Weekend Argus (Saturday Edition)

Lions’ captain a brave – albeit controvers­ial – choice by coach Coetzee

-

his dream of playing profession­al rugby. He packed his bags in 2009 and headed to the Eastern Cape where he turned out for the Elephants in the First Division. Then came the call that would change everything.

“Dick Muir phoned me. He said he was joining the Lions and wanted to know if I’d be interested in moving up to Joburg. He said he’d give me a proper chance. He said he always rated me as a player (from my Sharks days).

“So I made the move ... I had nothing to lose. But it was a big step as never would I have imagined I’d turn out for the Lions, I never dreamed I’d ever play for them... if it wasn’t the Sharks, it would have been Western Province, the Cheetahs or the Bulls. I just never felt any connection to the Lions.”

But, he says, his dad taught him from a young age to grab every opportunit­y when it comes your way. “It’s funny how things work out... my parents were living in Joburg at the time after moving up from Natal, so I moved in with them. What a blessing that was.”

A hamstring injury hampered his progress at the Lions and he couldn’t even make the Vodacom Cup squad in 2010. He turned out for Pirates on the odd occasion and then in 2011, when John Mitchell replaced Muir as head coach, he got a fresh start.

“I made the Currie Cup squad but played behind Jonathan Mokuena and then captain Josh Strauss... and had to play on the flank. But that was the start really.”

Former Lions loose- forward and 2007 World Cup-winning flank Wikus van Heerden remembers Whiteley’s rise up the ladder.

“When he was just making his way in the team, towards the end of my career in 2011, no one knew much about him. He was new in the set-up, but a few things stood out,” said Van Heerden. “He was extremely fit and dedicated to training.

“I remember John Mitchell worked us hard, he made us run 400 metres again and again and every time Warren was out in front, he even beat the backs. He was always in unbelievab­le condition.”

But there was more to him than that. “He was a youngster at that stage, a newbie, but you could see he was more mature than the other young guys, he had a smart head on his shoulders. He was profession­al in everything he did and his work ethic was outstandin­g. I’m not at all surprised he’s now the Springbok captain.”

Whiteley says he learned a lot from Mitchell. “He was tough and honest, technicall­y brilliant. It was tough at times under him, but I grew a lot too.”

The Lions won the Currie Cup in 2011 (with Whiteley on the bench in the No 18 jersey), under Mitchell, but they struggled again in Super Rugby in 2012 and the players had had enough of their task master and stood up to him, forcing him out of the Lions.

It was then Johan Ackermann’s turn – and what a story it has been over the last few years. “Coach Akkies made us believe in ourselves, he made us love rugby again, he made us play for each other and the union. We missed out in 2013, but we managed to slowly build a team that won the Currie Cup and is now a force in Super Rugby,” said Whiteley in the latter stages of Super Rugby last season.

Ackermann says appointing Whiteley as his captain when he took over from Mitchell was a no-brainer. “He just had it. He’s a real people’s person and so humble. Just the person he is... he has grown so much as a captain and as a man in the last few years, I am so pleased for him.

“He is a calm individual who has time for his players, the management, the administra­tors... he leads by example, he is passionate ... and I know he won’t let anyone down. Also remember the hard and tough route he’s had to take to get here. Nothing came easy and that’s why he’s the person he is today.”

Fear not South Africa; if there is anyone who epitomises what is possible through hard work and belief it is Whiteley. He will make sure the Boks believe anything is possible and everything is achievable. It’s just who he is.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa