Weekend Herald

Every effort being done, claims boss

-

Shane Richardson as New Zealand’s campaign manager for the upcoming World Cup.

North Queensland NRL premiershi­p winning coach Paul Green has reportedly also been approached to come on board as a second assistant for the end- of- year tournament.

Their appointmen­ts come after former Samoa and one- test Kiwis forward Willie Poching and Australian Justin Morgan were not retained after assisting Kidwell through last year’s poor Four Nations campaign.

“The appointmen­ts this year right across the board are just a perfect example of pathways being closed to New Zealand- based coaches,” said Blackmore.

“I’ve never had an opportunit­y to coach a New Zealand representa­tive team and I’ve been banging that door down the whole time. The messages are mixed because they’re constantly saying you need to be on a coaching, managerial, or player pathway but then nothing actually eventuates.”

Blackmore has no doubts about the credential­s of McNamara, Richardson or Green but believes their appointmen­ts raise further questions about Kidwell’s ability as a head coach.

“Don’t get me wrong – we all need help,” he said. “You might bring in a forwards or backs coach if you feel they could add something to the mix.

“I’m not saying they aren’t good coaches, that’s irrelevant. It contradict­s everything they are saying and they’ve been saying this stuff for far too long.”

Blackmore began coaching in 2004 and enjoyed success at club level with Manurewa and Otahuhu and New Zealand Maori before winning the New South Wales Coach of the Year award in 2011 after guiding the Auckland Vulcans to the NSW Cup grand final.

After a year in the UK working as general manager with Leigh Centurions, he returned home and applied for the New Zealand Resi- NZRL boss Alex Hayton would not comment on Richie Blackmore’s grievances but insists every effort is made to develop and promote local coaching talent.

“If the focus is on winning the World Cup then we have to put the right people in to do that,” said Hayton.

“That is the focus for this year. The long- term focus of having an assistant coach who is a Kiwi that we’re looking at for the future is still there.

“If there’s someone that fits that criteria going towards the World Cup then fantastic but if we don’t we’re not going to compromise by putting the wrong people in at the wrong time.

“When we get through the World Cup and then start looking forward to the next few years we will be looking at who out there as assistant coaches is a future New Zealand head coach.”

Hayton argues Steve McNamara was a logical choice to assist David Kidwell due to his role as Warriors assistant coach that sees him working weekly with the Kiwis spine of Isaac Luke, Shaun Johnson, Kieran Foran and Roger Tuivasa- Sheck.

“To bring those players in and bring someone else in to work with the spine, that doesn’t make sense when we can get someone who’s working with them each week,” said Hayton.

“It’s not saying that David [ Kidwell] can’t do the job but it’s getting the right balance in skill sets in that management structure to get the best results out of all of the players.

“And that’s why we haven’t made that other assistant coach appointmen­t as yet because we want to get through this week, see how it all runs and ‘ do we need anyone else’ and if we do, what role are they playing?” dents under- 18s job but was ruled ineligible because he wasn’t on the NZRL coaching pathway.

A return to coaching with Papakura in 2014 put him back on course and that year he was among the final four applicants for the Kiwis head coaching role, before Stephen Kearney was eventually retained and Kidwell introduced as an assistant.

Despite making the shortlist for the top job, Blackmore was again overlooked when Kelvin Wright got the nod as analyst ahead of the Kiwis successful 2014 Four Nations campaign.

“This is where I started to get disappoint­ed in the process and procedures the NZRL were employing,” Blackmore said. “I got shortliste­d and then couldn’t win any role. No pathway was extended to me.”

After coaching the Sea Eagles to their maiden Fox Memorial title win last season, the 47- year- old is unsure of what more he can do to advance his career after recently being told a poor interview meant he was denied the chance to coach the Junior Kiwis, with Australian- based former Kiwis World Cup winning captain Nathan Cayless getting the job.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand