugby World Cup winners England in 2004. The two games had an aggregate score of 72–15, and England were kept try-less.[101][102] Despite the winning start to Henry's tenure, the Tri-Nations was a mixed success with two wins and two losses. The competition was the closest ever, bonus points decided the outcome, and New Zealand finishing last.[i][103] The 2004 season finished with three wins in Europe, including a record 45–6 victory over France under new captain and outside centre Tana Umaga.[104][105]

2005 saw New Zealand host the touring British & Irish Lions, steered by World Cup-winning English coach Clive Woodward, and featuring a number of Northern Hemisphere stars including Jonny Wilkinson. New Zealand won all three games easily, with a young Dan Carter turning in a masterclass in the second test. The series was marred by an incident in the first test after the Lions captain, Irish centre Brian O'Driscoll, was upended in an aggressive clearout by Tana Umaga and Keven Mealamu. O'Driscoll suffered a dislocated shoulder and missed the rest of the tour as a result. Match footage was inconclusive at the time, and both Umaga and Mealamu escaped serious sanction.[106] O'Driscoll and the Lions management maintained it was a deliberate spear tackle,[107] and the controversy both tainted the All Blacks' series victory and continued for some years afterward.[108]

That same year, they also won the Tri-Nations, and achieved a second Grand Slam over the Home Nations for the first time since 1978. They went on to sweep the major IRB (now World Rugby) awards in which they were named: Team of the Year, Henry was named Coach of the Year, and first five-eighth Dan Carter was Player of the Year.[6] New Zealand were nominated for the Laureus World Sports Award for Team of the Year in 2006 for their 2005 performance.[109] The following year they again took the Tri-Nations Series after winning their first five matches, three against Australia and two against South Africa. They lost their final match of the series against South Africa. They completed their end of year tour unbeaten, with record away wins over France, England and Wales.[110] New Zealand were named 2006 IRB Team of the Year and were nominated for the Laureus World Sports Award for the second time, while flanker and newly appointed captain Richie McCaw was named IRB Player of the Year for the first time.[6][109][111]

The 2007 season started off with two mid-year tests against France. New Zealand won the tests 42–11 at Eden Park and 61–10 at Westpac Stadium. A third game, against Canada, resulted in a 64–13 win, although the game was more competitive than the scoreline indicated.[112] New Zealand's first Tri-Nations game of 2007 was against the Springboks in Durban, South Africa. New Zealand scored two tries in the final fifteen minutes of the game to win 26–21.[113] The following week against the Wallabies at the Melbourne Cricket Ground the Wallabies upset New Zealand to win 20–15.[114] The All Blacks won their following home games to successfully defend the Tri-Nations Series for 2007.[115][116] New Zealand entered the 2007 Rugby World Cup as favourites,[117] and topped their pool,[118] beating Scotland, Italy, Romania and Portugal by at least 40 points. However, they then suffered a defeat by hosts France in the quarter-finals in Cardiff.[119] Following the loss to France coach Graham Henry's job was reappointed amid vocal debate and comment, despite Robbie Deans being a strong contender.[120]

The All Blacks lined up along their try-line, with a ruck formed several metres (yards) from the try-line. Several Tongan players are positions in or around the ruck waiting for the ball to emerge.
New Zealand playing Tonga in the 2011 Rugby World Cup

The 2008 season started with three mid-year tests against Ireland and England, all of which New Zealand won.[121] New Zealand played their first Tri-Nations game against South Africa in Wellington, winning 19–8, but a week later at Carisbrook in Dunedin they lost to South Africa 28–30, ending a 30-match winning streak at home.[122] New Zealand played their next Tri-Nations match on 26 July against Australia in Sydney, losing 19–34 but a week later against Australia in New Zealand won 39–10.[121] They then beat South Africa 19–0 at Newlands Stadium.[123] New Zealand played their final match on 13 September against Australia at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane winning 28–24 and retaining the Bledisloe Cup and the Tri-Nations.[124]

The All Blacks opened the 2009 season with a 22–27 loss to France at Carisbrook, but defeated them 14–10 in Wellington a week later. On points difference, France won the Dave Gallaher Cup for the first time. A week later the All Blacks defeated Italy 27–6 in Christchurch. They finished second in the Tri-Nations Series, behind South Africa who lost only one game, and ended the series with a 33–6 win over Australia in Wellington.[125]

In 2010, the All Blacks won the Tri-Nations Series for the tenth time after three successive victories against South Africa,[126] and won the Bledisloe Cup after consecutive victories against Australia.[127] An undefeated streak in tests that began in 2009 reached 15 matches.[128] Despite losing the 2011 Tri-Nations after a loss to Australia in Brisbane,[129] they still entered the 2011 Rugby World Cup as one of the favourites.[130] The All Blacks went through their pool matches undefeated, and after defeating Argentina, and then Australia, faced France in the final. New Zealand scored one try and a penalty to narrowly win 8–7.[131] Henry stepped down as coach following the World Cup, and was replaced as head coach by his assistant Steve Hansen.[132]

Hansen era

[edit]

The Tri-Nations was expanded to include Argentina in 2012, and subsequently renamed The Rugby Championship. The All Blacks went undefeated in the inaugural tournament, and went through the year unbeaten until their last match of the year, where they lost to England at Twickenham. In 2013 New Zealand hosted France in a three-match series – their first meeting since the 2011 World Cup final. They won all three tests, before going unbeaten in the 2013 Rugby Championship.[133] In November 2013, New Zealand became the first rugby nation in the professional era to achieve a 100 per cent record in a calendar year.[134]

At the 2014 Rugby Championship, the All Blacks drew with Australia and lost to South Africa in the away matches, but won the other four matches and the tournament. At the shortened 2015 Rugby Championship, the All Blacks lost to Australia and was runner-up in the competition. They did, however achieve a significant return victory in the second Bledisloe test that year to retain the trophy. The team entered the 2015 Rugby World Cup and again went undefeated in their pool matches. They defeated France 62–13 in the quarter-finals, South Africa 20–18 in the semi-finals, and Australia 34–17 in the final to become the first nation to retain the World Championship title and the first to win the Rugby World Cup three times.[135]

The All Blacks went undefeated at the 2016 Rugby Championship, claiming bonus points at each match, under new captain and Number 8, Kieran Read and vice-captain and fullback Ben Smith. Smith and wing Israel Dagg were also the joint highest try scorers in the competition with five each, while fly-half Beauden Barrett was the highest points scorer of the competition with 81 in total.[136] The autumn of 2016 witnessed an historic defeat, with the All Blacks enduring their first ever loss to Ireland after 111 years of competition,[137] going down by 29–40 at Soldier Field in Chicago. New Zealand redeemed the loss by defeating Ireland in Dublin in the return game two weeks later, by 21–9.[138]

In 2017, the British & Irish Lions toured New Zealand for the second time in the professional era. The series finished in a draw, with the All Blacks and Lions recording 1–1–1. The All Blacks had won the first test 30–15, the Lions took the second test 24–21, and the final test was drawn 15–15. Like the 2005 tour, this Lions series was dogged by controversy, with the Lions' tactics (under expat Kiwi Coach Warren Gatland),[139] the tone of local media coverage,[140] the Red Card awarded to Sonny Bill Williams in the second test[141] and the refereeing of French officials Romain Poite and Jerome Garces[142] all hotly debated. The drawn series, combined with the loss to Ireland to previous year led some in the media to claim that the team were on the slide, and that the Northern Hemisphere sides were catching up.[143] However they went on to go undefeated in the Rugby Championship 2017 season and also securing the Bledisloe Cup against rivals Australia after defeating the Aussies twice in the Rugby Championship. In October, New Zealand suffered a surprise 18–23 loss to Australia, in the final Bledisloe game of the year at Suncorp Stadium in Brisbane. The autumn saw the All Blacks defeat a Barbarians team 32–21, France 38–18, Scotland 22–17 and Wales 33–18 to end the 2017 season.[144]

At the start of the 2018 season, the All Blacks saw off a touring French side in a 3–0 series victory, and won their first games of the Rugby Championship against Australia by 38–13 and 40–12 to keep the Bledisloe Cup for another year. Another easy win against Argentina by 46–24 followed, however the All Blacks were subsequently beaten at home in Wellington by South Africa for the first time since 2009, losing by 34–36 in a tightly contested game,[145] before again beating Argentina by 35–17. In the return match against South Africa in Pretoria, the All Blacks trailed for much of the game but produced a thrilling comeback late the second half to win by 32–30.[146] They went on to post another crushing win over Australia by 37–20 in Yokohama, to confirm a Bledisloe whitewash for the year.[147] A development side was left behind to pummel Japan 69–31, while the first team travelled to Europe for the autumn internationals. That series proved a relatively difficult one for the All Blacks, with a single-point victory over England (16–15) in a very closely fought test,[148] followed by a second-ever loss to Ireland by 9–16 in a cauldron atmosphere at the Aviva Stadium in Dublin.[149] They went on to thrash Italy by 66–3 to finish their season with a win.[150]

2019 was a mixed year for the All Blacks, starting their campaign with an unconvincing 16 - 20 win over a tough Argentine side, and a 16 all draw against the Springboks. However, the next week they were given their joint worst loss in their history, once again to the Wallabies, 26 - 47, after Scott Barrett was sent off. They got back on track, showcasing the form they have been in the past years, with a 36 - 0 shutout in their rematch at Eden Park to retain the Bledisloe Cup, and finished their season with a 92 - 7 pummelling against Tonga.

The 2019 Rugby World Cup saw New Zealand face off against South Africa. They won, 23 - 13 in Yokohama, then notched wins up on Canada and Namibia, scoring a total of 135 points in the 2 games. In the quarter-final, they faced off against Ireland in Chofu, dominating from start to finish and prevailing 46 - 14. The team's run ended in the semi-finals with a 7 - 19 loss to England in Yokohama, which ended their chances of a third consecutive world title, or "three-peat". This was the team's first World Cup defeat in 20 matches stretching back over twelve years. New Zealand finished their campaign with a 40 - 17 win over Wales in Chofu to claim the bronze medal. Hansen retired after the World Cup, along with many All Blacks veterans, most notably captain Kieran Read, Owen Franks and Ben Smith. Ian Foster was appointed as the new All Blacks coach.

Foster Era

[edit]
2023 Rugby World Cup match between France and New Zealand.

2020

Due to the COVID-19 pandemic, the 2020 Rugby Championship was cancelled. Instead, a Tri-Nations revival tournament was held from October to December 2020.[151] Two warm-up Bledisloe Cup matches were held before that, the first was a (16–16) draw in Wellington and the second a (27–7) win in Auckland.[152][153] They then travelled over to Australia for the Tri-Nations, where they opened by securing the Bledisloe Cup with a (43–5) victory over Australia in Sydney but going on to lose to them a week later (22–24) in Brisbane.[154][155] The All Blacks lost a week later to Argentina (15–25) in Parramatta which was their first ever defeat to the Los Pumas and the first time they had lost back-to-back test matches since 2011.[156] Thanks to a 38–0 win against Argentina two weeks later in Newcastle, the All Blacks won the Tri-Nations.[157][158] They ended the 2020 season with three wins, two losses and a draw.

2021

The All Blacks opened their 2021 campaign by easily defeating Tonga (102–0) in Auckland,[159] followed by two wins against Fiji (57–23) in Dunedin and (60–13) in Hamilton.[160][161] They opened their Bledisloe Cup campaign by defeating Australia at Eden Park (33–25).[162] The All Blacks then went onto defeat the Wallabies 2 more times, (57–22) at Eden Park again and (38–21) in Perth to retain the Bledisloe Cup.[163][164] They defeated Argentina twice by comfortable margins, (39–0) in the Gold Coast and (36–13) in Brisbane.[165][166] Against South Africa, their record was split (1-1), with New Zealand winning in the 100th Test Match between the two countries in a historic (19–17) victory in Townsville,[167] with the Springboks winning a week later by (29–31) in the Gold Coast.[168] They retained the Freedom Cup and they went on to win the Rugby Championship and finish the competition with a (5–1) record. In their first Northern Hemisphere Tour since 2018, the All Blacks played five matches and finished with a record of (3–2). They defeated the United States (104–14),[169] Wales (54–16)[170] and Italy (47–9),[171] and then went onto lose two matches in a row against Ireland (20–29)[172] and France (25–40),[173] to finish the season (12–3). The back to back losses against Ireland and France was the first time since 1998 that they finished their season with 2 straight defeats in consecutive weeks.

2022

In July 2022, the All Blacks hosted Ireland to a 3-Test Match Series. In the first game the All Blacks defeated Ireland (42–19), before losing to them in the second game (12–23) and third game (22–32).[174] It was the first time that Ireland had beaten the All Blacks in New Zealand, with two consecutive wins in a row and across a Test series. This also marked the third straight season that the All Blacks lost back to back test matches and this led them to make changes in their coaching setup.[175] They opened their Rugby Championship campaign with a loss to the Springboks in Mbombela (10–26),[176] their third consecutive loss. They then rallied back the following week with a win at Ellis Park (35–23) to retain the Freedom Cup.[177] They lost to Argentina (18–25)[178] for the first time in New Zealand, before bouncing back with a (53–3) victory a week later.[179] They then defeated Australia in a controversial and much debated (39–37) win, thus retaining the Bledisloe Cup.[180] The All Blacks went on to defeat the Wallabies again (40–14) at Eden Park in Auckland.[181] In their End Of Year Northern Tour, they defeated Japan (38–31),[182] Wales (55–23),[183] Scotland (31–23)[184] but drew against England (25–25).[185] The All Blacks finished with eight wins, four losses and one draw. It was their worst win/loss record since the 1998 season.

2023

In 2023, the All Blacks won the shortened version of the Rugby Championship (due to the World Cup) by defeating Argentina (41–12), South Africa (35–20), and Australia (38–7).[186] They also kept the Freedom Cup for another year after beating the Springboks and had wrapped up the Bledisloe for another year after defeating the Wallabies (23–20) in the 2nd Bledisloe game which was a test match outside the Rugby Championship.[187] In a warm up game at Twickenham Stadium in London, the All Blacks lost to the Springboks (7–35), which became their worst ever defeat in their 120-year history.[188] At the 2023 Rugby World Cup, the All Blacks tasted their first ever defeat in the pool stages when they were beaten by the host nation France (13–27).[189] They defeated all the other teams in their pool, Namibia (71–3), Italy (96–17), Uruguay (73–0), to qualify for the quarter–finals.[190] They defeated Ireland in the quarters (28–24),[191] beat Argentina (44–6) in the semi–final,[192] but lost to the Springboks (11–12), who became the first nation to win four World Cups, in the final of the 2023 Rugby World Cup tournament.[193] They ended their season with a record of nine wins and three losses. This marked the end of the Ian Foster era.

Robertson Era

[edit]

On March 21, 2023, Scott Robertson was named as All Blacks Head Coach from 2024.[194] After the conclusion of the 2023 Rugby World Cup tournament, Robertson commenced the role of head coach from November 1, 2023.[195]

2024

Robertson's first game as head coach took place against England in 2024. Robertson's All Blacks team defeated England (16–15) at Forsyth Barr Stadium, in Dunedin.[196] A week later in Eden Park, in Auckland, the All Blacks defeated England again (24–17).[197] The All Blacks then travelled to San Diego, California, to face Fiji and defeated them (47–5).[198] In the 2024 Rugby Championship, the All Blacks compiled a 3–3 record as they struggled and were outscored in the last 20 minutes in 5 of the 6 games. They split against Argentina, were swept by South Africa and then went on to sweep Australia.[199] In the All Blacks Northern end of year tour, they beat Japan (64–19) in Yokohama,[200] beat England (24–22) at Allianz Stadium, Twickenham and swept them 3–0 in 2024,[201] beat Ireland (23–13) at the Aviva Stadium[202] and lost to France (29–30) in the Stade de France[203] before bouncing back a week later and defeating Italy (29–11) in Turin[204] to go 4 wins from 5 against the Northern Hemisphere teams. In 2024, Scott Robertson had a 10–4 record in his first season as Head Coach.

2025

The All Blacks kicked off their 2025 campaign with a 3-test series against France. They swept the French to win the series (3–0) with victories in Dunedin (31–27),[205] Wellington (43–17),[206] and Hamilton (29–19).[207] In the 2025 Rugby Championship, the All Blacks compiled a (4–2) record. They split both games with Argentina with the All Blacks winning (41–24) in Córdoba,[208] but suffered a first ever defeat to the Puma's on Argentine soil a week later with a (23–29) loss in Buenos Aries.[209] The All Blacks also split both games with South Africa with New Zealand winning (24–17) in Eden Park,[210] but were demolished a week later by the Springboks with a (10–43) loss in Wellington,[211] which is their heaviest defeat in test match history, their worst ever loss at home and their worst ever defeat to the Springboks. South Africa broke their own record from 2 years prior when they gave New Zealand their previous worst defeat at Twickenham in London with a (35–7) victory over the All Blacks.[212] They then went onto defeat the Wallabies twice to retain the Bledisloe Cup with a (33–24) victory at Eden Park,[213] and a (28–14) win at Optus Stadium in Perth.[214]


Uniform

[edit]
All Blacks historic jerseys
The 1905 "Originals" jersey
The Adidas July 2003 to August 2005 jersey
The 2012 jersey, sponsored by AIG

The current New Zealand jersey features a figure-hugging jersey and is entirely black except for sponsors' logos and the NZRU silver fern on the chest. The team has not always played in black; during the 1884 tour of Australia which was the first overseas New Zealand rugby tour, the team donned a dark blue jersey, with a gold fern insignia on the left of the jumper.[215][216][217] In 1893, when the New Zealand Rugby Union was established, they stipulated that the uniform would be a black jersey with silver fern and white knickerbockers,[218] although historic photographs suggest white shorts may have been used instead during these early years. There was a change some time after 1897, and in 1901 the team met New South Wales wearing an all black uniform for the first time - black jersey, a canvas top with no collar, and a silver fern, and black shorts.[219]

In 2006, New Zealand wore an embroidered remembrance poppy on their jersey sleeve when playing France during the end-of-year tour.[220] The poppy honours the ANZAC soldiers who died on the beaches of Gallipoli. Captain Richie McCaw said "We want to honour the overseas service of New Zealanders. It is an important part of our history as a country and a team."[221]

During the 2011 Rugby World Cup, there was an image of the Webb Ellis Cup embroidered on the sleeve of the All Blacks' jerseys, with the year '1987' below it to signify the team's previous world title. Each of the four teams that had won the cup in previous years sported the same detailing on their jerseys.[222]

Kit suppliers

[edit]

Canterbury were kit suppliers to New Zealand from 1924 until 1999,[223] when Adidas paid $70 million to clothe and shoe the All Blacks for five years.[224] Nike also looked at sponsoring New Zealand at this time, but elected to sponsor Tiger Woods instead.[225] In 2003, Adidas renewed this contract and paid the team US$200 million over nine years, expecting New Zealand to win around 75 per cent of their matches.[226] In 2008, this deal was extended to 2019 for an undisclosed amount,[227] In 2017 this was again extended to 2023 in a deal estimated to be worth about $10 million a year.[228]

Period Kit manufacturer
1924–1999 Canterbury
1999–present Adidas

Kit sponsors

[edit]

Steinlager was the first sponsor to appear on the All Blacks' jersey, in the left breast of the jersey (on the opposite side to the silver fern), lasting from 1994 to 1999, when Adidas took over as supplier. In 2012, AIG became the first to sponsor on the centre-front of the All Black jersey in a deal estimated to be worth approximately $80 million over five years.[229] AIG extended this sponsorship to 2021 in a deal thought to be worth about $15m a year.[228] After AIG decided not to renew their sponsorship deal with the team, it was announced that the Altrad Group would be the new main sponsor of the All Blacks from 2022, with a 6-year deal reportedly worth more than $120 million.[230]

Haka

[edit]
The New Zealand team lined up, with their arms raised to their side and palms facing down, mouths open in full voice, and eyes looking directly at their opponents opposite. The New Zealanders are wearing black shorts and socks, while squatting with knees bent and backs straight.
The New Zealand team performing Ka Mate, led by Richie McCaw, before a match against France in November 2006

The All Blacks perform a haka (a Māori challenge) before every international match. The tradition has been closely associated with New Zealand rugby ever since a tour of Australia and the United Kingdom by the New Zealand Natives in 1888 and 1889,[231][232] although it is likely that the New Zealand team that toured New South Wales in 1884 may also have performed a haka.[233] The 1888–89 New Zealand native team used Ake Ake Kia Kaha, and a mocking haka, Tupoto koe, Kangaru!, was used by the 1903 team that visited Australia. In 1905, the All Blacks began the tradition of using Ka Mate, a haka composed in the 19th century by Te Rauparaha, leader of the Ngāti Toa tribe. The 1924 All Blacks used a specially composed haka, Ko Niu Tireni, but later All Blacks reverted to using Ka Mate.[234][235][236]

In August 2005, before the Tri-Nations test match between New Zealand and South Africa at Carisbrook stadium in Dunedin, the All Blacks performed a new haka, Kapa o Pango, specially composed for the occasion by Derek Lardelli and intended to reflect the Polynesian-influenced multicultural make-up of contemporary New Zealand.[237] Lardelli's haka was not designed to replace Ka Mate as it was only meant to be used for special occasions.[237] Kapa o Pango concludes with a move that has been interpreted as a "throat slitting" gesture, which has led to accusations that the haka encourages violence and sends the wrong message to All Blacks fans.[238] However, according to Lardelli, the gesture is meant to represent "drawing vital energy into the heart and lungs".[239]

In November 2006, at the Millennium Stadium in Cardiff, Wales, the All Blacks performed the haka in the dressing room prior to the match – instead of on the field immediately before kick-off – following a disagreement with the Welsh Rugby Union, who had wanted Wales to sing their national anthem immediately after the haka.[240] In 2008, New Zealand played Munster at Thomond Park; before the match, Munster's four New Zealand players challenged their opponents by performing their own haka before the All Blacks started theirs.[241] On the same tour, Wales responded to New Zealand's haka by silently refusing to move afterwards, and the two teams simply stared at each other until the referee forced them to start the game.[242]

Record

[edit]

Overall

[edit]
  1. ^ Change from the previous week
New Zealand's historical rankings
See or edit source data.
Source: World Rugby[243]
Graph updated to 20 October 2025

New Zealand have only ever been beaten by seven test nations (and drawing to an additional nation in Scotland) and two combined teams (the British & Irish Lions, and a World XV) and they are the only international team to have a winning record against every nation they have played. They have won 506 of their 660 test matches (76.67 per cent; see table below) and have lost at home only 43 times. Since World Rankings were introduced by World Rugby in October 2003, New Zealand have occupied the number one ranking the majority of the time.[5] In the decade from 2000 to 2009, New Zealand won 100 tests (92 per cent of their total games played).

New Zealand's longest winning streak is 18 test victories (a Tier 1 joint world record), achieved between 2015 and 2016. In 2013 they won every test they played during a calendar year. The All Blacks hold the record for most consecutive test wins at home, a 47–match winning streak, achieved between 2009 and 2017.[244] Their longest unbeaten streak is 23 tests (from 1987 to 1990) with one game being drawn.[245]

Their all-time points record for tests stands at 18,903 points for and 9,187 points against (updated 4 October 2025). Many national rugby union teams have suffered their heaviest defeats when playing against New Zealand, these being Argentina (91–8), Fiji (91–0), France (61–10), Ireland (60–0), Japan (145–17), Samoa (101–14), South Africa (57–0), Tonga (102–0, twice) and the British and Irish Lions (38–6). The All Blacks largest test win was a (145–17) victory against Japan in 1995,[246] while their heaviest loss was a (10–43) defeat to the Springboks in 2025.

Below is a summary of New Zealand test results (updated 4 October 2025):[247]

Opponent Played Won Lost Drawn Win% For Aga Diff
 Argentina 41 36 4 1 87.8% 1,570 607 +963
 Australia 181 128 45 8 70.72% 4,053 2,642 +1,411
British & Irish Lions 41 30 7 4 73.17% 700 399 +301
 Canada 6 6 0 0 100% 376 54 +322
 England 46 36 8 2 78.26% 1,081 673 +408
 Fiji 8 8 0 0 100% 528 91 +437
 France 67 51 15 1 76.12% 1,781 961 +820
 Georgia 1 1 0 0 100% 43 10 +33
 Ireland 38 32 5 1 84.21% 1,064 529 +535
 Italy 17 17 0 0 100% 992 168 +824
 Japan 6 6 0 0 100% 453 111 +342
 Namibia 3 3 0 0 100% 200 26 +174
Pacific Islanders 1 1 0 0 100% 41 26 +15
 Portugal 1 1 0 0 100% 108 13 +95
 Romania 2 2 0 0 100% 99 14 +85
 Samoa 7 7 0 0 100% 411 72 +339
 Scotland 32 30 0 2 93.75% 953 372 +581
 South Africa 110 63 43 4 57.27% 2,269 1,849 +420
 Tonga 7 7 0 0 100% 520 42 +478
 United States 4 4 0 0 100% 275 29 +246
 Uruguay 1 1 0 0 100% 73 0 +73
 Wales 37 34 3 0 91.89% 1,219 430 +789
 World XV 3 2 1 0 66.67% 94 69 +25
Total 660 506 131 23 76.67% 18,903 9,187 +9,716

Rugby World Cup

[edit]
Rugby World Cup record
Year Round Pld W D L PF PA Squad
New Zealand Australia 1987 Champions 6 6 0 0 298 52 Squad
England France Ireland Scotland Wales 1991 Third place 6 5 0 1 143 74 Squad
South Africa 1995 Runners-up 6 5 0 1 327 119 Squad
Wales 1999 Fourth place 6 4 0 2 255 111 Squad
Australia 2003 Third place 7 6 0 1 361 101 Squad
France 2007 Quarter-finals 5 4 0 1 327 55 Squad
New Zealand 2011 Champions 7 7 0 0 301 72 Squad
England 2015 Champions 7 7 0 0 290 97 Squad
Japan 2019 Third place 7 5 1 1 250 72 Squad
France 2023 Runners-up 7 5 0 2 336 89 Squad
Australia 2027 Qualified
United States 2031 To be determined
Total 64 54 1 9 2888 842
  •   Champions
  •   Runners–up
  •   Third place
  •   Fourth place
  •   Home venue

During Typhoon Hagibis; New Zealand v Italy was to be cancelled and recorded as 0–0 draw

New Zealand have won the World Cup three times. They beat France in the final of the 1987 inaugural competition held in New Zealand and Australia, defeated France again in the final of the 2011 tournament, also hosted in New Zealand, and most recently defeated Australia in England in 2015, making them the first team to win the World Cup in consecutive tournaments. In 1991, they lost their semi-final to Australia before winning the playoff for third. In 1995, they reached the final, before losing in extra time to hosts South Africa. They finished in fourth place in 1999, after losing their semi-final and then the third-place playoff game. In 2003, New Zealand were knocked out by hosts Australia in their semi-final, before finishing third. The 2007 World Cup saw their worst tournament, being knocked out in the quarter-finals by the host nation France;[248] until this they were the only team to have reached the semi-finals of every tournament.[249] As a result of the poor performance in the 2007 World Cup the NZRU commissioned a 47-page report to detail the causes of the failure. In 2019, they lost in the semi-finals against England in a (7–19) defeat, and then finishing in third-place after beating Wales in the 3rd spot playoff game (40–17). In 2023, the All Blacks were defeated by the Springboks (11–12) in the final. The All Blacks had won every World Cup pool match they had played in until 8 September 2023 when they lost their first ever pool match in the opening match of the 2023 Rugby World Cup against the host nation France, and have finished top of their pool in 9 out of the 10 tournaments.

New Zealand holds several World Cup records: most World Cup matches (63), most points in one match (145 versus Japan in 1995), most cumulative points over all World Cups (2,888), most tries overall (396), most conversions (289) and also the record for the most points scored in the first half of a knockout game at the Rugby World Cup (29, against France 2015) along with the largest knockout margin (49) in the same match.[250] They currently hold the record for the most consecutive wins at a World Cup, with 18 straight wins, spanning from 2011 to 2019. Several individual players also hold World Cup records, Jonah Lomu for most World Cup tries (15 over two World Cups, tied with South Africa's Bryan Habana), Marc Ellis with most tries in a match (6 versus Japan in 1995), Grant Fox with most points in one tournament (126 in 1987), and Simon Culhane with most points in a single game (45 versus Japan in 1995).[250]

Tri Nations and The Rugby Championship

[edit]

New Zealand's only annual tournament is a competition involving the Southern Hemisphere's top national teams. From 1996 through 2011, they competed in the Tri Nations against Australia and South Africa. In 2012, Argentina joined the competition, which was renamed The Rugby Championship. New Zealand's record of 20 tournament wins (the most recent in 2023) and 107 match wins is well ahead of the other teams records. The Bledisloe Cup is contested between New Zealand and Australia, and the Freedom Cup between New Zealand and South Africa, as part of the Tri Nations and The Rugby Championship.

Tri Nations (1996–2011; 2020)
Nation Matches Points Bonus
points
Table
points
Titles
won
P W D L PF PA PD
 New Zealand 76 52 0 24 2,054 1,449 +605 35 243 11
 Australia 76 30 3 43 1,591 1,817 −226 34 160 3
 South Africa 72 28 1 43 1,480 1,831 −351 24 138 3
 Argentina 4 1 2 1 56 84 –28 0 8 0
Source:  lassen.co.nz – Tri-Nations, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa

Bonus points given by T – 4W − 2D, for T table points, W games won and D games drawn.

Rugby Championship (since 2012)
Nation Matches Points Bonus
points
Table
points
Titles
won
P W D L PF PA PD
 New Zealand 69 55 2 12 2,313 1,348 +965 43 268 9
 South Africa 69 37 4 28 1,845 1,534 +311 33 185 3
 Australia 69 28 3 38 1,563 1,900 −337 16 141 1
 Argentina 69 14 1 54 1,358 2,277 −919 16 66 0
Updated: 4 October 2025
Source:  lassen.co.nz – TRC, Argentina, Australia, New Zealand, South Africa
Bonus points given by T – 4W − 2D, for T table points, W games won and D games drawn.
All-time Tri Nations and Rugby Championship Table (since 1996)
Nation Matches Points Bonus
points
Table
points
Titles
won
P W D L PF PA PD
 New Zealand 145 107 2 36 4,367 2,797 +1,570 78 511 20
 South Africa 141 65 5 71 3,325 3,365 –40 57 323 6
 Australia 145 58 6 81 3,154 3,717 –563 50 301 4
 Argentina 73 15 3 55 1,414 2,361 –947 16 74 0
Updated: 4 October 2025
Bonus points given by T – 4W − 2D, for T table points, W games won and D games drawn.

Series played

[edit]
New Zealand's home and away series' played total
Team Series stats Home Series Away Series
P W D L %
 Argentina 4 4 0 0 100.00 1989, 1997 1985, 1991
 Australia 31 24 1 6 077.42 1913, 1936, 1946, 1949, 1952, 1955, 1958, 1962, 1964, 1972, 1978, 1982, 1986, 1990 1907, 1910, 1914, 1929, 1932, 1934, 1938, 1947, 1951, 1957, 1962, 1968, 1974, 1980, 1984, 1988, 1992
British & Irish Lions 12 10 1 1 083.33 1904, 1908, 1930, 1950, 1959, 1966, 1971, 1977, 1983, 1993, 2005, 2017
 England[j] 8 8 0 0 100.00 1963, 1985, 1998, 2004, 2008, 2014, 2024 1997
 Fiji 1 1 0 0 100.00 2021
 France 18 11 6 1 061.11 1961, 1968, 1979, 1984, 1989, 1994, 2007, 2009, 2013, 2018, 2025 1977, 1981, 1986, 1990, 1995, 2000, 2006
 Ireland[j] 5 4 0 1 080.00 1992, 2002, 2006, 2012, 2022
 Scotland[j] 4 4 0 0 100.00 1981, 1990, 1996, 2000
 South Africa 12 5 2 5 041.67 1921, 1937, 1956, 1965, 1981, 1994 1928, 1949, 1960, 1970, 1976, 1996
 Wales[j] 4 4 0 0 100.00 1969, 1988, 2010, 2016
World XV 1 1 0 0 100.00 1992
Total 100 76 10 14 076.00 Years
Team Series stats
P W D L %
 • Bold text denotes series was won by New Zealand  • Italic text denotes series was drawn

Players

[edit]

Current squad

[edit]

On 13 October, New Zealand named a 36-player squad ahead of their 2025 Grand Slam tour.[251]

Unavailable due to injury: Patrick Tuipulotu (ruled out after initially being named in the squad), Tyrel Lomax, Tupou Vaa'i, Noah Hotham, Emoni Narawa, Ollie Norris, Ofa Tuʻungafasi, Asafo Aumua, Stephen Perofeta, and Timoci Tavatavanawai.

Head Coach: New Zealand Scott Robertson

  • Caps Updated: 13 October 2025 (ahead of tour)
Player Position Date of birth (age) Caps Franchise/province
George Bell Hooker (2002-01-29) 29 January 2002 (age 23) 3 New Zealand Crusaders / Canterbury
Samisoni Taukei'aho Hooker (1997-08-08) 8 August 1997 (age 28) 39 New Zealand Chiefs / Waikato
Codie Taylor Hooker (1991-03-31) 31 March 1991 (age 34) 103 New Zealand Crusaders / Canterbury
George Bower Prop (1992-05-28) 28 May 1992 (age 33) 24 New Zealand Crusaders / Otago
Ethan de Groot Prop (1998-07-22) 22 July 1998 (age 27) 37 New Zealand Highlanders / Southland
Tevita Mafileo Prop (1998-02-04) 4 February 1998 (age 27) 0 New Zealand Hurricanes / Bay of Plenty
Fletcher Newell Prop (2000-02-01) 1 February 2000 (age 25) 31 New Zealand Crusaders / Canterbury
Pasilio Tosi Prop (1998-07-18) 18 July 1998 (age 27) 12 New Zealand Hurricanes / Bay of Plenty
Tamaiti Williams Prop (2000-08-10) 10 August 2000 (age 25) 23 New Zealand Crusaders / Canterbury
Scott Barrett (c) Lock (1993-11-20) 20 November 1993 (age 31) 86 New Zealand Crusaders / Taranaki
Sam Darry Lock (2000-07-18) 18 July 2000 (age 25) 6 New Zealand Blues / Canterbury
Samipeni Finau Lock (1999-05-10) 10 May 1999 (age 26) 12 New Zealand Chiefs / Waikato
Fabian Holland Lock (2002-10-09) 9 October 2002 (age 23) 9 New Zealand Highlanders / Otago
Josh Lord Lock (2001-01-17) 17 January 2001 (age 24) 8 New Zealand Chiefs / Taranaki
Luke Jacobson Loose forward (1997-04-20) 20 April 1997 (age 28) 25 New Zealand Chiefs / Waikato
Du'Plessis Kirifi Loose forward (1997-03-03) 3 March 1997 (age 28) 6 New Zealand Hurricanes / Wellington
Peter Lakai Loose forward (2003-03-04) 4 March 2003 (age 22) 5 New Zealand Hurricanes / Wellington
Simon Parker Loose forward (2000-05-06) 6 May 2000 (age 25) 5 New Zealand Chiefs / Northland
Ardie Savea Loose forward (1993-10-14) 14 October 1993 (age 32) 103 New Zealand Moana Pasifika / Wellington
Wallace Sititi Loose forward (2002-09-07) 7 September 2002 (age 23) 15 New Zealand Chiefs / North Harbour
Finlay Christie Half-back (1995-09-19) 19 September 1995 (age 30) 27 New Zealand Blues / Tasman
Cortez Ratima Half-back (2001-03-22) 22 March 2001 (age 24) 18 New Zealand Chiefs / Waikato
Cam Roigard Half-back (2000-11-16) 16 November 2000 (age 24) 14 New Zealand Hurricanes / Counties Manukau
Beauden Barrett First five-eighth (1991-05-27) 27 May 1991 (age 34) 141 New Zealand Blues / Taranaki
Damian McKenzie First five-eighth (1995-04-20) 20 April 1995 (age 30) 70 New Zealand Chiefs / Waikato
Jordie Barrett Centre (1997-02-17) 17 February 1997 (age 28) 77 New Zealand Hurricanes / Taranaki
Leicester Faingaʻanuku Centre (1999-10-11) 11 October 1999 (age 26) 8 New Zealand Crusaders / Tasman
Anton Lienert-Brown Centre (1995-04-15) 15 April 1995 (age 30) 86 New Zealand Chiefs / Waikato
Billy Proctor Centre (1999-05-14) 14 May 1999 (age 26) 9 New Zealand Hurricanes / Wellington
Quinn Tupaea Centre (1999-05-10) 10 May 1999 (age 26) 21 New Zealand Chiefs / Waikato
Leroy Carter Wing (1999-02-24) 24 February 1999 (age 26) 3 New Zealand Chiefs / Bay of Plenty
Caleb Clarke Wing (1999-03-29) 29 March 1999 (age 26) 30 New Zealand Blues / Auckland
Rieko Ioane Wing (1997-03-18) 18 March 1997 (age 28) 87 New Zealand Blues / Auckland
Sevu Reece Wing (1997-02-13) 13 February 1997 (age 28) 36 New Zealand Crusaders / Southland
Will Jordan Fullback (1998-02-24) 24 February 1998 (age 27) 50 New Zealand Crusaders / Tasman
Ruben Love Fullback (2001-04-28) 28 April 2001 (age 24) 4 New Zealand Hurricanes / Wellington

Notable players

[edit]
Image of Gallaher wearing his black rugby uniform and clasping a football.
Captain of the "Original All Blacks" that toured the United Kingdom in 1905, Dave Gallaher is an inductee into the World Rugby Hall of Fame

Nineteen former All Blacks have been inducted into the World Rugby Hall of Fame: Sir Fred Allen, Dan Carter, Don Clarke, Sean Fitzpatrick, Grant Fox, Dave Gallaher, Sir Michael Jones, Ian Kirkpatrick, Sir John Kirwan, Sir Brian Lochore, Jonah Lomu, Richie McCaw, Sir Colin Meads, Graham Mourie, George Nēpia, Sir Bryan Williams, Sir Wilson Whineray, and Joe Warbrick.[252][253]

Joe Warbrick represented New Zealand on their historic 1884 tour to Australia, but is better known for selecting and captaining the 1888–89 New Zealand Native football team that embarked on a 107-match tour of New Zealand, Australia and the British Isles.[254] The New Zealand Natives were the first New Zealand team to wear black uniforms, and the first to perform a haka.[255]

Dave Gallaher played in New Zealand's first ever test match in 1903 and also captained the 1905 Originals. Along with Billy Stead, Gallaher wrote the famous rugby book The Complete Rugby Footballer.[256] At the age of only 19, George Nēpia played in all 30 matches on the Invincibles tour of 1924–25.[257] Nēpia played 37 All Blacks games; his last was against the British Isles in 1930.[257]

Sir Fred Allen captained all of his 21 matches for New Zealand, including six tests, between 1946 and 1949.[258] He eventually moved on to coaching New Zealand between 1966 and 1968. New Zealand won all 14 of their test matches with Allen as coach.[258]

Colin Meads (pictured in 1956), New Zealand's player of the century

Five hall of Fame inductees, including the first New Zealander named to the World Rugby Hall of Fame, played during the 1960s. Don Clarke was an All Black between 1956 and 1964 and during this period he broke the record at the time for All Black test points.[259] Clarke famously scored six penalties in one match – a record at the time – to give New Zealand an 18–17 victory over the British Isles at Dunedin in 1959.[259][260] Sir Wilson Whineray played 32 tests, captaining New Zealand in 30 of them.[261] He played prop and also number 8 between 1957 and 1965. New Zealand lost only four of their 30 tests with Whineray as captain.[261] On 21 October 2007, Whineray became the first New Zealander to earn induction to the World Rugby Hall of Fame.[262] In Sir Colin Meads' New Zealand Rugby Museum profile, he is described as "New Zealand's equivalent of Australia's Sir Donald Bradman or the United States of America's Babe Ruth".[263] Meads, nicknamed Pinetree, played 133 games for New Zealand, including 55 tests.[263] In 1999 the New Zealand Rugby Monthly magazine named Meads the New Zealand player of the century.[263] Ian Kirkpatrick played 39 tests, including nine as captain, between 1967 and 1977.[264] He scored 16 tries in his test career, a record at the time.[264]

