The Scotsman

Title triumph in his first season is only acceptable target for Rennie

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New Glasgow head coach Dave Rennie has made it clear that the ambition for his maiden season with the club is nothing less than lifting the first-ever Guinness Pro14 championsh­ip title.

When asked what he would term as a success in the campaign, which gets under way for the Warriors on Saturday, the Kiwi’s reply was a succinct one. “Winning it,” he said.

The statement is in stark contrast to his counterpar­t at Edinburgh, Richard Cockerill, who has played down expectatio­ns in what is also his first taste of a competitio­n which has been expanded to include South African sides Cheetahs and Southern Kings.

While Cockerill has talked about “under promising and over delivering” and that a bottom-four club has no business in expecting a play-off spot, Rennie is starting from a much stronger base as he inherits a club which has been regular contenders, firstly under Sean Lineen and then current Scotland boss Gregor Townsend who led Glasgow to the Pro12 trophy in 2015.

In the last couple of seasons there has been a drop off, with a semi-final defeat by Connacht – who host Glasgow in Galway on Saturday – and a failure to reach the knockout stages last season.

“It’s a lot about growing the club,” continued the 53-year-old former Waikato Chiefs coach. “Gregor has done a great job and they only struggled last year when they had a lot of internatio­nal players out.

“We have a job to build more depth so we have brought in a handful of guys who can’t play for Scotland in that period.

“In the end we have huge aspiration­s. I don’t want these boys thinking fourth is good enough. You work hard, try to get to the play-offs, and once there you are two or three weeks from winning a title.

“It’s a long way off but we won’t be talking about anything other than winning the title.

“We want the squad to be better. We want to develop more Scottish internatio­nals and bring good kids through. But if we do all that and finish sixth you can’t call that successful.

“We have to have high aspiration­s and work hard to achieve them. We have to set the bar high and then work hard to achieve that.

“We will need to tick some boxes along the way. Whether it is realistic or not doesn’t matter, but you don’t have to be the best team in the competitio­n to win it, you just have to be the best team at the end.”

The rugby gods have thrown up a quirky coincidenc­e as Rennie’s first competitiv­e match at the Glasgow helm sees him lock horns with a man who, up until a month or so ago, was one of his assistants.

Kieran Keane was the Chiefs attack coach and is now the Connacht chief, having replaced Pat Lam, who is now at Bristol.

“He has been around a long time. He’s a smart rugby man,” said Rennie of Keane. “He has a positive mindset about how to play. Pat’s team attacked from everywhere but with KK they’ll kick a lot more from the defensive end. He will have things up his sleeve. Ironic isn’t it that we should be catching up in round one?”

The presence of the South African sides brings another bit of familiarit­y for a man who has a brilliant record in Super Rugby. Rennie made it clear that he feels the southern hemisphere competitio­n has become a bit convoluted and lopsided with its multi-conference system.

The Guinness Pro14 has now made moves toward that, but the Kiwi is re-assured that the system in place for the coming season is a viable one.

“It’s still better than the competitio­n I have come from,” was his assessment. “You still play everyone, even if it is not everyone twice. The pools look pretty even so you just get on with it, it is as it is.

“We will play a handful of games where we are going to be missing some internatio­nal players and that is going to be a different challenge for me to coach compared with where I have come from.

“But I knew what I was coming into when I signed the papers.”

Glasgow’s first long-haul trip will be to Bloemfonte­in in

0 Glasgow Warriors head coach Dave Rennie, in training at Scotstoun yesterday, has told his players early October to face the Cheetahs. “Super Rugby was a really good format and then they tried to make it more global and so on,” said Rennie.

“Because of that, it has increased the amount of travel and the amount of time away from home so that it has become an unbalanced competitio­n.

“The New Zealand pool was very tough but the Australian one was not and you have a situation where some South African teams didn’t play the Kiwis at all in the round robin sotheycoul­dgoontorea­chthe quarter-finals and semi-finals.

“I would imagine the Pro14 group have looked at that and come up with a competitio­n that will avoid that sort of criticism.” Following years of what could generously be called “under-achievemen­t” and more brutally termed a “systemic malaise” it is no secret that this is a crunch season for Edinburgh as they pin their hopes on new coach Richard Cockerill righting the ship.

Within the wider project it is shaping up to be a vital season for certain individual­s too, including stand-off Duncan Weir, as he looks to push for a return to the Test team. Now 26 and with 27 caps to his name, Weir has endured a testing year after his move to Edinburgh from Glasgow in a bid to let him shine out of the shadow of Finn Russell, who had eclipsed him as the nation’s undisputed No 1 playmaker.

A broken jaw was the worst possible start to his time at the capital club and there were difficult periods later in the season when he was dropped from the starting line-up.

Weir is now looking forward to a fresh start in the upcoming campaign, which starts at Cardiff on Friday

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 ??  ?? 0 Connacht coach Kieran Keane worked under Rennie at Chiefs.
0 Connacht coach Kieran Keane worked under Rennie at Chiefs.

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