The Citizen (Gauteng)

Wily White keeps calm

EXPERIENCE: BULLS COACH IS NO STRANGER TO THE BIG-MATCH PRESSURE

- Ken Borland

Former Sharks Currie Cup coach MacLeod-Henderson rates Everitt’s ball-inhand rugby approach.

Bulls coach Jake White has never been averse to stirring up a bit of controvers­y and, although he does not have much of a social media presence, he knows very well how to stoke up conversati­on before a big game.

And in South African rugby, matches don’t get much bigger than the Currie Cup final, which the Bulls will host against the Sharks today.

But this week White, who admitted that he still feels the pressure of crunch matches, has been strangely restrained and even went as far as to suggest the Sharks might be favourites because half of their team have won the Currie Cup previously.

Knowing how canny White is though, this is almost certainly some sort of mind game and he will ensure his Bulls team are the most inhospitab­le of hosts.

That’s the thing about the 57-year-old White, who has been a top-level coach now for almost 20 years, dating back to when he led the Junior Springboks to the U-21 World Cup crown in 2002 – there is always a plan and it usually comes off.

From utterly transformi­ng a Springbok team that was in disarray in 2004 into World Cup champions in 2007, and winning a rare Tri-Nations title along the way, he then took the Brumbies to the 2013 Super Rugby final and the Sharks to the 2014 semifinals, before leading Montpellie­r to the European Challenge Cup in 2016.

“I’ve been in enough finals and playoffs to know how it works and you can never take away the pressure," White said.

"So I still feel the pressure, and myself and the players will make mistakes, but a final brings the best out of certain players and they take their opportunit­ies.

There’s a real buzz in the squad, it’s so nice to be in the change room. You can just feel it.

“This is a very proud and driven team. They have a great hunger to win the Currie Cup and I just need to channel that the right way.

Sharks coach Sean Everitt, 51, would have had a lot of interactio­n with White in 2014 because he was one of the Sharks’ assistant coaches, but the relationsh­ip between the head coach, his assistants and the players reportedly became strained, leading to the World Cup-winner spending just a year in Durban.

White was accused of being dictatoria­l but he has certainly softened since then, and he is well-versed in global modern rugby trends.

Everitt’s coaching stock has certainly grown hugely since then as well, and Brad MacLeod-Henderson, who coached with him at the Sharks, winning the Currie Cup in 2013, described him as being a mentor who placed more responsibi­lity on the players.

“Sean is more collaborat­ive. He won’t pitch up and say ‘this is what we are going to do’. He will help the players make the right decisions, depending on the cues given by the opposition,” said MacLeod-Henderson.

"As a former backline player, creative and he’s in favour of ballin-hand rugby and having a go. But he wants the players to have a look first. If it’s on, have a go; if not, go to the air. It’s about space and getting the balance right.”

 ?? Picture: Gallo Images ?? BRAINS TRUST. Bulls coach Jake White (left) and his Sharks counterpar­t Sean Everitt will battle it out for Currie Cup glory as their teams meet in the final at Loftus Versfeld this afternoon.
Picture: Gallo Images BRAINS TRUST. Bulls coach Jake White (left) and his Sharks counterpar­t Sean Everitt will battle it out for Currie Cup glory as their teams meet in the final at Loftus Versfeld this afternoon.

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