The potential Wallabies-All Blacks ANZAC Day conflict was shot down months in the past as considerations over the logistics of a mid-season Take a look at ended hopes of a rep fixture on the memorial day.
However whereas a Bledisloe conflict is lifeless within the water, it’s not the one possibility out there to fill ANZAC day with some consultant rugby union. The industrial intrigue is simply too excessive to go away the general public vacation empty.
The not too long ago accomplished Tremendous Rugby W and Aupiki seasons, culminating in a cross-Tasman fixture between the Blues and the Waratahs, means the ladies’s gamers are now not competing at membership stage.
A Wallaroos-Black Ferns Test on ANZAC Day fills the void for the elite women’s players, while bringing to the table an ANZAC flavour. As either a standalone game or as part of a double-header, this option should be viable.
The Pac Four series kicks off the week after with USA-Canada, with the Wallaroos and Black Ferns starting their campaigns on May 10.
Despite a shorter preparation, surely this fixture could have been played on ANZAC weekend.
If Rugby Australia is keen to put the Wallabies on the field and the All Blacks are not, how about the Maori All Blacks?
The Maori All Blacks rarely get to play, with just two fixtures in 2024, none in 2023 and two in 2022. The fixtures are sporadic, with no anticipation or build-up.
A Wallabies Test against the Maori All Blacks as an annual fixture on ANZAC Day would no doubt be a success, with the Maori All Blacks more than capable of a competitive game.
The likes Shaun Stevenson and Quinn Tupaea are Maori All Blacks who are trying to find their way back into the All Blacks. A chance to play the Wallabies in a mid-season Test would be a great way to prove their case. Many emerging uncapped players with Maori heritage would be able to test themselves.
Another alternative is to explore a completely new match up reviving rep teams of old.
In July the British & Irish Lions will play an AUNZ composite XV made up of Australian and New Zealand players. This team first played in 1989 during that year’s Lions tour and will be revived.
This unique composite side does not have the same eligibility rules as the All Blacks or Wallabies, opening the door for overseas-based players to join.
An ANZAC Day clash for the AUNZ XV would be a perfect fit and be a vehicle for ex-Super Rugby players to play rep rugby again in this part of the world.
In 2004 a Pacific Islanders squad made up of Fiji, Samoans, Tongan and Cook Island players toured Australia and New Zealand in the famous red, white and blue strip adopted as a heritage jersey by Moana Pasifika this year.
The likes of Brian Lima, Sereli Bobo, and future All Blacks Sitiveni Sivivatu and Sione Lauaki played for the Pacific Islanders.
The Pacific Islanders against the AUNZ XV on ANZAC Day would be an interesting concept.
Could players such as Joseph Manu, Aaron Smith, Quade Cooper line up for the AUNZ XV opposite Israel Folau, Lima Sopoaga, and Apisalome Vota in the Pacific Islanders team?
Players of that calibre certainly would draw the interest of all rugby fans in the Southern Hemisphere. Negotiations would have to be had to get Japan-based players available with the League One season in full swing.
Nonetheless, Super Rugby Pacific players could potentially fill the void also if the SANZAAR went all-in on a mid-season representative weekend.
A representative fixture on ANZAC Day is possible without a Bledisloe Cup clash, if the unions are prepared to explore other avenues to make it happen.