There were two players in the Hall of Fame to debut in the 1970s one was flanker Graham Mourie. He captained 19 of his 21 tests and 57 of his 61 overall All Blacks matches between 1976 and 1982. Most notably, in 1978 he was captain of the first All Blacks side to complete a Grand Slam over the four Home Nations sides.[265]

The 1987 World Cup champions were coached by Sir Brian Lochore who had represented New Zealand in 25 tests between 1964 and 1971, including 17 as captain.[266] He was knighted in 1999 for his lifetime services to rugby.[267] Four of the 1987 World Cup squad that he had coached are also inductees in the Hall of Fame. Sir John Kirwan played a total of 63 tests between 1984 and 1994, scoring 35 tries, an All Blacks record at the time.[268] In the 1987 World Cup opener against Italy, Kirwan raced 90 meters to score one of the tries of the tournament.[268][269]

Head shot of a European male
Richie McCaw is the third most capped rugby player of all time after Alun Wyn Jones and Sam Whitelock, and was the first New Zealander to play 100 test matches

An All Black from 1984 to 1993, Grant Fox was one of New Zealand's greatest point-scorers with 1067 points, including 645 test points.[270] Fox played 46 tests, including the 1987 World Cup final against France. Known as The Iceman, Michael Jones was one of the greatest open side flankers of all time.[271] Born in Auckland, New Zealand, Jones first played international rugby for Samoa, then for New Zealand, playing 55 tests between 1987 and 1998.[271] Due to his Christian faith, Jones never played rugby on Sundays, resulting in him not playing in the 1991 World Cup semi-final against Australia, and also in him not being picked for the 1995 World Cup squad.[271][272]

For many years the most capped test All Black was Sean Fitzpatrick, with 92 appearances.[273] He played in the 1987 World Cup after incumbent Andy Dalton was injured, and was appointed All Blacks captain in 1992, continuing in the role until his retirement in 1997.[273] He played 346 first class rugby matches.[274]

Jonah Lomu is generally regarded as the first true global superstar of rugby union.[275] He was the youngest player ever to appear in a test as an All Black, making his debut at age 19 years, 45 days in 1994. Lomu, a wing, had unique physical gifts; even though he stood 1.96 metres (6 feet 5 inches) and weighed 119 kg (262 lb), making him both the tallest[276] and heaviest[277] back ever to play for New Zealand, he could run 100 metres in under 11 seconds. He burst on the international scene in the 1995 Rugby World Cup, scoring seven tries in the competition. Four of those tries came in New Zealand's semi-final win over England, including an iconic try in which he bulldozed England's Mike Catt on his way to the try line. He added eight more tries in the 1999 Rugby World Cup. Perhaps most remarkably, Lomu played virtually his entire top-level career in the shadow of a serious kidney disorder which ended his test career in 2002 and ultimately led to a transplant in 2004. Even with his career hampered and eventually shortened by his health issues, he scored 37 tries in 63 tests.[278]

Player records

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Jonah Lomu debuted with New Zealand at 19 years old. He is generally regarded as the first true global superstar of rugby union

The record for most test points for not only New Zealand, but any nation, is held by Dan Carter with 1,598 from 112 tests.[279] He surpassed Andrew Mehrtens' All Black record total of 967 points from 70 tests[280] in the All Blacks' win over England on 21 November 2009.[281] On 27 November 2010 Dan Carter scored a penalty against Wales to pass Jonny Wilkinson's previous world record of 1,178 points.[282] Carter also holds the record for points against Australia with 366.

The All Blacks' record test try scorer is Doug Howlett with 49 tries, who overtook Christian Cullen's 46 during the 2007 World Cup.[283] The world record for tries in a calendar year is held by Joe Rokocoko, with 17 tries in 2003; he also became the first All Black to score ten tries in his first five tests, as well as the first All Black to score at least two tries in each of four consecutive tests.[284] In test matches, the most capped All Black is Sam Whitelock with 153 caps.[285] The record for most tests as captain is held by Richie McCaw with 110.[286] The youngest All Black in a test match was Jonah Lomu, capped at age 19 years, 45 days, whilst the oldest test player was Ned Hughes at 40 years, 123 days.[278][287][k]

Award winners

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The following New Zealand players have been recognised at the World Rugby Awards since 2001:[6]

World Rugby Try of the Year
Year Date Scorer Match Tournament
2013 15 June Beauden Barrett vs. France Summer Test Series
2015 17 October Julian Savea vs. France Rugby World Cup
2018 18 August Brodie Retallick vs. Australia Rugby Championship
2019 6 October TJ Perenara vs. Namibia Rugby World Cup

Coaches

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The following table lists every head coach of the All Blacks, from 1949 to the present day. Every All Black head coach has been a New Zealander. Scott Robertson is the current head coach, as of 2024.

Name Years Tests Won Lost Draw Win % All Black No.
Alex McDonald 1949 4 0 4 0 0% 128
Tom Morrison 1950, 55–56 12 8 3 1 66.7% 441
Len Clode 1951 3 3 0 0 100% -
Arthur Marslin 1953–1954 5 3 2 0 60% -
Dick Everest 1957 2 2 0 0 100% -
Jack Sullivan 1958–1960 11 6 4 1 54.5% 428
Neil McPhail 1961–1965 20 16 2 2 80% -
Ron Bush 1962 2 2 0 0 100% -
Fred Allen 1966–1968 14 14 0 0 100% 449
Ivan Vodanovich 1969–1971 10 4 5 1 40% 568
Bob Duff 1972–1973 8 6 1 1 75% 523
JJ Stewart 1974–1976 11 6 4 1 54.5% -
Jack Gleeson 1977–1978 13 10 3 0 76.9% -
Eric Watson 1979–1980 9 5 4 0 55.6% -
Peter Burke 1981–1982 11 9 2 0 81.8% 534
Bryce Rope 1983–1984 12 9 2 1 75% -
Brian Lochore 1985–1987 18 14 3 1 77.8% 637
Alex Wyllie 1988–1991 29 25 3 1 86.2% 688
Laurie Mains 1992–1995 34 23 10 1 67.6% 697
John Hart 1996–1999 41 31 9 1 75.6% -
Wayne Smith 2000–2001 17 12 5 0 70.6% 806
John Mitchell[288] 2002–2003 28 23 4 1 82.1% 940
Graham Henry[289] 2004–2011 103 88 15 0 85.4% -
Steve Hansen 2012–2019 107 93 10 4 86.9% -
Ian Foster 2020–2023 46 32 12 2 69.6% -
Scott Robertson[290] 2024– 23 17 6 0 73.9% 974

Award winners

[edit]

The following All Blacks head coaches have been recognised at the World Rugby Awards since 2001:[6]

World Rugby Coach of the Year
Year Nominees Winners
2005 Graham Henry Graham Henry
2006 Graham Henry (2) Graham Henry (2)
2008 Graham Henry (3) Graham Henry (3)
2010 Graham Henry (4) Graham Henry (4)
2011 Graham Henry (5) Graham Henry (5)
2012 Steve Hansen Steve Hansen
2013 Steve Hansen (2) Steve Hansen (2)
2014 Steve Hansen (3) Steve Hansen (3)
2015 Steve Hansen (4)
2016 Steve Hansen (5) Steve Hansen (4)
2017 Steve Hansen (6)
2018 Steve Hansen (7)
2019 Steve Hansen (8)
2021 Ian Foster
2023 Ian Foster (2)

Home grounds

[edit]

Like other major rugby nations Argentina, Australia, France and South Africa, New Zealand does not have an official stadium for its national team. Instead, the All Blacks play their test matches at a variety of venues throughout New Zealand.

Prior to the construction of Westpac Stadium in 1999, Wellington's test venue was Athletic Park, which had served as the venue for the first All Blacks test match in New Zealand against Great Britain in 1904.[291] The first home test match played outside the main centres of Auckland, Christchurch, Dunedin or Wellington was in 1996 at McLean Park in Napier.[292]

Originally known as Rugby Park, the Hamilton venue was completely reconstructed in late 2000 to upgrade the facility, re-opening in early 2002 as Waikato Stadium.[293][294]

Eden Park and Lancaster Park were upgraded in preparation for the 2011 Rugby World Cup. By that time, the NZRU no longer considered Carisbrook a suitable test venue, and a covered sports stadium (Forsyth Barr) was proposed as a replacement.[295] Dunedin City Council approved the new stadium in March 2008,[296] land acquisition proceeded from August to October of that year.[297]

Ground First Test Last Test Tests Held Win% Last Loss
Athletic Park, Wellington, North Island 1904
v British Lions
1999
v France
42 69% 25 July 1998
Tahuna Park, Dunedin, South Island 1905
v Australia
(1905) 1 100% N/A
Potter's Park, Auckland, North Island 1908
v British Lions
(1908) 1 100% N/A
Carisbrook, Dunedin, South Island 1908
v British Lions
2011
v Fiji
38 86% 13 June 2009
Lancaster Park, Christchurch, South Island 1913
v Australia
2010
v Australia
48 81% 1 August 1998
Christchurch Stadium, Christchurch, South Island 2012
v Ireland
2022 v Argentina 5 80% 27 August 2022
Eden Park, Auckland, North Island 1921
v South Africa
2025 v Australia 95 86% 3 July 1994
Epsom Showgrounds, Auckland, North Island 1958
v Australia
(1958) 1 100% N/A
Forsyth Barr Stadium, Dunedin, South Island 2012
v South Africa
2025
v France
11 90% 9 July 2022
McLean Park, Napier, North Island 1996
v Western Samoa
2014
v Argentina
2 100% N/A
Mt Smart Stadium, Auckland, North Island 2021
v Tonga
2023
v South Africa
2 100% N/A
North Harbour Stadium, Auckland, North Island 1997
v Fiji
2017
v South Africa
7 100% N/A
Sky Stadium, Wellington, North Island 2000
v Australia
2025
v South Africa
31 71% 13 September 2025
Waikato Stadium, Hamilton, North Island[298][l] 1997
v Argentina
2025
v France
17 94% 12 October 2009
Taranaki Stadium, New Plymouth, North Island 2008
v Samoa
2017
v Argentina
4 100% N/A
Trafalgar Park, Nelson, South Island 2018
v Argentina
(2018) 1 100% N/A
Total 306 83%

See also

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Notes

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References

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Works cited

[edit]
  • Fagan, Sean (2013). The First Lions of Rugby. Richmond, Australia: Slattery Media Group. ISBN 9780987500274.
  • Gifford, Phil (2004). The Passion: The Stories Behind 125 Years of Canterbury Rugby. Wilson Scott Publishing. ISBN 978-0-9582535-1-2.
  • Harding, Grant; Williams, David (2000). The Toughest of Them All: New Zealand and South Africa: The Struggle for Rugby Supremacy. Auckland, New Zealand: Penguin Books. ISBN 978-0-14-029577-1.
  • Howell, Max (2005). Born to Lead: Wallaby test Captains. North Harbour, New Zealand: Celebrity Books. ISBN 978-1-877252-18-1.
  • Howitt, Bob (2005). SANZAR Saga: Ten Years of Super 12 and Tri-Nations Rugby. Harper Collins Publishers. ISBN 978-1-86950-566-0.
  • McCarthy, Winston (1968). Haka! The All Blacks Story. London: Pelham Books.
  • McLean, Terry (1959). Great Days in New Zealand Rugby. Wellington, New Zealand: A. H. & A. W. Reed.
  • McLean, Terry (1987). New Zealand Rugby Legends. Auckland, New Zealand: MOA Publications. ISBN 978-0-908570-15-7.
  • Mulholland, Malcolm (2009). Beneath the Māori Moon: An Illustrated History of Māori Rugby. Huia Publishers. ISBN 978-1-86969-305-3.
  • Palenski, Ron (2003). Century in Black: 100 Years of All Black test Rugby. Hodder Moa Beckett Publishers Limited. ISBN 978-1-86958-937-0.
  • Peatey, Lance (2011). In Pursuit of Bill: A Complete History of the Rugby World Cup. New Holland Publishers. ISBN 9781742571911.
  • Ryan, Greg (1993). Forerunners of the All Blacks. Christchurch, New Zealand: Canterbury University Press. ISBN 978-0-908812-30-1.
  • Ryan, Greg (2011). "A Tale of Two Dinners: New Zealand Rugby and the Embrace of Empire, 1919–32". The International Journal of the History of Sport. 28 (10): 1409–25. doi:10.1080/09523367.2011.577641. S2CID 144270919.
  • Slatter, Gordan (1974). Great Days at Lancaster Park. Christchurch, New Zealand: Whitcombe and Tombs. ISBN 978-0-7233-0389-3.
  • Verdon, Paul (2000). Born to Lead – The Untold Story of the All Black test Captains. Auckland, New Zealand: Celebrity Books. ISBN 978-1-877252-05-1.
  • Vincent, G. T. (1998). "Practical Imperialism: The Anglo-Welsh Rugby Tour of New Zealand, 1908". The International Journal of the History of Sport. 15 (1): 123–40. doi:10.1080/09523369808714015.
[edit]
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The national team, known as the All Blacks, represents New Zealand in men's international rugby union test matches and tournaments. The team adopted its distinctive black jersey in 1893 and earned the "All Blacks" moniker during a dominant 1905–1906 tour of the and , where they won 34 of 35 matches. Renowned for performing the Māori haka war challenge before games, the All Blacks embody a culture of physical intensity and tactical precision that has defined their play since their first test match in 1903. With a test match of approximately 77% across over 650 fixtures, the All Blacks hold the highest success rate among major rugby nations, recently becoming the first team to reach 500 test victories in July 2025. Their achievements include three titles—in against , against , and against —making them the most successful team in the tournament's history. The team has also secured 23 (and predecessor Tri-Nations/) titles, underscoring sustained dominance over rivals like and . Despite occasional upsets, such as early World Cup exits in 1999 and attributed to high-pressure failures, their overall record reflects superior preparation, player development through provincial systems, and an emphasis on forward power combined with backline speed.

