Stakes high for centurion-to-be Read

All Blacks captain Kieran Read will mark his 100th Test appearance on the biggest stage imaginable, with the British and Irish Lions series on the line.

Kieran Read.

All Blacks skipper Kieran Read will join the 100 club in the decider against the Lions. (AAP)

A 100th Test cap, as incumbent All Blacks skipper, in a British and Irish Lions Test series decider, at a rocking Eden Park.

It doesn't get much bigger for any rugby player - yet an ever-modest Kieran Read says Saturday's clash will likely feel no different to the time he first pulled on the black jumper, against Scotland in Edinburgh, nine years ago.

The 31-year-old Read will become the seventh Kiwi to earn a silver 100th cap this weekend, following in the footsteps of ex-teammates Mils Muliaina, Richie McCaw, Dan Carter, Ma'a Nonu, Keven Mealamu and Tony Woodcock.

It's a milestone that hasn't been lost on his teammates and coach Steve Hansen, who have talked up Read's mana ahead of his centurion performance.

Yet the Crusaders loose forward handled the issue in his usual unflappable manner on Friday, saying it evoked similar feelings to his first Test.

"Your first one, you're pretty nervous, pretty excited, and I don't think that's really changed to be honest," Read told reporters.

"I'll be rocking up tomorrow and I'll have a few butterflies in the stomach, but overriding that is the excitement of why you do this - I don't get sick of pulling on the jersey and going out and playing.

"It's a pretty cool place to be - I never expected to be in this position, I guess. The biggest thing for me is to go out there and do my bit."

Born and raised in Drury, south of Auckland, Read travelled south to Canterbury to make his rugby mark and has since won almost everything in the game - from two World Cups to Rugby Championships and a Super Rugby title.

Yet, having fallen to the Lions 24-21 in Wellington last week, Saturday's third Test takes on extra significance for the skipper, in what is undoubtedly the last chance of his career to pick up a Lions series winner's medal.

"We can't just go rewrite the books and change things. We probably got caught a little bit in the conditions and got stuck in ourselves, and we've got to go out there and play our game, that's the most important thing," Read said.

Hansen said that, like the six All Blacks centurions that came before him, Read could be classed as a genuine world-class player and leader - and an inspirational figure in his own right, having followed Richie McCaw in the top job.

So much so, that the 100th cap had barely been discussed in camp.

"It's the norm for us that the team comes first," Hansen said.

"There hasn't been a lot of talk about it - it's hardly been raised, actually. That's the mark of the man himself."


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Source: AAP



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