The Scotsman

Acting coach Hodge can land big job

● Hodge takes reins as underperfo­rming Edinburgh part ways with South African

- Iain Morrison

Duncan Hodge has been given the chance to land the head coach’s job at Edinburgh after the captial club placed him in charge yesterday on an interim basis.

On a day of hectic activity at Murrayfiel­d, Alan Solomons stepped down following a disappoint­ing start to the season. Hodge’s reign will begin tomorrow night when the team take on Guinness Pro12 champions Connacht in Galway.

With just one win in their opening four league matches, Edinburgh desperatel­y need to kick-start their campaign. They lie ninth, the same position they finished in last season.

Hodge, the former Scotland stand-off, has been identifed by SRU chief Mark Dodson as the man to potentiall­y lead Edinburgh out of the wilderness.

A statement from the SRU said: “The promotion to acting head coach now provides an opportunit­y to stake his claim for the role on a permanent basis in the Guinness Pro12 and European Challenge Cup.”

It also emerged yesterday that outgoing Scotland coach Vern Cotter will take charge of French side Montpellie­r next season.

Meanwhile, a special general meeting of the clubs has been called for 28 October where the SRU will hope to gain the twothirds majority required which would allow them to sell one or both of the pro teams, or parts thereof.

Rugby’s first coaching casualty of the season has arrived after just one month with Edinburgh’s head coach Alan Solomons paying the price for the club’s poor start to the season. Edinburgh have won just one of their opening four matches and currently sit a lowly ninth in the Guinness Pro12 table, exactly where they finished at the end of last season.

The veteran South African coach was starting his fourth season with the club that has finished eighth, eighth and ninth on his watch. After turning up late for his debut season the coach blamed the poor conditioni­ng of the players for their poor performanc­e that year and replaced the conditioni­ng coach.

Solomons’ place is taken by former Scotland stand-off Duncan Hodge who has been his assistant this season and part of last. He is helped by forwards coach Steve Scott who remains in situ.

Hodge won 26 Scotland caps and is best known for his exploits in the 2000 Calcutta Cup match when he scored one try, one conversion and four penalties to help Scotland to a rare win over the auld enemy. He was first approached by Frank Hadden who made Hodge an assistant Scotland coach in 2007, upgraded to a fulltime position in 2012, where he remained until the arrival ofjasono’halloranfr­omnew Zealand, appointed by Vern Cotter, who took over after last year’s World Cup.

“Duncan brings his recent coaching experience from the Scotland national team as well as his long playing career with Edinburgh into the role,” said SRU boss Mark Dodson.

“He will receive our full support to keep moving the club forward.”

“I would like to take this opportunit­y to thank Alan for his significan­t contributi­on to the Edinburgh club and I wish him well in the future.”

Just a month ago Edinburgh’s managing director Jonny Petrie was backing the club’s decision to extend Solomons’ contract again.

His time with Edinburgh was not without its success. In Solomons’ second season the club won the 1872 Cup for the first time in six years and they defended it successful­ly last season against a strong Glasgow team, winning both matches, albeit both games were played at Murrayfiel­d.

Edinburgh also competed in the 2014/15 European Challenge Cup final although they finished a poor second to Gloucester on the night.

As much as for the club’s results, which were improving slowly, Solomons’ has paid the price for a lack of ambition. Taking over an Edinburgh team which was in meltdown after the early exit of Irish coach Michael Bradley, Solomons insisted on going back to basics – set piece, defence and kicking for position, playing a typical, low-risk South African style game. He was helped in this by a strong tight five pack of forwards including the all-internatio­nal front row of Alasdair Dickinson, Ross Ford and WP Nel.

However, this route one rugby didn’t sit easy with the fans, who are used to thrills and spills from the capital club, and it didn’t chime with the times, which have moved on apace. The game is evolving faster than ever but Solomons was using last year’s playbook. Instead of skill and speed, Edinburgh were overly reliant upon a big, physical forward pack to bully the opposition but it was rarely enough.

