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Reuters
Reuters
Sport
Greg Stutchbury

All Blacks captain Read suffers injury in comeback match

FILE PHOTO: The New Zealand All Blacks rugby team captain Kieran Read walks under cloudy skies during a team training session in Sydney, Australia, August 19, 2016, before their first Bledisloe Cup game against Australia's Wallabies on Saturday. REUTERS/Jason Reed

WELLINGTON (Reuters) - An injury to All Blacks captain Kieran Read, who was forced off halfway through his comeback match, soured the Canterbury Crusaders' comfortable 32-8 victory over the Wellington Hurricanes on Friday.

Read was making his first appearance this year after an extended off-season but went down for a lengthy spell of treatment on his right leg after about 20 minutes of the first half at Wellington Regional Stadium.

He limped to the next play, a lineout down field where captain Sam Whitelock called him as the target, and saw out the rest of the first half but was replaced at halftime by coach Scott Robertson.

"Technically he has got a double haematoma," Robertson told reporters after his side had seized on numerous errors by the home team to run away with a game that many had expected to be a lot closer.

"He got two knocks in the same place and he seized up at halftime, so we took him off."

Robertson did not give a time frame on how long it might take for Read to recover but said, with a grin, it would probably take "twice as long" as it was a double haematoma.

The answer, however, would do little to ease All Blacks coach Steve Hansen's concerns for the Rugby World Cup in Japan later this year with first-choice loose forwards Sam Cane (neck) and Liam Squire (knee) also out with long-term injuries.

Robertson said there should be little to worry about with Read's ability to get back up to speed.

"He went all right when he was on, he went a full 100," Robertson said. "Jeez, I thought he was going to ease himself back into the game, but in that first five minutes the amount of touches and tackles he made, it was pretty impressive.

"He was straight into it. It's a credit to him to the amount of work he has done after a long period of time.

"I find it incredible that guys like him and Sam can play at that level after such a long time out.

"It's a credit to the world class athletes they are."

(Reporting by Greg Stutchbury; Editing by Sudipto Ganguly)

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