Any player who enjoys a career that extends beyond a decade tend to have to significantly evolve to survive that long.
It's the nature of the business. Rugby is too physical, too demanding for a player to come in to the test arena in their early 20s and play the same style of football all the way through to their mid-30s.
Dan Carter had two distinct parts to his career. He was a vibrant, running No 10 between 2003 and 2011 and then a tactical controller between 2012 and 2015. Injury took an obvious toll on him in the last four years of his career.
Richie McCaw was a continual work in progress and from being all about the turnovers for much of his career, by the end he was a ball carrier and tackler, almost a second blindside flanker.
Tana Umaga started life as a try-scoring wing and finished it as a bruising secondfive. Michael Jones was a dynamic openside in stage one of his career and a crushing No 6 in the second.
Adaptation is the key to longevity and it shouldn't be seen as something easy to pull off either. Being able to successfully change roles takes enormous dedication and perseverance. Only special players can do it and Kieran Read very much goes into the category of special player.
Like many of the greats before him, he was able to change his game. In fact, he had to make two significant changes as he didn't actually come into professional rugby as a No 8.
Read first came to prominence in 2007, playing for the Crusaders while McCaw and fellow All Black Reuben Thorne were on enforced conditioning breaks.
He was picked mainly at blindside as he was the following year, before making his test debut in the same jersey against Scotland in November 2008.
That was his position back then and after winning a regular slot on the bench by the end of 2008, Read was pulled aside by the All Blacks coaches after that our and asked to switch to No 8.
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The 20 Most Memorable Rugby Acts Of 2020
2020- Most Amazing Rugby Acts
RUGBY ROYALTY
FRANS STEYNâS IMPACT AT LAST YEARâS WORLD CUP ADDED MORE PRESTIGE TO A DECORATED CAREER THAT ISNâT OVER YET. CRAIG LEWIS FROM SA RUGBY MAGAZINE REPORTS.
WINGING IT FOR LONGER
TYPICALLY POWER WINGS DON'T LAST LONG IN THE ALL BLACKS. BUT CALEB CLARKE AND RIEKO IOANE ARE HOPING TO BUCK THE TREND.
TOUGHEST JOB IN THE WORLD
NZ RUGBY WORLD EDITOR GREGOR PAUL HAS A NEW BOOK OUT CALLED THE CAPTAIN'S RUN. IN IT HE EXPLORES WHAT IT TAKES TO LEAD THE WORLD'S BEST RUGBY TEAM, HOW THE JOB HAS CHANGED AND HOW THE VARIOUS LEADERS HAVE DEALT WITH PRESSURE, FAILURE AND SUCCESS.
WOW FACTOR
SCOTT ROBERTSON IS UNORTHODOX BUT HE'S ALSO BRILLIANT AND WANTS A JOB WITH THE BRITISH & IRISH LIONS.
RUGBY REBORN
COVID BROUGHT ECONOMIC CARNAGE IN 2020 BUT RATHER THAN BEING SEEN AS A WRECKER OF FORTUNES, THE PANDEMIC WAS ACTUALLY A GIANT BLESSING.
BATTLE FOR THE BLEDISLOE
THE UNPRECEDENTED CONDITIONS OF 2020 SAW THE INTERNATIONAL CALENDAR HASTILY REDRAWN AND IN A UNIQUE TWIST FOR THE PROFESSIONAL AGE, THE ALL BLACKS PLAYED FOUR CONSECUTIVE TESTS AGAINST AUSTRALIA.
PACIFIC POWER HOUSE
FIJI HAVE NEVER QUITE BEEN ABLE TO FULFIL THEIR ENORMOUS POTENTIAL. BUT THEY MIGHT NOW FOLLOWING THE APPOINTMENT OF VERN COTTER AS HEAD COACH.
THE PEOPLE'S CHAMPION
ON AND OFF THE FIELD, SPRINGBOKS WING CHESLIN KOLBE CONTINUES TO MAKE AN INSPIRATIONAL IMPACT.
DEFENCE FORCE ONE
THE BLUES WERE A RADICALLY DIFFERENT TEAM IN 2020 AND MUCH OF THAT WAS DUE TO THEIR VASTLY IMPROVED WORK ON DEFENCE.