I have put up two articles on the Rassie affair together, as both are linked.
supersport.com – Gavin RichThere was a sense of savage irony to the timing of Rassie Erasmus’s exit from Western Province rugby. It throws an early spotlight onto a subject which, if the game is to grow and flourish both in the Cape and wider South Africa, demands close scrutiny this year.
Understandably, the question relating to the identity of the next Springbok coach is the January rugby topic of conversation. It became that when the administration dragged their heels on the appointment and postponed the announcement until a full month after their New Zealand counterparts had done the same.
But shouldn’t the focus instead be on who appoints the coaches and employs them? At the start of this new four-year cycle up to the next World Cup, shouldn’t a bigger stress also be placed on sweeping away the uncomfortable situation that develops when you have amateur administrators making key decisions that impact on a professional game?
One of the best points that Victor Matfield made in his book, My Journey, related to the paucity of true professional rugby people in the administration of the sport. Unfortunately, Victor stopped short of making it the big issue it may need to become if the sport he loves is going to ever reach its full potential.
It’s now nearly two decades since rugby became a professional sport. But in this country too much power, both at provincial and national level, is still vested in amateur office bearers who do not work full-time in the sport and thus are not as conversant in the trends and needs of the modern game as they should be.
Many of the amateur administrators are well-meaning, and yes, they give off a lot of their time to serve the sport. It is a fact though that in 2012 professional rugby operates in a different world to the club level that spawns them.
And a successful professional rugby concern is never going to grow out of the petty infighting among amateur officials that continues to blight WP rugby in particular but which, for a long time, has done the same at national level.
Those who work on the professional side of WP rugby know they need to start ducking in the year when there is an election for amateur office-bearers. In recent seasons it has not been unusual for prospective office-bearers to do their electioneering by slamming their own coaches through the media in a quest for populist appeal.
Having gotten wind of the clashes that were taking place behind the scenes at WP before Christmas I expected there to be an explosion sometime after my return from summer holidays, but I never expected it to happen quite this quickly.
Of course the WP marketing people, in confirming the Erasmus resignation, have put a positive spin on everything. The official line is that Erasmus is looking for a future elsewhere, but that is bunk, just as the theory that Erasmus and Allister Coetzee don’t get on is also bunk. Erasmus and Coetzee did have a small fall-out around the time of the 2010 Currie Cup final, but that was sorted out ages ago and they have worked well together in the past year.
Those who know Erasmus and the passion he had for his chosen mission to make WP a champion union will rightfully heap scorn on any suggestion that, after taking the Stormers from 11th in the Super 12 (the year before he arrived) to second in Super Rugby in two in consecutive seasons he would suddenly decide to leave.
He was pushed by people who made his job untenable, in the same way that England coach-elect Nick Mallett, when he was WP coaching director, was also pushed by the same people. If, as expected, Mallett takes over at England, don’t be too surprised if he approaches Erasmus to be his technical analyst. That’s how highly he rates him.
Gert Smal, who could soon be the new Springbok coach, is another who fell foul of the same group of administrators. So the question is – if these people can be so highly rated elsewhere, why are they not good enough for WP? But then maybe the question should instead be directed at why after 11 years of trophy drought in the Western Cape it is only coaches who get scrutinised and not the people and the system that employs them…
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Business Day, Zeena IsaacsErasmus resigned as senior professional coach, leading to speculation that he could either replace Peter de Villiers as the national coach or take up a position as a high performance manager at the South African Rugby Union.
The union will announce the new Bok coach later this month, but apart from saying it would head-hunt possible candidates rather than call for applications and that De Villiers would be on the short list by virtue of having been the former coach, the organisation has remained mum about the process.
However, former Springbok forwards coach Gert Smal — who recently extended his contract as Ireland’s forwards coach — and SA’s first Super 14-winning coach Heyneke Meyer, are rumoured to be the favourites to occupy the job.
But given Erasmus’s vast rugby knowledge and coaching experience as a former Cheetahs and Stormers coach, as well as a technical consultant for the Springboks at last year’s Rugby World Cup in New Zealand, it would not come as a surprise if he were to be named the Springbok coach.
