The Press

Plenty for new coach to prove

- Richard Knowler richard.knowler@stuff.co.nz

Ian Foster has begun life as All Blacks head coach by making bold promises. The pressure is now on him to be true to his word. When NZ Rugby selected Foster ahead of Crusaders coach Scott Robertson for the top job, replacing Steve Hansen who had stepped down after the World Cup in Japan, it hedged its bets.

Foster hasn’t worked as a head coach since he was in charge of the Chiefs between 2004 and 2011 and during that period the Super Rugby trophy never gathered dust at the Hamilton-based club.

Eight years can be a long time in profession­al rugby. Especially when a coach spends that period of time working inside the All Blacks machine.

Foster will have arguably learned a lot more about himself, and the art of coaching, since Hansen invited him to start

All Blacks head coach Ian Foster.

working under him in 2012.

As a selector, along with Grant Fox and Hansen, Foster was tasked with making big decisions; with a final stroke of the pen the three men could make or break a young man’s test career.

Foster was also in charge of the All Blacks’ back play and the attack, enjoyed an 87 per cent success rate under Hansen and in 2015 they retained the Webb Ellis Cup by beating Australia in the

World Cup final in London.

Four years later, in Japan, the All Blacks never even reached the final, having been chewed up and spat out by England in the 19-7 loss in the semifinal in Yokohama.

Former All Blacks coach John Mitchell, now earning his cabbage as England’s defence maestro, introduced a strategy that made the All Blacks’ vaunted backline attack look as dangerous as a three-legged dog.

As Foster conceded afterwards, his old Waikato captain did a number on his boys.

In a promotiona­l video released by NZ Rugby immediatel­y after Foster’s appointmen­t was confirmed yesterday, the man himself cut a much happier figure than the one who had to sit inside a media conference room at Yokohama Stadium, which resembled a concrete dungeon without the chains, following the shock defeat to England. Understand­ably so, too. Foster has, at last, got the job he coveted.

That defeat to England could have easily derailed his plans to be All Blacks head coach. Maybe it would have if Warren Gatland, Jamie Joseph or Joe Schmidt had challenged him for the job.

Instead it was a pure duel between Scott Robertson and Foster.

Having spent eight years with the All Blacks, Foster said he knows what makes the team hum. As we saw in Yokohama, when England destroyed their hopes of advancing to the final, he also knows their weaknesses.

Those will have to be addressed. And quickly. The New Zealand rugby public will demand that.

Foster, 54, says ‘‘we need to change things up’’. Forget the entertaini­ng win over Wales in the bronze final in Tokyo, few remember that; the All Blacks are still carrying the pain from the semi, he said.

‘‘So how we adjust and refresh this group and change some things up is going to be vital,’’

Foster said. ‘‘Just to create the energy we need to get us where we want to be. It’s about making a whole lot of little changes around that space.’’

He will know the All Blacks model isn’t broken. Far from it. He will still mould a game plan around a basic framework that starts with sound set-pieces, and aggressive, tough forwards who are prepared to win the breakdowns at all costs.

He can then give the backs licence to use the skills they have honed in Super Rugby to break open rivals, something he had done since 2012 under Hansen.

Foster can’t afford to make a slow start to this job.

It’s important he instils selfbelief in the players, and gives the game plans they can trust; wins over Wales (twice) and Scotland in New Zealand next winter are imperative, followed by success in the Rugby Championsh­ip and the retention of the Bledisloe Cup.

That’s the only way to silence the doubters. As All Blacks coach, there is little other option.

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