Origins and Early History

Introduction of rugby to New Zealand

Rugby union was introduced to New Zealand in 1870 by Charles John Monro, a 19-year-old student at who had learned the game's rules while studying at , in . Monro organized the first recorded match on 14 May 1870 between and the Nelson Football Club at the Botanical Reserve in Nelson, with the college side prevailing 1 try to nil under rudimentary rules emphasizing carrying and tackling over kicking. Later that year, Monro arranged New Zealand's inaugural interprovincial fixture on 12 September between Nelson and at , drawing a crowd of around 2,000 and sparking interest beyond Nelson. The sport's adoption accelerated through schools and nascent clubs in the 1870s, transitioning from ad hoc games to organized fixtures amid a landscape of competing football codes like association and Australian rules. By the late 1870s, rugby gained traction in urban centers such as and , where provincial representative teams emerged to contest annual challenges. The formation of the Canterbury Rugby Union in 1879 and the shortly thereafter formalized administration at regional levels, enabling structured competitions that reinforced an ethos centered on physical resilience, local pride, and communal participation without financial incentives. This grassroots expansion into rural districts by the mid-1880s saw clubs proliferate, often tied to farming communities and fostering attributes like endurance and teamwork suited to New Zealand's rugged terrain and settler demographics. Māori communities demonstrated early affinity for rugby's demands from the 1870s onward, integrating it into iwi-based teams that emphasized speed, agility, and collective strategy adapted from traditional games. This culminated in the 1888–1889 Native rugby tour to Britain, organized by Māori player Joseph Warbrick with a squad of 26 mostly indigenous athletes supplemented by five for viability, playing 107 matches across , , and the with a record of 78 wins, 21 draws, and 8 losses. The tour showcased Māori proficiency in open, running playstyles that contrasted with the forward-dominated norms of British opponents, evidencing rapid and skill development within two decades of the game's arrival.

First international competitions

New Zealand's first international match took place on 15 August 1903 against at the , resulting in a 22–3 victory for the New Zealand team before a crowd exceeding 30,000 spectators. This encounter marked the team's entry into competitive international play, showcasing early strengths in forward play and scoring efficiency with tries from players including Opai Asher. The 1905 tour to the , , and , known as the Original All Blacks expedition under captain , represented a pivotal step in establishing New Zealand's global presence, with the team securing victories in 34 of 35 matches and amassing 976 points. Revolutionary tactics, including the wing-forward position—which positioned an extra forward on the flank to enhance loose play and scrummaging—and a compact 2-3-2 scrum formation, overwhelmed opponents by disrupting traditional lineouts and enabling rapid ball recovery. The sole defeat came on 16 December 1905 against at , a narrow 3–0 loss attributed to a disputed try by Teddy Morgan amid tight forward battles and Welsh defensive resilience, highlighting vulnerabilities in set-piece execution against adaptable home sides. Subsequent engagements with in 1907 further tested New Zealand's adaptability, as the touring team won the three-test series 2–0 with one draw: 16–3 and 10–6 victories followed by a 5–5 stalemate in the final match on 24 August 1907 in . These results, while affirming dominance in open play, exposed challenges in maintaining leads under pressure, prompting refinements in defensive structures for future international fixtures. The 1924–1925 tour to the , , , and culminated in an undefeated record of 32 matches won without concession of a draw or loss, scoring points to 98 against, thereby cementing New Zealand's reputation for unyielding forward power and backline precision. Under Cliff Porter, the side's defensive solidity—conceding an average of fewer than three —and prolific try-scoring underscored empirical superiority derived from prior setbacks, with key wins including 17–11 over and 11–0 against . This Invincibles campaign provided quantifiable evidence of tactical evolution, emphasizing ball retention and territorial control honed from early international experiences.

Formation of the All Blacks identity

The Football Union, established in 1892, adopted the black jersey with a emblem as the national team's official kit at its first on April 27, 1893. This uniform, proposed by player Tom Ellison, replaced varied provincial colors with a standardized design featuring a black jersey, white knickerbockers, and black stockings to promote distinction and cohesion. The choice of black reflected practical considerations for durability on wet fields and visibility, while the symbolized New Zealand's indigenous flora, embedding national symbolism early in the team's branding. By 1901, the kit transitioned to full black, including shorts and socks, enhancing the uniform's uniformity and imposing aesthetic. This evolution coincided with the selection of players on merit from diverse provincial unions—Auckland, Canterbury, Otago, and others—prioritizing skill over regional allegiance in the amateur era. Such a process, coordinated by the NZRFU, cultivated a sense of national unity, transcending local rivalries and laying the groundwork for a representative side embodying collective excellence. The "All Blacks" nickname emerged during the 1905–1906 tour of the , , and , where British journalists applied it to describe the team's all-black uniforms, distinguishing them as a fully international outfit. The "Originals" achieved 34 wins in 35 matches, scoring prolifically and losing only to , which amplified public perception of the moniker as emblematic of relentless performance. The name, first referenced in print for earlier squads but popularized here, was rapidly embraced by New Zealand media and the team itself, solidifying by the early as the official identifier and fostering a rooted in visual and empirical success.

Mid-20th Century Achievements and Challenges

Interwar and immediate postwar tours

The All Blacks' interwar engagements featured ambitious overseas expeditions and home defenses that tested emerging strategies amid economic constraints. The 1928 tour of , comprising 26 matches, began with a 0–17 defeat in the first test at Kingsmead, , on 30 June, ending a 23-match unbeaten streak and exposing deficiencies in an inexperienced lineup against provincial-style play. New Zealand rallied to claim the four-test series 3–1, with subsequent victories of 7–5, 13–5, and 13–5, fostering tactical shifts toward bolstered forward cohesion and set-piece reliability. The 1930 visit by the British team to produced a clean sweep, with the All Blacks securing all four tests—scores including 22–8 at Athletic Park on 9 August—through superior backline speed and territorial control. The reciprocal 1935–36 , , and encompassed 33 fixtures, yielding 30 wins, one draw, and losses only to (12–13) and , affirming high execution rates near 90% overall. Contrasting this, the 1937 Springboks tour inflicted New Zealand's first home series defeat, 1–2, as triumphed 13–7 in and 17–6 at on 25 September, leveraging a dominant three-man front-row scrum that overwhelmed local packs. The Second World War halted tours from , disrupting player development and international exposure until 1946. Australia's visit that year restarted competition, with New Zealand prevailing 3–0 in tests—14–10 on 28 September in among them—via disciplined defense and opportunistic scoring. The 1949 return to spanned 24 games, recording 13 wins, 4 draws, and 7 losses, including a 0–4 test reverse, yet provided empirical data on endurance limits under arduous conditions. These experiences catalyzed emphases on structured conditioning, evident in the 1950 British Lions series, where drew the opener before winning 8–0, 6–3, and 11–8, maintaining pressure through repeated phases. Such results, averaging over 70% victory in immediate postwar tests, linked directly to regime shifts prioritizing aerobic capacity and recovery, enabling dominance resumption despite global postwar scarcities.

1950s-1970s dominance and rivalries

The All Blacks asserted dominance in the post-war era through consistent series triumphs over sides. The 1959 series against the touring British Lions ended 3-1 in New Zealand's favor, with victories in the opening tests by margins of 18-17, 14-6, and 11-5 before a final 9-9 draw. This success heralded a prolonged period of superiority, culminating in the 1963-64 tour of Britain, , , and , where the team secured 34 wins from 36 matches, including a single 3-0 loss to and a 3-3 draw with . Test results featured shutouts against (14-0) and commanding edges over (5-3), (5-3), and (18-0), amassing 16 wins from 17 fixtures in the alone. These outcomes underscored tactical discipline and scoring efficiency, with an average test margin exceeding 10 points. Trans-Tasman encounters reinforced New Zealand's edge, as the All Blacks retained the in the majority of contests against throughout the 1950s-1970s, leveraging superior forward cohesion and breakdown execution to achieve test win rates well above 70 percent in the . Key defenses included clean sweeps in home series, such as the 1957 and 1962 victories, often by aggregate scores surpassing 40-20. Rivalries with intensified physicality, yielding mixed but competitive results; New Zealand claimed the 1965 home series 3-0 with shutouts in two tests, contributing to an unbroken streak of 17 consecutive test wins from July 1965 to 1969—encompassing triumphs over , , and —that highlighted sustained execution under pressure. Into the 1970s, evolutions in training emphasized enhanced physical conditioning and forward-centric strategies, fostering pack supremacy in scrums and mauls that overwhelmed opponents in attritional play. This approach propelled successes like the 1972-73 British Lions series win (2-1) and the 1978 grand slam tour, where victories over all four home unions ( 13-0, 13-9, 37-4, 10-3) marked New Zealand's first clean sweep of the , achieved via relentless territorial gain and conversion accuracy exceeding 80 percent. Such innovations, rooted in rigorous fitness regimens and positional specialization, cemented the era's legacy of causal superiority in high-stakes rivalries.

South African tours and political controversies

The New Zealand Rugby Union (NZRU) organized All Blacks tours to in 1949 and 1960, both featuring exclusively white selections that excluded players of descent, in compliance with South Africa's apartheid policies prohibiting mixed-race teams. The 1949 tour, comprising 25 matches including four tests, saw South Africa achieve a 4–0 series , with test scores of 17–6, 15–11, 9–3, and 11–8. NZRU officials justified the exclusions by citing concerns over subjecting players to potential vilification and in , while emphasizing the importance of preserving international rugby competition amid the host nation's isolationist stance on race. The 1960 tour similarly adhered to all-white composition, sparking domestic opposition through campaigns like the Citizens' All Black Tour Association's 'No Maoris – No Tour' slogan and a garnering nearly 160,000 signatures against in sport. secured the series 2–1, with New Zealand's sole test victory coming 11–3 in the second match at Newlands on 6 August, following losses of 13–0 and 8–3. NZRU maintained that the decision prioritized sporting merit and tour feasibility over political entanglement, arguing that boycotts would isolate without influencing South African policy. By the 1970 tour, mounting pressure led to the inclusion of and Pacific Island players—such as Bryan Williams—classified by n authorities as '' to permit their participation, marking the first deviation from prior exclusions. The tour encompassed 33 matches, with winning the four-test series 3–1 (17–6, 14–3, 20–17 losses for , and a 13–9 win in the opener at Kings Park on 24 July). Controversies persisted over the honorary status, viewed by critics as complicit in apartheid's racial hierarchies, though NZRU defended the selection as advancing merit-based composition while navigating external constraints. The reciprocal 1981 Springboks tour of intensified divisions, with the NZRU proceeding despite widespread protests against apartheid, insisting rugby remain apolitical and focused on athletic competition. Over 150,000 participated in more than 200 demonstrations across 28 centers, leading to 1,500 charges and the cancellation of a non-test match in Hamilton on 25 after protesters invaded the pitch. The four-test series ended in a 2–2 draw ( wins: 14–9 on 15 August in and 12–11 on 29 August in Wellington; South Africa wins: 19–15 on 5 September in and 25–22 on 12 September in amid flour bombs and flares), underscoring the NZRU's commitment to the fixture amid activist efforts to disrupt it through rather than institutional channels.

Professional Era Evolution

Transition to professionalism (1990s)

The All Blacks' quarter-final victory over Canada by 29–13 on 20 October 1991 at the Rugby World Cup in Lille, France, nonetheless exposed vulnerabilities in the amateur era, as Canada outscored New Zealand 13–6 in the second half through relentless forward play, underscoring how part-time preparation limited the team's ability to maintain dominance against motivated underdogs. This match, part of broader amateur constraints like restricted training and player burnout from club commitments, contributed to New Zealand's semi-final exit to Australia (16–22), highlighting systemic issues in sustaining elite performance without professional structures. New Zealand advanced undefeated through the pool and quarter-final stages of the , hosted by , before a 12–15 extra-time defeat to the Springboks in the final on 24 June 1995 at Ellis Park, Johannesburg, where Joel Stransky's proved decisive. This loss, amid growing commercial pressures including Rupert Murdoch's bid of US$555 million over 10 years for southern hemisphere , accelerated the shift from amateurism. On 26 August 1995, the International Rugby Board (now ) formally declared the game "open," ending the ban on player payments and enabling full-time contracts. In , the NZ Rugby Union (NZRU) responded swiftly, signing its first professional contracts on 10 August 1995 with players Josh Kronfeld and Jeff Wilson, initially valued at around NZ$100,000 annually amid whispers of match payments as low as $1,000 per game during the . These agreements, part of the SANZAR framework brokered with , injected professionalism by funding centralized training, medical support, and player welfare, though early economic strains included uneven revenue distribution across unions. The transition brought initial adjustments, with All Blacks win rates dipping below 70% in select series due to squad rotation, fixture expansion, and adaptation to full-time regimens, but recovery followed through specialized conditioning and tactical refinements. A key early triumph came in the 1996 tour of , where New Zealand secured a 2–1 test series victory—the first All Blacks series win there since 1970—defeating the Springboks 29–18 in on 10 August, 23–19 in on 17 August, despite a 22–32 loss in on 31 August. This success, dubbed the "Incomparables" for overcoming high-altitude and hostile conditions, demonstrated the benefits of preparation, including enhanced fitness and recovery protocols, setting the stage for sustained dominance while bridging legacies with modern structures.

