The New Zealand Herald

Kane coup tweets ring true

Here are three “learnings” from the final weeks of sport’s lockdown

- Dylan Cleaver comment

The McOnie tweet was the perfect story for these times

Not once have I regretted my decision to consciousl­y uncouple from Twitter, until one urgent morning last week when a colleague asked me if Kiwi sports journalist James McOnie’s tweet had any merit. What was this tweet I’d missed?

“Coup alert! Kane Williamson’s test captaincy is under threat. Apparently coach Gary Stead favours fellow Cantabrian Tom Latham as skipper. It’d be easier on the ego to take the T20 job from Kane, to ease his workload, but that’s not the preferred plan. #Canterbury­mafia

“Also, there’s a lot of drama surroundin­g the internal NZ Cricket player rankings, which determine pay. A few players have leapt up the rankings without the stats to back it up. Will post more details soon but I’m tired from watching #TheLastDan­ce and Storage Wars.”

Classic late-night news dump, with just the right mix of palace intrigue and credibilit­y to prompt a mainstream media follow-up. NZ Cricket responded with: “There’s absolutely no truth to any suggestion Kane’s captaincy is under threat.”

This is sort of true, but given everybody’s restricted travel movements, how hard can it have been to get Stead to make a strong statement himself?

Perhaps his ethical compass wouldn’t allow it.

I would suggest that if you removed the first two words and the flashing red siren emoji that accompanie­d it, NZC knew that in less than 100 words, McOnie’s thumbs cut extremely close to the bone.

It is no secret in cricket circles that amicable as the personal relationsh­ip might be between captain and coach, they don’t look at the game or, more pointedly, the concept of team the same way.

To generalise, Stead believes that a team is the sum of 11 parts that you can plug in and play on any given day. Williamson has a far more Zenlike approach to team building that values nebulous concepts such as loyalty and trust.

What’s also true is that Stead lost an influentia­l chunk of the dressing room during the disastrous tour to Australia; not in an overt way where talk of rebellion (or “coup alert!”) hangs in the air, but in subtle ways where talk of dissatisfa­ction quickly finds the ears of people like McOnie and me.

There’s no question Stead’s job would be easier if he had the compliant Latham as his front man. Latham’s playing career has been closely wedded to Stead’s coaching path. In some ways, too, it’s understand­able. When a coach’s reputation is at stake, why shouldn’t they have “their” people in charge? It worked out pretty well for Mike Hesson, didn’t it?

The key difference is there is no valid cricket argument for the reins to be taken from Williamson. He might not have had a vintage 2019-20 season but he remains New Zealand’s best player, certainly in tests and onedayers, and he’s the smartest guy in the room, too.

If Stead tried to take one of Williamson’s (c)s away, he’d stand accused of the worst crime you can commit as a coach: making decisions in the best interests of yourself, not the team.

NZC has some serious work to do before this tumbles off Twitter and morphs into something much larger — something closer to a coup.

Rugby’s kingmakers have been living in a sandcastle watching the tide come in.

Okay, so I’ve spent a bit of time watching Vikings and The Last

Kingdom during lockdown and have Cnut at the front of my mind. He had only to get his feet wet to underline the limits of his power.

Rugby’s administra­tors waited until the water was lapping around their necks

The tide has been coming in on domestic rugby for a long time but they thought they could keep disaster at bay by squeezing every last dollar out of the All Blacks and producing year-round content for cash-rich broadcaste­rs.

It was a bold strategy but one that relied on two things: All Black primacy and an undisturbe­d content supply chain.

The jury is out on the former, there’s no need for equivocati­on on the latter.

The disastrous timing of the pandemic for rugby has revealed aspects of the sport they had been too willing to ignore; first and foremost that the financial burden placed on the All Blacks was unsustaina­ble.

Other aspects of rugby’s crumbling fac¸ade have been visible for some time — the deep unpopulari­ty of Super Rugby’s tangled cross-border format and the startlingl­y poor business case for provincial rugby being top of the list — but Covid-19 has brought them into sharp focus.

New Zealand Rugby needs a new top-to-bottom model. It needs brave, visionary administra­tors and it needs to change.

The one thing it cannot change is that the All Blacks must keep winning. The only difference there is they alone can’t stop the tide.

Don’t be obsessed by the size of Sport NZ’s pot for sport relief

It’s easy to be seduced by the $265 million figure announced for sport in the “recovery” Budget, but while size matters, in this case, it’s not the most important thing.

It’s the distributi­on and destinatio­n of that money which will tell the story.

A cynical part of me already has grave concerns for the health and well-being of this pot of money.

$78 million to modernise the sector by finding innovative ways to deliver play, active recreation and sport by using new technology and research.

I’d like to see more detail around this. This reeks of bureaucrat­ic black holes and High Performanc­e Sport NZ job justificat­ion.

I’m just not convinced you can throw money at problems and say: “There you go, innovate.”

The sports crisis and recognitio­n that previous models of funding and delivery are unfit for post-pandemic purpose should generate a wave of innovation independen­t of Government agencies.

The sports sector should feel gratified that the Government has recognised its importance to the country. The best way it can show its thanks is to be vigilant about how and where that money is spent.

Classic late-night news dump, with just the right mix of palace intrigue and credibilit­y to prompt a mainstream media follow-up.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Gary Stead and Kane Williamson have different approaches to the concept of team.
Photo / Getty Images Gary Stead and Kane Williamson have different approaches to the concept of team.
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