The South African could have defended his style of rugby had the club been more successful but despite spending goodness knows how many millions on a host of players, many of whom were imported from overseas, that success proved elusive.

Solomons also helped perpetuate a culture of excuses at the club. It is one thing to dampen overblown expectatio­ns but, every time the boss talked to the press about injuries or a lack of experience he was just giving his players another subliminal reason to lose.

His low point arrived last weekend when, in the face of a front row injury crisis, he handed Kevin Bryce the No 3 shirt against Munster. Bryce has only just made the tran- sition from hooker to tighthead and he had just 12 minutes of competitiv­e profession­al rugby in his new position before being thrown to the wolves against Munster’s experience­d Irish internatio­nal David Kilcoyne who ate him for breakfast.

Bryce injured his arm in the very first engagement and was withdrawn from the contest after just six minutes. Edinburgh’s management may have fallen short in their duty of care to the player.

Given the timing, few coaches of any stature are available right now so Hodge has an excellent opportunit­y to cement his place as head coach of Edinburgh over the remainder of the season, starting with current champions Connacht on Friday evening.

Under the former Watsonian, Edinburgh are sure to showcase a more open brand of running rugby in the coming weeks although maybe not on Friday if the wind is blowing in Galway on Friday. Meanwhile, Solomons left Murrayfiel­d with these words: “I have greatly enjoyed working with the players and coaches and feel I have helped to put the club on a much stronger footing over the past three years and am leaving it in a better place than when I arrived.”

The South African is right, he leaves Edinburgh Rugby in a better place than Michael Bradley did, but that is not necessaril­y something you’d want to boast about.

PARTING WORDS “I have greatly enjoyed working with the players and coaches and feel I’ve helped to puttheclub­onamuch stronger footing over the past three years”

ALAN SOLOMONS

“Back in Australia we did not have a good season at all, we came last,” said Rasolea. “So one thing I have been telling the boys is to keep their heads up and keep going forwards. It is still early in the season and we have to make sure that we get things right in attack, defence and all our systems.”

“One thing I can tell you for sure is that it is way better here than at the team I was at in Super Rugby,” he added. “The way things are and the way we hold each other accountabl­e here is a lot better. Back when we were losing in Super Rugby, there was no accountabi­lity, there was no challengin­g. That was why week after week we were losing every game – everybody was trying to point the finger and getting frustrated by it.”

For Edinburgh’s long suffering supporters who have suffered disappoint­ment on top of disappoint­ment watching the team in recent seasons, patience may be wearing thin – but as one of a clutch of new players brought into the squad this summer with the aim of revitalisi­ng their back play, Rasolea says that the light at the end of the tunnel may be closer than we all think.

Rasolea gave a taster of what he can bring to the team’s attack when he came off the bench at half-time during their final pre-season match against Newcastle Falcons and made an immediate impact with his pace and power. He played the full 80 minutes and scored a try in the rain the following week away to Cardiff Blues, but was on the bench for the team’s next two matches against the Scarlets and Leinster, before being rested for last weekend’s defeat at Munster.

He should be back in the frame for tomorrow’s trip to take on Connacht. The champions have also had a slow start, and Rasolea reckons it is a golden opportunit­y for Edinburgh to kick-start their season. “I have spoken to Duncan Hodge, the backs coach [and now acting head coach], and he has the right mind-set in what he wants to bring into the team. It is just a case of making sure we develop on that so that it pans out at the weekend. I have only played a couple of games so far so I hope I can bring a lot more than I have,” he said.

 ??  ?? 0 Duncan Hodge steps up from his assistant role to become Edinburgh’s acting head coach after Alan Solomons, inset, quit following the club’s poor start to the season.
0 Duncan Hodge steps up from his assistant role to become Edinburgh’s acting head coach after Alan Solomons, inset, quit following the club’s poor start to the season.
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 ??  ?? 0 Junior Rasolea: Optimistic.
0 Junior Rasolea: Optimistic.

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