Erasmus’s lawyer, however, was convinced the Springbok coaching job did not appear to be an option for his client. The union ” has not contacted Rassie yet … there are a few options overseas, so he and I will depart for Europe later this week and return late next week, and then we will weigh up his options”.
While his lawyer refused to divulge details about these options because of the sensitive nature of the talks with the respective teams, the England coaching job could be a possibility. It is the only high-profile coaching position in Europe which has yet to be filled permanently.
Rassie Erasmus was also secretive about his future in a statement released by Western Province yesterday: “There are a number of new opportunities that have surfaced at a higher level and I am currently considering my options. Each is an exciting and massive new challenge and that is a big attraction for me at this stage of my career.”
Thanks, Tripples for the link, thought I would put it up in full here, with his lawyers response to the ‘Bok’ job. From Gavin Riches article, it seems I owe Rassie an apology, if indeed, and I am sure it is, he did resign for the above reasons. But, I really feel that if Rassie is going to come out of the affair untarnished, he has to open the proverbial ‘can of worms’ himself, thus forcing the debate and thus, hopefully, leading to a change in structures eventually. Without a high profile figure doing this, we are going to struggle to force change, and will continue to be fed ‘claptrap’ from the media department at WPRU.
Gives me heart that SARU have apparently not contacted Rassie, meaning the preferred candidate has been selected and signed up, to only be ratified by the Union President’s meeting before naming the coach on 27 January.
The SARU Exco NOW has far more power than when Snorflokker was appointed, with very important structural changes having been made in the meantime in the way SARU functions and with the President’s Council slowly but surely forced into becoming a rubber stamp in stead of a decision making body.
Last time the President’s Council had to actually make a decision who to appoint, a committee having screened the basic candidates and reduced them to four or five for discussion by the President’s Council who in turn debated it and decided on 2 candidates to vote for, which led to the 1 vote majority for Snorflokker over Heyneke Meyer.
This time round, the SARU Exco will place a READY DECISION of who they have chosen, in front of the Union President’s Concil, because (and only because) SARU’s Constitution demands ratification.
(I hope the cumbersome process involving the President’s Council can be slimmed down considerably by means of changes to SARU’s Constitution, but that will mean all these Joppiesoekers voting with big majority to change the SARU Constitution).
News24.com: Struggling Top 14 outfit Biarritz are leading the race to sign former Western Province senior professional coach Rassie Erasmus. According to the Sky Sports website, Biarritz have endured a torrid first half of the season and only a 15-6 victory over Agen on Friday saw them climb out of the relegation places. Current boss Patrice Lagisquet has already confirmed he will be leaving the Basque giants at the end of the season to take up the position as France’s backline coach – and Biarritz are now lining up former Springbok flank Erasmus as his replacement. Erasmus has confirmed he has a number of exciting opportunities open to him after revealing he would be stepping down as director of coaching at the Stormers. The 39-year-old has been linked to the vacant head coach position with the Springboks, having worked as South Africa’s technical advisor during the Rugby World Cup, while he has also been tipped for a role within England’s set up should Nick Mallett take over. However Biarritz are set to make the first move and are now planning to hold talks with Erasmus.
Whoever gets Rassie….get a bargain. I rate him as highly as I rate Nick Mallett and I think in time Rassie will grow to be a world beater as a coach. Mallett will reach his nadir if he gets the England job because he will pull them out of the doldrums and make them a team to be feared for a long time to come. They both have rugby nous and both are not prepared to take nonsense and are their own men. This trait hasn’t always made them popular but in the long run they will see success and it will be on their own terms. I’ll never forget Mallett giving the finger to the Bok selectors when he ran off after a Springbok trials game where he played for the hopefuls….they had already decided he wasn’t their choice and probably because he was too outspoken…as an engelsman was those days. he went off to France and played some very good rugby there. I will never forget Rassie catching the ball before it could cross the crossbar when a penalty would have lost us the game (could have been Freestate too…not sure) and the subsequent changing of the rules ensuring someone couldn’t do that in future. I like Rassie and if he goes overseas it is a great loss for us.
@ 4man:Very eloquently put. I wonder what the big boys think when these guys go overseas like this. Either, “They’re rubbish, and we didn’t want them anyway,” or do they pat themselves on their backs and say, “Look what we’ve given to the world, aren’t we brilliant!”?
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