New Zealand's unfamiliarity with English rugby was evident on Tuesday when lock Brodie Retallick was unable to name one member of Stuart Lancaster's touring party.

Asked if he knew any England player ahead of Saturday's series opener, Retallick responded "a couple". When pressed for a name, the second row said "Michael Lawes". Retallick appeared to mean Courtney Lawes, who is en route to New Zealand having helped Northampton win the Aviva Premiership final last weekend and is unavailable for the first Test.

Meanwhile, England's prospects of delivering an unlikely victory in Saturday's first Test improved after Kieran Read was ruled out of the series opener at Eden Park.



The All Blacks head coach, Steve Hansen, revealed that Read, who has been sidelined since April with concussion, woke up on Monday morning "not feeling the best". The reigning IRB player of the year made his comeback for the Crusaders on Saturday only to subsequently suffer a recurrence of the symptoms that have troubled him for the last month. A doubt now hangs over the No8’s involvement in the series, while winger Julian Savea is also a doubt for the opener due to a knee problem.

"We're not prepared to risk him playing and that's our decision, not his, and we'll progress that day by day," Hansen said of Read's situation. "Long term I'm not too concerned, but we're just not prepared risk him this week.



"He's frustrated, as you would be, but we're very lucky we've got capable people who can fill his place. Jerome Kaino and Victor Vito have been performing very well and Liam Messam is an incumbent. We've got some good people to step up."

Steven Luatua has been drafted into New Zealand's training squad for Saturday to cover for Read.



The All Blacks have also lost Sam Cane to a knee injury for the series, although he was not expected to feature in the matchday 23. Matt Todd has been called up to plug the gap.



Savea will undergo a scan on Tuesday, with a decision on his availability made in time for Thursday's team announcement.

Read's loss will be keenly felt with the free-roaming back row among New Zealand's most influential players, but Hansen refuses to overstate the impact his absence will have. "Losing players is only disruptive if we allow it to be. Rugby is a contact sport, we're going to have people get injured and we just have to deal with that," Hansen said.

Local bookmakers have installed New Zealand as overwhelming 1-16 favourites to prevail at Eden Park with England rated 8-1.