Bristol Post

Rugby Lam delighted with coaching team he’s put together at Bristol

- James PIERCY james.piercy@reachplc.com

PAT Lam has laid bare the extent of the ambition at the heart of Bristol Bears, with the director of rugby boldly declaring his mission since arriving at Ashton Gate has been to win the Champions Cup.

Lam has previously indicated that becoming a Champions Cup team was the bar for a team that, while helped by the benevolenc­e of owner Steve Lansdown, were still playing second-tier rugby just over two years ago.

But in unveiling his coaching team for the 2020-21 season at Bears’ new training facility at Abbots Leigh, Lam has laid out the three main principles which will guide him, his staff and squad.

In a lengthy statement on the Bears website, Lam said: “When I arrived three years ago, I set three key objectives for the rugby programme to achieve our Vision: Win the Champions Cup (our ambition); Produce England internatio­nals (our programme); Develop our homegrown players (our passion)

“The number one requiremen­t I requested from Steve (Lansdown) and Chris (Booy, chairman) to achieve this, before players, facilities and budget, was the need to build a high performanc­e management team to help me drive the programme and I’m so pleased with the quality of staff we have on board to serve. I’m delighted that after an intensive period of recruitmen­t - both internally and externally - we have built a strong coaching team that not only have absolute clarity about our gameplan and the Bears system, they understand our culture and the world-class standards we demand.”

The Bears are yet to even compete in the Champions Cup, let alone reach the knockouts to put themselves in a position to win it, but should graduate to Europe’s top table for 2020-21. Lam’s side are third in the Premiershi­p with nine games remaining ahead of the restart date of August 15.

With a superstar-heavy squad including new arrivals Semi Radradra and Kyle Sinckler, plus the wealth of academy talent beginning to come through and a defined club culture, there’s no reason not to suggest the Bears can’t become the No1 team in Europe.

South African Omar Mouneimne arrived from Worcester Warriors earlier this week as defence coach, replacing John Muldoon who is now forwards coach, and becoming the final piece in the puzzle for Lam’s backroom staff.

“My ambition was to build a coaching team that has true alignment right across the club from the senior team all the way through to our academy to ensure the transition through each stage of the Bears pathway is as seamless and clear for all players wherever they enter our Bears programme,” Lam added.

“A key part of our vision is not just to develop our players into better players and better people, but also to develop our staff to become world-class.

“While each coach has a specific area of responsibi­lity, I like to expose them to all areas of the game on and off the field to ensure they continue to grow as coaches and to help them reach their ultimate goal of possibly becoming head coaches themselves which I believe they all can. The flow and quality of our brand-new facility ensures excellent internal communicat­ion between all our department­s and everything is in place for us to serve our playing group, at all levels, to achieve their rugby dreams.”

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 ?? Pictures: Rogan Thomson/JMP ?? Omar Mouneimne, Bristol’s new defence coach, takes an indoor session, main image, at the club’s new training base. Inset: A general exterior view of the facility. Above: Semi Radradra, one of the club’s new signings
Pictures: Rogan Thomson/JMP Omar Mouneimne, Bristol’s new defence coach, takes an indoor session, main image, at the club’s new training base. Inset: A general exterior view of the facility. Above: Semi Radradra, one of the club’s new signings

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