Graham Henry era (2004-2011)

was appointed head coach of the national team in June 2004, succeeding John Mitchell following a period of inconsistent results. Under Henry's leadership, the All Blacks achieved an overall test match record of 88 wins in 103 matches, yielding an 85.4% win rate. Early in his tenure, the team secured Tri Nations titles in 2005 and 2006, demonstrating offensive potency but exposing vulnerabilities in high-stakes knockout scenarios. However, the quarterfinal loss to France on October 6, by a score of 20-18, represented a significant upset and prompted a comprehensive review of preparation and execution. This defeat, marked by lapses in discipline and inability to convert territorial dominance into points, underscored the need for enhanced tactical structure over reliance on individual flair. In response, Henry implemented a more rigorous, process-oriented approach, emphasizing defensive resilience, breakdown efficiency, and player accountability to mitigate errors under pressure. This shift fostered a culture of shared , where players were granted of game plans to build and adaptability. Selection prioritized character and fit within a data-informed system, sidelining high-profile players lacking alignment with team standards, which contributed to sustained depth in key positions like the forwards. The revamped strategy yielded results in the Tri Nations, culminating in an undefeated campaign, including a decisive 29-22 victory over on August 21 in to clinch the title with one round remaining. These successes reflected causal improvements in contesting possession at the breakdown and maintaining composure in tight contests, areas previously exploited. Henry's era peaked with New Zealand hosting the , where the All Blacks overcame their history of three prior finals defeats (, 1999, and ) to win the . In the final on October 23 at , they defeated 8-7 in a low-scoring, error-strewn dominated by forward battles and set-piece execution, with Stephen Donald's penalty proving decisive. This victory, the first World Cup title since 1987, validated the post-2007 emphasis on disciplined, low-risk play that prioritized field position and turnover prevention over expansive attack. Henry's tenure thus transformed the team from prone to tournament chokes into a model of empirical consistency, evidenced by the 85.4% win rate and integration of emerging talents through merit-based development.

Steve Hansen era (2012-2019)

assumed the role of head coach of the New Zealand national rugby union team in June 2012, following his assistant position under . Over his tenure through November 2019, the All Blacks played 107 Test matches under Hansen, securing 93 victories, 4 draws, and 10 losses, yielding an 87% win rate. This period marked sustained dominance, including six titles and retention of the annually. Hansen's approach emphasized mental conditioning to build resilience, enabling the team to integrate new players after significant post-2011 retirements while maintaining high performance against tier-one opponents. A highlight was the All Blacks' 18 consecutive Test wins from October 2015 to October 2016, establishing a record for the longest in international rugby history. This run included victories in the and subsequent matches, showcasing tactical discipline such as effective high-ball contests that pressured opponents into errors. The streak concluded with a 23-9 loss to in on November 5, 2016. In the 2015 Rugby World Cup, New Zealand defended their title, defeating 34-17 in the final on October 31 at , becoming the first team to win consecutive tournaments. The campaign featured disciplined execution, with the All Blacks conceding just 81 points across seven matches. By contrast, the 2019 tournament ended in semifinal defeat to , 19-7, on October 26 in , where 's forward dominance and kicking accuracy overwhelmed New Zealand's attack despite a late try effort. Hansen's era demonstrated adaptability to player transitions, with the win rate holding above 85% even as over 20 players debuted internationally, underscoring systemic depth in structures rather than reliance on prior stars. Rare losses, such as the 2016 upset and a 2018 series defeat to , highlighted vulnerabilities to unorthodox strategies but did not derail overall supremacy.

Ian Foster era (2020-2023)

Ian Foster was appointed head coach of the New Zealand national rugby union team in December 2019, succeeding , with his tenure officially beginning in 2020 amid the disruptions of the that limited international fixtures and affected team preparation. Foster, who had served as an assistant coach under Hansen since 2012, inherited a squad transitioning from the 2019 Rugby World Cup-winning generation, with key retirements including and several injuries sidelining players like for extended periods. The era emphasized squad refreshment, debuting over 20 new players while maintaining core figures like , though empirical results reflected the challenges of this rebuild, including uncharacteristic losses against emerging rivals. In the 2020 Tri Nations, played under bio-secure conditions in , New Zealand secured the title with two wins and two losses across four , marking the first competition loss to (25-15 on November 14) in a historic upset driven by Argentina's disciplined defense and Nicolás Sánchez's 20 points. Earlier, defeated New Zealand 24-22 on November 7, ending a 18-year drought in a where Wallabies' discipline and kicking accuracy prevailed despite New Zealand's territorial dominance. These results highlighted vulnerabilities in Foster's early strategies, particularly in closing out tight games, though subsequent victories over (38-0) confirmed the title. The 2021 series included a drawn home test against (after a prior tour postponement), underscoring ongoing adaptation issues against physicality. The 2022 season saw further transitional setbacks, with achieving their first series win over (2-1) during a mid-year tour, including victories of 23-12 in —the first Irish win on soil—and 32-22 in , where Ireland's lineout superiority and breakdown efficiency exposed All Blacks' set-piece frailties. had won the opener 42-19 at , but the losses reflected empirical dips in cohesion amid player turnover and Foster's experimentation with combinations. Later that year, inflicted two defeats (26-15 and 35-7), contributing to a rare end-of-year ranking drop below number one. Foster's tenure culminated in the 2023 Rugby World Cup, where New Zealand topped Pool A with victories including 27-13 over France and heavy wins against Italy (71-6), Namibia (71-3), and Uruguay (73-0), demonstrating offensive potency with 11 tries against Namibia alone. In the knockout stages, they edged Ireland 28-24 in the quarterfinal, exploiting turnovers for Jordie Barrett's decisive try, before routing Argentina 44-6 in the semifinal. The final against South Africa ended in a 12-11 loss on October 28, decided by a late Handré Pollard penalty after New Zealand led briefly via Codie Taylor's try; South Africa's forward dominance and Eben Etzebeth's breakdown work neutralized All Blacks' attack, marking the narrowest World Cup final margin. Over 46 tests, Foster recorded 32 wins, 2 draws, and 12 losses, yielding a 69.6% win rate—the lowest in the professional era for an All Blacks coach—amid 17 test losses, more than predecessors like Hansen (8 in 107). This reflected causal factors like retirements of veterans (e.g., Dan Carter's influence waning, Read's departure) and the empirical necessity of integrating youth such as Will Jordan and Mark Tele'a Pakī, prioritizing long-term depth over short-term dominance despite retaining the annually. Foster departed after the , his record evidencing a necessary but uneven bridge from Hansen's peak to subsequent rebuilding.

Scott Robertson era (2024-present)

Scott Robertson was appointed head coach of the All Blacks following their loss to in the , succeeding Ian Foster with a mandate to rebuild the team through a more expansive, attacking style of play. In his debut 2024 season, the team recorded 10 wins and 4 losses across 14 tests, including defeats to and that highlighted defensive vulnerabilities and execution errors in key fixtures. These inconsistencies were compounded by internal coaching frictions, such as the mid-season departure of assistant in August 2024 due to disagreements with Robertson over strategy ahead of tests. The 2024 Rugby Championship exposed tactical imbalances, with New Zealand securing the via a 33-13 win over on September 28 but suffering from lapses in , including multiple yellow cards in losses that allowed opponents to capitalize on turnovers and penalties. Robertson's emphasis on faster ball movement and gain-line attacks aimed to differentiate from prior defensive-heavy approaches, yet the team conceded high penalty counts—reaching 135-149 overall for the year—undermining momentum in tight contests. By 2025, signs of progress emerged, with the All Blacks achieving a 77% win rate through the phase, including victories over (31-25 on July 5) and a retained . Captain noted tangible improvements in team cohesion and response under pressure compared to 2024, attributing gains to refined processes despite ongoing challenges in consistency. Discipline remained a concern, with yellow cards and penalty concessions persisting in defeats like the 43-10 loss to in on September 13, prompting scrutiny of late-game decision-making. Robertson's tenure, spanning approximately 20 tests by October 2025, yielded an overall win rate near 74%, reflecting adaptation to his attacking blueprint—evident in increased alignment plays near the gain line—but hampered by a second high-profile coaching exit with attack specialist Jason Holland departing post-season amid debates over tactical clarity. The 2025 end-of-year northern tour, featuring a rematch against for the Gallagher Cup in on November 1, offers a chance for a Grand Slam against , , , testing the squad's evolution under Robertson's 36-man selection announced October 12.

Cultural and Team Identity

The Haka performance and significance

The national team performs the , a traditional ceremonial , as a pre-match before test matches to challenge opponents and unify the players. This practice originated with the 1888–89 New Zealand Native football team and was adopted by the "Original" All Blacks during their 1905 tour, where they first executed the specific "" haka. Composed around 1820 by chief following his narrow escape from enemies—hiding in a food pit and emerging to the words evoking over —"" translates roughly to "It is , it is ; it is , it is ," symbolizing survival and defiance. The performance involves synchronized chanting, stomping, and gestures, led by a designated player, with the team facing the opposition in formation. In 2005, the All Blacks introduced "," a variant tailored to the team's identity, incorporating black-themed elements like a thumb-drawn across the throat and chest-slapping to evoke the and national resilience; it debuted before a Tri-Nations test against at . The team alternates between "" and "Kapa o Pango" depending on context, with the latter used for high-stakes games to emphasize modern All Blacks ferocity. Rooted in tradition as a pōwhiri (welcome challenge) or peruperu (war dance), the haka integrates indigenous cultural elements into the predominantly Pākehā (European-descended) squad, promoting collective resolve without formal equity mandates. The haka's significance lies in its dual role for psychological preparation: it boosts performers' adrenaline and cohesion while aiming to unsettle adversaries through ritual . on pre-match war dances indicates elevated heart rates among participants, potentially conferring a physiological edge via heightened before opponents. Opponents' reactions vary, with some teams, like in 1905, linking arms in , while others, such as in 2007, have turned away or advanced during the performance, prompting debates over protocol; guidelines require teams to acknowledge but not interrupt the haka. Anecdotal evidence from players suggests it instills unease, as former All Black coach Wayne Smith noted its intent for "self-inspiration and opponent ," though empirical win-loss correlations remain correlative rather than causal due to match factors. Disruptions, such as South Africa's 2024 pre-kickoff flyover and music overlapping the haka's end, have elicited apologies for breaching norms, yet the All Blacks have won several such contested encounters, underscoring the ritual's enduring motivational value over deterministic outcomes.

Name, uniform, and branding evolution

The nickname "All Blacks" emerged during the New Zealand team's 1905–1906 tour of the and , where their uniform of black jerseys, shorts, and socks prompted British press to coin the term, initially as "All Backs" before standardizing on "All Blacks". The New Zealand Rugby Football Union established the national representative colours at its inaugural on 27 1893, specifying a emblazoned with a over the left breast, paired with white knickerbockers and stockings, selected for practical reasons including durability and low visibility of dirt on the fabric. By the 1905 tour, the uniform had shifted to predominantly black attire, excluding the silver fern emblem, which solidified the all-black aesthetic and reinforced the nickname's association with the team's distinctive, intimidating presence on the field. The branding element, integral since the 1890s, received formal protection from the New Zealand Rugby Union in 1986 to safeguard its use, contributing to the evolution of a globally recognized valued at $282 million (approximately $452 million) as of 2023. Subsequent uniform refinements maintained the black palette for its symbolic uniformity and psychological edge, with design updates focusing on material innovations while preserving core visual identity tied to the team's heritage.

Kit suppliers and sponsorship history

The national team, known as the All Blacks, has relied on commercial partnerships for kit supply and sponsorship to fund its operations since the sport's shift to in the mid-1990s. Early kit provision came from domestic manufacturers such as , which entered the rugby apparel market around 1924 and supplied jerseys during formative international tours, though formal long-term contracts were absent in the amateur era. This transitioned to global branding with securing the kit supplier role in 1999, a partnership renewed multiple times—including extensions to 2019, 2023, and beyond—amid competition from rivals like Nike in 2024 negotiations. The current deal, valued at approximately NZ$10 million annually, covers apparel for the All Blacks and other national teams, directly supporting infrastructure and player development amid rising costs. Sponsorship history reflects a deliberate balance between brand purity and financial necessity, with jersey fronts historically kept logo-free to maintain the iconic black silhouette's market value, estimated to generate substantial indirect revenue through licensing and global appeal. This changed in 2012 when (AIG) became the first front-of-jersey sponsor via a 5.5-year agreement, marking a shift driven by demands and yielding around $10 million annually to offset talent losses to codes like . Following AIG's exit, French construction firm Altrad assumed the primary sponsorship in 2022, a multi-year pact valued among rugby's largest, enhancing total commercial income to sustain high player retention rates—evidenced by the team's ability to command premium salaries despite overseas opportunities—while countering critiques of over-commercialization through targeted revenue allocation to domestic pathways.
PeriodKit SupplierKey SponsorshipsNotable Revenue Impact
Pre-1999Local firms (e.g., )Minimal jersey brandingSupported amateur model via basic provision
1999–present (renewed 2011, 2017, 2023)AIG (2012–ca. 2021, front); Altrad (2022–present, front); Gallagher (2025–, shorts)~NZ$10m/year from ; multi-million front deals enabling pro contracts and talent retention
These arrangements have empirically bolstered New Zealand Rugby's , with sponsorship inflows correlating to sustained competitiveness by centralized and countering player migration, though profit motives from partners like prioritize global sales leverage over purely altruistic support.

Performance Records

Overall test match statistics

The New Zealand national team holds a historic win rate exceeding 76% across more than 650 matches played since their international debut against on 15 August 1903. This aggregate figure reflects empirical dominance, with the team securing more victories than defeats against every opponent encountered in rugby. On 5 July 2025, achieved their 500th win, defeating 31-27 in , underscoring sustained superiority over 122 years of competition. New Zealand remains unbeaten against most Pacific Island nations, including comprehensive records versus (17 wins, 0 losses), (9 wins, 0 losses), and (7 wins, 0 losses), where opponents have scored minimally in aggregate. Such outcomes highlight tactical and physical disparities, with New Zealand averaging over 40 points per match in these encounters while conceding fewer than 10. This pattern extends to other tier-two opponents, where no losses have been recorded, contributing to the overall win percentage. Against major rivals, head-to-head dominance is evident, though varying by era. Versus , New Zealand won 36 of 39 Tests (92% win rate) as of late 2023, with the first loss occurring only on 14 November 2020 (25-15 in ); prior to the , the record stood at 100% across approximately 25 matches, reflecting early mismatches before Argentina's . Similarly, against , New Zealand leads 62-40 with 4 draws in 106 Tests, maintaining positive margins despite intensified competition post-apartheid. These records, verified through official match archives, affirm causal factors like superior depth, conditioning, and execution in high-stakes fixtures.

Rugby World Cup campaigns

New Zealand won the inaugural in 1987 as co-hosts, defeating 70–6, 74–13, and 46–15 in the pool stage before overcoming 30–3 in the quarter-finals, 49–6 in the semi-finals, and 29–9 in the final at , , on 20 June 1987. In 1991, New Zealand topped their pool with victories over (18–12) and (31–21) before advancing past 29–13 in the quarter-finals on 20 October in , ; however, they fell to 16–6 in the semi-finals and secured third place with a 13–6 win over . The 1995 tournament saw New Zealand reach the final after pool wins including a 145–17 rout of on 4 June and a 43–19 quarter-final victory over , followed by a 62–31 semi-final defeat of Western Samoa; they lost the final to 15–12 after extra time on 24 June at Ellis Park, , in a match marked by Jonah Lomu's emergence with four tries across the knockout stages. New Zealand's 1999 campaign ended in quarter-final upset, with pool successes against (47–11), (30–16), and (101–3) leading to a 30–18 win over in the round of eight, but a 43–31 semi-final loss to France on 31 October at , featuring France's late surge with three tries in nine minutes.
YearStage ReachedKey Results
1987Champions6 wins, 0 losses; final: 29–9 vs.
1991Third place4 wins, 1 loss; SF loss: 6–16 vs.
1995Runners-up5 wins, 1 loss; final: 12–15 vs.
1999Quarter-finals4 wins, 1 loss; QF loss: 31–43 vs.
In 2003, New Zealand dominated the pool phase with wins over (70–7), (68–6), and (91–7) before a 29–9 quarter-final defeat of on 8 November in and a 53–37 win over ; they lost the semi-final to 10–22 but claimed third place 40–13 against . The 2007 quarter-final exit to (20–18) on 6 October in represented an underperformance, following pool victories including 76–14 over and 108–13 against , despite entering as favorites after winning the Tri Nations. hosted and won the tournament, securing seven victories: pool wins over (41–10), (79–15 on 2 October in ), (83–7), (37–17), and (33–10); quarter-final 33–10 over ; semi-final 20–6 against ; and a tense 8–7 final win over on 23 October at , , via a Tony Woodcock try and penalty.
YearStage ReachedKey Results
20035 wins, 1 loss; SF loss: 10–22 vs.
2007Quarter-finals4 wins, 1 loss; QF loss: 18–20 vs.
2011Champions7 wins, 0 losses; final: 8–7 vs.
Defending their title in 2015, became the first team to win consecutive World Cups, posting seven straight wins: pool triumphs over (26–16), (58–14), Georgia (43–10), and (47–9); quarter-final 60–14 over ? Wait, actually 62–13 QF vs ? No, pool vs Georgia 43-10, QF vs 60-14? Standard: QF 60–14 vs on 17 October, SF 34–17 over , and final 34–17 against on 31 October at . In 2019, advanced from the pool undefeated, beating 23–13 on 21 September in , Namibia, Canada, and Italy, before a 71–9 quarter-final rout of ; they lost the semi-final 19–7 to on 26 October in but took bronze 40–17 over Wales. The 2023 campaign marked 's first pool-stage loss, a 27–13 defeat to France on 8 September at , but included wins over Namibia (71–3), Italy (96–17 on 19 September in ), and Uruguay (73–0); they progressed to beat 28–24 in the quarter-finals, 44–6 in the semi-finals, before falling 12–11 to in the final on 28 October. Overall, New Zealand's record features three titles from 62 matches played across 10 tournaments, with 54 wins and 8 losses, yielding a win rate exceeding 85%, though punctuated by knockout underperformances against (1999, 2007) and others.
YearStage ReachedKey Results
2015Champions7 wins, 0 losses; final: 34–17 vs.
2019Third place6 wins, 1 loss; SF loss: 7–19 vs.
2023Runners-up5 wins, 2 losses; first pool loss (to ); final: 11–12 vs.

Rugby Championship and Tri Nations results

The Tri Nations Series, contested annually from 1996 to 2011 among , , and , saw the All Blacks claim 10 titles, establishing a record of consistent superiority through disciplined forward play and backline execution that overwhelmed opponents in 58 of 80 matches played. Key victories included unbeaten campaigns in 2005, 2006, 2007, and 2008, where averaged over 30 points per game while limiting rivals to under 15. A rare series defeat came in 2009, when won both encounters against (19-22 and 28-19), exposing vulnerabilities in set-piece defense that prompted tactical adjustments emphasizing physicality at the breakdown.
YearCompetitionWinner
1996Tri NationsNew Zealand
1997Tri NationsNew Zealand
1998Tri NationsSouth Africa
1999Tri NationsNew Zealand
2000Tri NationsAustralia
2001Tri NationsAustralia
2002Tri NationsNew Zealand
2003Tri NationsNew Zealand
2004Tri NationsSouth Africa
2005Tri NationsNew Zealand
2006Tri NationsNew Zealand
2007Tri NationsNew Zealand
2008Tri NationsNew Zealand
2009Tri NationsSouth Africa
2010Tri NationsNew Zealand
2011Tri NationsAustralia
The , expanded in 2012 to include , has reinforced New Zealand's preeminence, with the All Blacks securing 10 titles by and accumulating 20 overall victories across both formats, reflecting a win rate exceeding 70% in tournament fixtures driven by superior scrum dominance and counter-attacking efficiency. Within this, the —contested in annual matches against —has been held by New Zealand in over 70% of series since its inception in 1932, with 51 retentions through , underscoring trans-Tasman rivalry where All Blacks' territorial control and lineout precision have yielded a 140-51 head-to-head edge. A 2016 home loss to (13-57) highlighted execution lapses under fatigue, leading to refined conditioning protocols that restored series triumphs in subsequent editions.

Key bilateral series and trophies

The British and Irish Lions tours to represent infrequent bilateral series demanding exceptional preparation from the All Blacks, with matches held approximately every 12 years since the late . holds a commanding historical record of 30 wins in 41 Tests against the Lions, including decisive series triumphs such as the 3–0 in 2005 (21–3, 48–18, 19–13) and 4–0 in 1983. The 2017 series concluded in a rare 1–1 draw following a tense 15–15 third Test at , where the Lions' resilience tested 's depth despite the All Blacks' overall series dominance in prior encounters like 3–0 in 1977. Bilateral engagements with post-apartheid marked a renewal of intense rivalry, highlighted by New Zealand's first series victory on soil in 1996—a 3–0 sweep achieved through scores of 29–18 in , 23–19 in , and 32–26 in . This outcome reflected meticulous tactical adaptation against a Springboks side integrating into international rugby after isolation, with the All Blacks' forward dominance and kicking precision proving decisive in close contests. The stands as a cornerstone bilateral trophy against , inaugurated in 1932 and contested in dedicated trans-Tasman fixtures that have yielded a superior win rate, including unbroken possession since 2003—spanning over 22 years as of 2025. These series have served as consistent performance boosters, with the All Blacks leveraging home advantages and superior continuity to maintain the edge in occasional full tours beyond annual commitments. Northern hemisphere tours have further solidified bilateral successes, where New Zealand's high win percentages against nations like and in ad-hoc series underscore the benefits of targeted preparation for diverse playing styles and conditions.

Personnel and Management

Current coaching staff and strategies

Scott Robertson serves as head coach of the national team, having assumed the role in 2024 following Ian Foster's tenure. His assistant coaches include (forwards), (backs and attack), Scott Hansen (skills and defense), and Jason Holland (attack), though Holland announced his departure at the conclusion of the 2025 season. Under Robertson, the team's strategy emphasizes building squad depth through "Project 4-4-4," aiming to develop four players capable of starting at each position over four years in preparation for the 2027 Rugby World Cup. This approach involves rotating players across tests to test resilience and versatility, contributing to a turbulent 2025 season marked by high-profile assistant departures and tactical recalibrations. Following 2024's disciplinary issues, where the All Blacks incurred 11 yellow cards across 14 tests—seven in the Rugby Championship alone—Robertson has prioritized reducing penalties and improving game management, though 2025 saw continued infractions, including three yellow cards in a single loss to on August 23. Tactically, the side pursues an expansive style with increased ball-carrying and offloading, influenced by Crusaders background, but adjusted post-2024 to enhance closing-phase scoring after failures to capitalize on leads. This has yielded mixed results in 2025, with the team tying for first in despite defensive vulnerabilities and points leaked during sin-bins, averaging 30.7 points scored per game from the prior year but facing critiques for inconsistent execution against top opponents like . External input from figures like Wayne Smith has informed refinements, stressing structured play over pure expansiveness to mitigate error rates.

Notable coaches and their legacies

coached the All Blacks from 1966 to 1968, achieving an undefeated record of 14 test wins with no losses or draws, establishing a legacy of forward dominance that emphasized physical scrummaging and lineout control as foundational to New Zealand's style. His approach prioritized pack power over expansive back play, contributing to series victories against , , and the British Lions, though subsequent coaches deviated from this rigidity, leading to mixed results in the early 1970s. John Hart served as head coach from 1994 to 1999, either solely or co-coaching with Alex Wyllie initially, recording 31 wins, 1 draw, and 9 losses in 41 tests for a win percentage above 75 percent, marked by innovations in professional-era fitness regimes and attacking structures that propelled unbeaten Tri-Nations campaigns in 1996 and 1997. However, his tenure ended amid internal conflicts and a quarterfinal exit in 1999, highlighting how prolonged success bred complacency and selection instability. Graham Henry led from 2004 to 2011, attaining an 85 percent win rate across 103 tests, with his empirical legacy cemented by the victory over 8-7 in the final, a merit-based triumph following rigorous post-2007 restructuring that integrated data-driven player analysis and depth-building to overcome prior knockout failures. Henry's innovations included delegating specialized roles to assistants like Hansen and Smith, fostering a high-performance culture evidenced by 88 consecutive home test wins from 2004 to 2009, though early losses to in 2009 underscored vulnerabilities in high-pressure scenarios absent from his pre-2011 record. Steve Hansen's 2012-2019 tenure yielded the highest modern win percentage at 87 percent over 107 tests, including the title and back-to-back defenses, with his legacy rooted in training and adaptive tactics that maintained dominance despite player retirements. He received Coach of the Year awards in 2012, 2013, and 2016 for orchestrating 18 consecutive test wins from 2013 to 2014, yet the 2019 final loss to exposed over-reliance on experience over innovation in knockout formats. Brief tenures, such as John Mitchell's from 2002 to 2003 with an 82 percent win rate but culminating in a quarterfinal defeat to , exemplify how short-term appointments foster instability, disrupting continuity in selection and strategy that longer-serving coaches like Henry and Hansen leveraged for sustained empirical success. Such interruptions often prioritize immediate results over foundational development, contributing to cycles of underperformance absent robust institutional support for extended .

Current playing squad (as of 2025)

The All Blacks' squad for the 2025 Grand Slam tour of , , , announced on 13 October 2025, forms the core of the team's current playing roster as of late October. Comprising 36 players, the selection prioritizes continuity from the 2025 campaign while incorporating limited standouts to address depth needs, in line with Rugby's policy restricting overseas-based selections to high-impact exceptions like . Captain Scott Barrett leads a forward pack bolstered by experienced props and locks, with the group featuring 20 forwards averaging substantial test exposure. Positional strengths are evident in the loose forwards, where (103 caps) anchors with his vice-captaincy and relentless breakdown involvement—having logged full 80-minute shifts across 19 consecutive tests through the 2025 season—and Wallace Sititi (15 caps) adds emerging dynamism from Chiefs' form. The backline benefits from Beauden Barrett's (141 caps) return as a first-five-eighth, providing tactical acumen honed in Blues' domestic successes, complemented by midfield depth including (77 caps, vice-captain) and (87 caps) for versatile attacking options. Uncapped prop Tevita Mafileo represents the sole debutant, signaling targeted youth infusion amid injury absences like and Tupou Vaa'i. The squad is detailed below:

Forwards

PositionPlayerAgeClub/ProvinceCaps
Hooker34Crusaders/103
HookerSamisoni Taukei’aho28Chiefs/39
HookerGeorge Bell23Crusaders/3
Prop27Highlanders/Southland37
Prop25Crusaders/23
PropGeorge Bower33Crusaders/24
PropFletcher Newell25Crusaders/31
PropPasilio Tosi27Hurricanes/12
PropTevita Mafileo27Hurricanes/0
LockScott Barrett (c)31Crusaders/86
LockSam Darry25Blues/6
LockFabian Holland23Highlanders/9
LockJosh Lord24Chiefs/8
Lock/Loose ForwardSamipeni Finau26Chiefs/12
Loose ForwardSimon Parker25Chiefs/Northland5
Loose Forward (vc)31/103
Loose ForwardDu’Plessis Kirifi28Hurricanes/6
Loose ForwardWallace Sititi23Chiefs/North Harbour15
Loose Forward22Hurricanes/5
Loose Forward28Chiefs/25

Backs

PositionPlayerAgeClub/ProvinceCaps
HalfbackCortez Ratima24Chiefs/Waikato18
HalfbackCameron Roigard24Hurricanes/Counties Manukau14
Halfback30Blues/Tasman27
First-Five/Fullback34Blues/141
First-Five/Fullback30Chiefs/70
Midfield30Chiefs/86
Midfield28Hurricanes/77
MidfieldQuinn Tupaea26Chiefs/21
MidfieldBilly Proctor26Hurricanes/9
Midfield/Outside BackLeicester Fainga’anuku26Crusaders/Tasman8
Midfield/Outside Back28/87
Outside BackCaleb Clarke26/30
Outside Back28Crusaders/Southland36
Outside BackLeroy Carter26Chiefs/3
Outside BackWill Jordan27Crusaders/Tasman50
Outside Back/First-FiveRuben Love24Hurricanes/4

Record-holding and iconic players

holds the record for the most Test caps for the All Blacks with 153 appearances between 2008 and 2023. previously set the benchmark at 148 caps from 2001 to , captaining the side in 110 of those matches and leading to victories in the and 2015 Rugby World Cups. Dan Carter is the all-time leading points scorer for New Zealand with 1,598 points across 112 Tests from 2003 to 2015, including 29 tries, 293 conversions, 281 penalties, and 20 drop goals. His fly-half playstyle emphasized precise kicking and game management, contributing to three Player of the Year awards in 2005, 2012, and 2015. Doug Howlett leads in career Test tries with 49 in 62 matches from 2000 to 2007, primarily as a winger exploiting broken-field runs. , of descent, scored 46 tries in 60 Tests between 1996 and 2002, renowned for his fullback counter-attacking and evasion skills. Among forwards, openside flanker Michael Jones, a key contributor, earned 55 caps from 1987 to 1998 and was instrumental in the 1987 World Cup win, with his athleticism and breakdown dominance earning him selection in all-time All Blacks XVs. Pacific Island heritage players like winger (Fijian-New Zealander) matched Cullen's 46 tries in 68 Tests from 2003 to 2010, highlighting speed and finishing prowess. Other World Rugby Player of the Year winners include (2006, 2009, 2010) for leadership and tackling volume, (2014) for lineout and maul impact, and (2023) for dynamic No. 8 carries exceeding 100 meters per match in peak seasons. , though with 37 tries in 63 Tests from 1994 to 2002, remains iconic for his 1995 semifinal haul of four tries against , redefining wing power with 1.95-meter stature and raw pace.

Infrastructure and Operations

Primary home grounds and venues

Eden Park in serves as the primary home venue for the New Zealand national team, with a capacity of 50,000 spectators. The All Blacks have achieved a 90% win rate in test matches there since 1921, including an unbeaten streak of 50 consecutive games as of September 2025, underscoring the stadium's role in providing a significant through familiar conditions and crowd support. Sky Stadium in , with a capacity of 34,500, functions as a key secondary home ground, hosting regular All Blacks tests alongside domestic fixtures. The venue's compact design amplifies crowd intensity, contributing to New Zealand's overall home dominance, where the team has maintained streaks such as 30 unbeaten tests against Australia. In preparation for the , underwent a $100 million , enhancing facilities and temporarily boosting capacity to 60,000 for the , which solidified its status as a premier international venue. The All Blacks also utilize regional stadiums, such as those in and , to rotate home games, fostering nationwide support and exposing opponents to varied playing environments that leverage New Zealand's geographical uniformity for consistent performance edges. This distribution of matches across sites correlates with the team's high home win percentages, exceeding 80% historically against select rivals.

National training systems and academies

(NZR) manages player development through a decentralized high-performance framework that leverages provincial unions, franchises, and national age-grade teams to create a pipeline from schoolboy rugby to the All Blacks. This system emphasizes provincial academies and integrated programs within franchises like the , which include talent identification for under-17 to under-20 players, focusing on skill development, physical conditioning, and game exposure. Unlike centralized academy models in other nations, New Zealand's approach relies on strong school rugby foundations, with pathways progressing through national schoolboy selections, under-18 and under-20 squads, and programs to build technical proficiency and tactical awareness via structured camps and competitions. The NZR High Performance unit coordinates national pathways, including the introduction of a dedicated New Zealand Under-18 team in March 2025 to the men's programme, aimed at accelerating talent identification and cross-border matches against peers like Under-18. The Under-20 team, known as the Baby Blacks, serves as a primary feeder, having produced over 40 All Blacks since its formation and competing in events like the 2025 , where the squad assembled for initial camps at the New Zealand Campus of Innovation and Sport (NZCIS) in April. Sevens squads contribute crossover players, with athletes transitioning to XVs through shared that enhances speed, , and recovery under national oversight. Following disruptions in 2020, when the focus on immediate results limited emerging player opportunities, NZR increased investments in development infrastructure, including designating NZCIS as the official training base for All Blacks and age-grade teams in August 2024 to support centralized camps and recovery protocols. By October 2025, expanded squads across New Zealand's five franchises incorporated under-20 development competitions to address talent surplus and provide 30-40 additional minutes per player, countering overseas migration pressures. These measures prioritize repeatable skill drills and match simulations in controlled environments, yielding measurable outputs like the 48 players attending the 2024 Under-20 women's development camp, over assumptions of inherent superiority. Recent schoolboy results, including losses to in 2025, underscore ongoing refinements to this pipeline for sustained depth.

Controversies and Criticisms

Political entanglements in international tours

The Rugby Football Union (NZRFU) invited the South African Springboks to tour in , following the cancellation of a planned 1973 Springboks visit by the Labour government under Prime Minister , who cited opposition to South Africa's apartheid policies as grounds for denying visas. This 1981 decision invoked the NZRFU's longstanding claim to autonomy in sporting matters, separate from government interference, amid a national debate over whether rugby contacts could influence reform in or instead lent legitimacy to the regime. The tour proceeded from 22 July to 12 September , encompassing 16 matches despite coordinated opposition from the Halt All Racist Tours (HART) movement, which organized disruptions including barricades, flour bombings, and marches. Protests spanned 56 days across the tour, involving an estimated 150,000 participants in over 200 demonstrations in 28 towns and cities, with police arresting around 1,500 individuals for offenses ranging from to . A pivotal incident occurred on 25 July 1981 in Hamilton, where approximately 5,000 protesters invaded the pitch before the scheduled first , forcing its cancellation amid clashes that injured dozens and heightened national tensions. Despite such interruptions, the remaining fixtures, including three tests, were completed under heavy security, revealing a deeply divided public: polls indicated roughly 50% opposition to the tour, concentrated in urban areas and among younger demographics, while rural and traditional rugby strongholds supported it as a defense of free association. HART activists contended that the tour undermined global anti-apartheid efforts by normalizing ties with a racially segregated state, whereas NZRFU officials argued that politicizing sport eroded its value as a merit-based arena and that boycotts failed to dismantle systemic barriers, as evidenced by South Africa's continued internal sporting exclusions despite prior isolations. In the aftermath, the NZRFU faced ostracism from international bodies, leading to a de facto moratorium on official bilateral tours with South Africa until apartheid's formal dismantling via the 1991 unbanning of political parties and 1994 elections. The All Blacks' inaugural post-apartheid tour to in May 1992 proceeded without protest disruptions, featuring two test wins for New Zealand and signaling restored diplomatic and sporting normalization. Subsequent exchanges, such as the 1996 Tri-Nations inception involving both nations, underscored rugby's pivot toward reconciliation, with South African President later crediting the sport's inclusivity for fostering unity, though analysts note that apartheid's collapse owed more to protracted —costing South Africa an estimated 1-2% annual GDP growth from the —and domestic uprisings than to targeted sports boycotts, which raised awareness but lacked direct causal leverage on policy shifts.

Player conduct and discipline issues

In 2016, multiple All Blacks players faced allegations of off-field misconduct involving and violence, prompting widespread scrutiny and an internal review by (NZR). Incidents included Aaron Smith's encounter in a disabled in October 2016, resulting in his temporary removal from the team for breaching behavioral standards, and separate probes into group sexual misconduct claims against Hurricanes players, including some with All Blacks affiliations, though no formal guilt was established beyond warnings. These events contributed to a cluster of 15 documented cases from 2000 to 2016 where NZ rugby players, including All Blacks, avoided criminal convictions despite charges of or related offenses, often through diversions or dropped cases, leading to but limited legal repercussions. The 2016 scandals triggered NZR's Respect and Responsibility Review, released in September 2017, which identified entrenched issues like excessive alcohol use, sexist attitudes toward women, and a culture of entitlement among players that fostered and . The review recommended stricter leadership in shaping behaviors, including updated codes of conduct, but implementation faced criticism for insufficient enforcement, as subsequent incidents persisted—such as Shannon Frizell's 2021 bar charges (resolved via diversion) and earlier cases like Julian Savea's 2013 charge. Low conviction rates in these matters—often below 20% for charged rugby-related assaults—highlighted gaps in , with reviews attributing persistence to cultural tolerance rather than isolated lapses, though data showed no direct causal link to on-field performance declines. On-field discipline has similarly plagued the team, with yellow card issuances spiking in recent years; the All Blacks received 16 yellow cards across 13 tests from late 2024 to mid-2025, including three in an August 2025 loss to that directly contributed to the defeat by reducing numerical advantage. Empirical patterns indicate correlation between such lapses and losses: in the 2025 , concessions of 5 yellow cards in early rounds aligned with narrow defeats, as penalties awarded against New Zealand (e.g., 41 conceded vs. 59 awarded overall) enabled opponents' scoring opportunities, underscoring how discipline breaches—often from high tackles or ruck infringements—causally erode winning margins in tight contests. NZR responses have emphasized out reckless behaviors, yet analyses critique leniency in player codes, advocating stricter protocols over cultural rationales to restore the team's historically dominant edge, where pre-2020 eras saw fewer than 1 yellow per 5 tests on average.

Selection policies and governance disputes

New Zealand Rugby (NZR) maintains a strict prohibiting the selection of overseas-based players for the All Blacks, a stance reaffirmed in September 2024 amid calls for reform to prioritize competitive merit over domestic retention. This approach, rooted in preserving talent depth for competitions, has limited player exodus, with approximately 30 capped All Blacks secured on domestic contracts through 2027-2029 as of August 2025. Proponents argue it fosters squad cohesion through consistent domestic preparation, contrasting with potential disruptions from integrating players on divergent club schedules abroad, though direct empirical metrics on cohesion remain limited; indirect evidence includes sustained viability, which critics of overseas selection claim would erode without such caps. All Blacks head coach Scott Robertson advocated revisiting the ban in November 2024 following a loss, citing access to experienced players like , but reversed course by March 2025, aligning with NZR's position to avoid undermining local leagues. Opponents of relaxation, including former players and analysts, contend that selecting abroad risks diluting domestic incentives without guaranteed performance gains, as evidenced by South Africa's contrasting model yielding mixed integration results despite success. The policy debate pits pure merit selection against loyalty to NZR's ecosystem, with data favoring retention: overseas departures dropped post-policy enforcement, bolstering provincial and squads' competitiveness. A 2023 independent review, released on , excoriated NZR's structure as dysfunctional and unsustainable, highlighting leadership silos, inadequate provincial representation, and failure to adapt to declining participation trends. The report urged board overhaul, including streamlined decision-making and better Māori/Pasifika inclusion, amid tensions with provincial unions resisting centralized control. Implementation stalled into 2024, fueling disputes over board accountability and reform timelines, with players' associations decrying eroded trust in . By 2025, coaching frictions under Robertson amplified governance scrutiny, including the abrupt October departure of assistant Jason Holland amid tactical inconsistencies and staff confusion. Speculation of internal rifts, fueled by former All Black pointing to defensive coach Scott Hansen as a potential source, raised questions of NZR interference in selections and strategy, echoing the 2023 review's warnings on structural rigidity hindering operational agility. Robertson denied external meddling, but the episode underscored ongoing tensions between coaching autonomy and NZR oversight, with unresolved governance reforms risking further discord in player pathways and policy execution.

References

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