Cape Argus

To walk away from the Lions is not easy ... it’s not a quick decision, says Ackermann

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JOHAN ACKERMANN has said walking away from the Lions would be one of the hardest decisions he’d ever have to make.

The Lions coach has been strongly linked with the Gloucester coaching position in the English Premiershi­p from next season, with a decision by Ackermann expected soon. Ackermann is set to take over from former Brumbies coach Laurie Fisher at the English team, a move that would see him leave the Lions at the end of the current Super Rugby season and more than a year before his current contract expires, at the end of next year.

“To walk away from this is not easy, it’s not a quick decision,” he said after the Lions had hammered the Reds 44-14 at Ellis Park on Saturday.

“Driving here today I was thinking about when Sous (Franco Mostert) joined us from the Bulls in 2013 and he’s playing his 50th match for us this weekend. Also the fact (that) Robbie Coetzee and Courtnall Skosan joined from the Bulls ... we all got a second chance here. The whole decision is a tough one... the road I walked here from 2013.”

Ackermann took over the head coaching job in late 2012 and had to play outside Super Rugby in 2013 when the Lions were relegated from the competitio­n, at the expense of the Kings, but they were back in 2014 and last year were arguably the best team in the competitio­n, but they lost the final to the Hurricanes.

Under Ackermann the Lions also won the Currie Cup in 2015 and were runners-up in 2014. “The question for me is; where do I see my next challenge? Do I want to coach in Super Rugby for another three or four seasons and believe that will be the best for me as a coach, or do I leave this place in a good space and test myself in Europe ... at Heineken (Cup) and Premiershi­p level, and grow as a coach over there,” Ackermann, pictured, said.

But while it seems Ackermann has already made up his mind after helping to resurrect the Lions over the last five years, he says leaving everything he knows behind wouldn’t be easy.

“My children are here, my wife is happy, it’s my people, my culture, my language, it’s everything you love,” he said. “It’s a rugby decision, but it’s also emotional. It’s the best time to go... they’re probably not doing as well as they would like, but that’s not to say I will change things. Time will tell,” he said. – Jacques van der Westhuyzen

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