The Post

Foster would be a great coach: Hansen

- Marc Hinton

The solution to today’s Telegraph crossword will appear with your next crossword. Steve Hansen will not be part of the search for his successor as All Blacks coach and he notably stopped short of endorsing his assistant Ian Foster for the job he will vacate after next year’s World Cup.

After Hansen signalled the pending end of his 16-year involvemen­t with the All Blacks post-Japan, thoughts immediatel­y turned to the quest for his replacemen­t.

Both New Zealand Rugby board chairman Brent Impey and chief executive Steve Tew, who sat either side of an emotional Hansen at his announceme­nt, emphasised they would take all the time they needed to find the right person, and confirmed the official process would not begin until after the World Cup.

‘‘All potential candidates we have relationsh­ips with, so they will now all know . . . I don’t think we’ll need to put an advertisem­ent on Seek for the gig,’’ said Impey. ‘‘We will be talking to them and the proper process will start after the World Cup. We have made a very deliberate move that we’re not going to engage in the formal process while we’ve got the runway through to the end of Tokyo.’’

Tew also bristled at a suggestion from Stuff that they had lost their preferred candidate with Ireland coach Joe Schmidt recently confirming he would be taking a break to spend time with his family after Japan next year.

‘‘We’ve been talking to a lot of people,’’ he said. ‘‘You might have labelled someone our ‘preferred’ candidate, but we haven’t done that. There will be a number of people put their hands up.’’

Foster, who has been Hansen’s No 2 throughout his head coaching tenure, is one of the leading contenders to step into the top role, alongside successful Crusaders mentor Scott Robertson, and offshore-based Kiwis such as Dave Rennie, Vern Cotter and Warren Gatland.

Schmidt’s situation is delicate. Despite Tew’s protestati­ons, he would be their ideal successor, given his remarkable track record with Ireland. But they also respect his family situation, and understand they may need to find a compromise to allow him to be part of the All Blacks setup.

Hansen gave Foster a glowing report yesterday, but was not prepared to go as far as to endorse his oft-criticised No 2 as his successor. ‘‘I think he’d be a great head coach,’’ Hansen said of Foster. ‘‘He’s developed as a coach, and as a man. He’s got some great qualities, and his understand­ing of the game is great.

‘‘But I don’t think it’s right I sit here and say this guy should do the job or that guy should do the job.

‘‘That’s the Rugby Union’s job. I’ve got my opinions, but for one of the very few times in my life I’ll probably keep that to myself because I don’t think it’s right for the process.’’

Hansen did have a view on the theory that you needed offshore experience to take on the All Blacks role. Both Hansen and Sir Graham Henry had coached Wales prior to taking on the job, but New Zealand’s most accomplish­ed young coach, Robertson, has yet to log experience overseas.

‘‘If you get the right person it doesn’t matter what they’ve done,’’ Hansen said. ‘‘I hear you guys go on about that a fair bit, you haven’t coached overseas or you haven’t done anything in Super Rugby.

‘‘The best coach in the world at the moment in Joe Schmidt, World Rugby’s choice, he lost his job at the Blues, yet he’s developed and grown to become an outstandin­g coach.

‘‘I hear things about Fozzie [Foster], that he didn’t win anything at the Chiefs, but that’s because the Crusaders were winning everything at the time. Those things are irrelevant.’’

MORE STORIES D1

 ??  ?? Steve Hansen, left, and Ian Foster.
Steve Hansen, left, and Ian Foster.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand