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How the Lions made huge capital gains

Wellington became the best conveyor belt of young talent in the country after the pain and embarassme­nt of relegation, reports Hamish Bidwell.

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So there’s three things. Relegation was the first. Nothing concentrat­es the mind quite like abject failure and Wellington had definitely endured one of those.

Losing nine straight games, during the 2014 provincial season didn’t prove - as some said at the time - that then-Lions head coach Chris Boyd had no idea what he was doing. What it exposed, actually, was that Wellington had no playing depth.

It was all very well to then say ‘let’s develop some’ but that’s not an overnight process. That’s where Earl Va’a came in.

Va’a had his critics then and he has them now. But he was appointed to succeed Boyd largely on the back of his efforts in agegroup rugby.

He took Scots College to a national title and headed the Wellington Rugby Football Union’s (WRFU) high performanc­e programme. Va’a might not have been the first person to spot them, or the only coach they ever had, but he was intimately involved in the developmen­t of players such as Asafo Aumua, Alex Fidow, Jackson Garden-Bachop, Wes Goosen, James Blackwell, Malo Tuitama and Thomas UmagaJense­n.

Players who - and this is the third thing - are now beginning to flourish under the tutelage of new Lions coach Chris Gibbes.

Va’a had been close to these boys - his own son TJ is a Wellington and Hurricanes­contracted player who starred at Scots too - but it was time for a different voice and approach. Gibbes has certainly provided that, but the whole process began with that fall from grace in 2014.

‘‘It made us step back and look at what we needed to develop this group of players and the next group coming through,’’ WRFU chief executive Steve Rogers said.

Wellington were confident they had a pretty useful crop of youngsters, but realised it would take more than good kids to get out of provincial rugby’s second tier. Club guys would need upskilling too and so the Lions began running with bigger squads and employing more intensive pre-season programmes.

Players such as loose forwards Mateaki Kafatolu and Galu Taufale, along with lock Will Mangos, are among those who’ve emerged from club football to make telling contributi­ons in 2017. When the Lions beat Southland 61-12 earlier this month, only fullback Trent Renata and reserve Du’Plessis Kirifi weren’t products of the Wellington club system.

Gibbes has been critical to the whole thing. He doesn’t do individual­s or promote stars. Nor is he big on excuses or hard luck stories.

But what Gibbes does do is provide a simple, clear gameplan and then demand effort and a good attitude.

Take Fidow, for instance. Another of Va’a’s Scots College stars, the tighthead prop wasn’t noted for his fitness or workrate. Yes, he could carry strongly, but only in fits and starts.

Gibbes demanded Fidow sort his diet out and the 20-year-old is suddenly 10 kilograms lighter and in the form of his life.

‘‘If you talk about Asafo and Alex and Jackson GardenBach­op, they’ve been in this programme a while. Our challenge is to keep them grounded and to keep them in Wellington and to look at that GETTY IMAGES connection is important, given how strictly the salary cap seems to be enforced these days. Growing your own talent and performing well certainly gives a union’s good players reasonable incentive to stick around.

Championsh­ip side or not, Wellington’s nine wins from 10 games and 59 tries in the roundrobin phase suggest they’ve gone about things quite well this season. As a couple of premiershi­p crossover opponents would attest.

‘‘We’ve shown this year by beating Taranaki and Canterbury that, with the salary cap smoothing everything out, we’re as good as any other team out there,’’ Rogers said.

That wouldn’t have happened without the re-evaluation that relegation prompted, or the developmen­t work done by Va’a. The trick now is to use the last two years of Gibbes’ Lions contract to make sure it doesn’t take another failure for Wellington to find the right path forward.

‘‘We’re excited about how we’ve got to where we’ve got to this year, but we’re equally excited about what’s going to happen in our next club season,’’ said Rogers.

‘ It made us step back and look at what we needed to develop this group of players.’ STEVE ROGERS

 ??  ?? Asafo Aumua was the standout player for Wellington and went straight into the All Blacks squad for the end-of-seaon tour.
Asafo Aumua was the standout player for Wellington and went straight into the All Blacks squad for the end-of-seaon tour.

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