Hawke's Bay Today

White knight: Bulls hire veteran for rebuild

- Alex Shaw of RugbyPass.com

One of the more enigmatic and polarising figures in rugby union, South African coach Jake White is heading home to take the reins at the Bulls.

The Pretoria-based Super Rugby franchise have been perennial underachie­vers in recent seasons, with their fortunes having suffered since their narrow defeat to the Brumbies in the semifinal of the playoffs in 2013, with the Australian side in fact under White’s tutelage at the time.

Since then, the Bulls have finished bottom of the South African conference multiple times and their only visit back to the Super Rugby playoffs came last year, though they were swiftly dispatched by the Hurricanes in the quarter-finals. With the exception of that 2019 season, the Bulls have failed to finish higher than ninth on the overall log since 2013.

White will be leaving Japan, where he has been in charge of Toyota Verblitz, and as director of rugby will hope to be the catalyst that gets them moving back up the South African conference and into contention with the perennial contenders for the trophy.

It’s no easy challenge that lies in front of White, though, whose history in coaching is one of considerab­le success, albeit over generally short tenures. The Bulls have, for want of a better word, been gutted by player departures during the last year.

Up front, evergreen hooker Schalk Brits hung up his boots, second rows Lood de Jager, RG Snyman and Jason Jenkins all packed their bags for Europe or Japan, Jannes Kirsten and Hanro Liebenberg made their way to England and Duane Vermeulen headed east for another stint in the Top League.

In the back line, Handre´ Pollard made the move to Montpellie­r, while Jesse Kriel and Travis Ismaiel also departed for new challenges in different competitio­ns. Short-term replacemen­ts were recruited in the forms of Morne´ Steyn and Nafi Tuitavake, though the sheer weight of departures had the Bulls looking thin, or at least untested, in both the pack and back line heading into the 2020 season.

Those fears proved not to be unfounded, either, as the Bulls slumped to defeat in five of their six Super Rugby games this season before the Covid-19 outbreak brought suspension and a potential premature conclusion to the competitio­n.

That said, White does have a number of establishe­d stars to lean on and who can prove to be the foundation for the franchise’s attempts to rebuild.

Springboks Lizo Gqoboka and

Trevor Nyakane are in place in the front row, whilst Juandre Kruger brings experience and physicalit­y to an engine room that was shorn of plenty of star-power last season. In the back row, Marco van Staden feels on the cusp of truly breaking out as a standout internatio­nal player.

Embrose Papier is catalyst at nine, Burger Odendaal and Dylan Sage are effective options in the centres, and they are flanked by Cornal Hendricks and Rosko Specman on the wings. At full-back, Warrick Gelant is arguably the pick of South Africa’s options at the position when he is fully fit and in form.

Getting those players performing cohesively alongside one another is the initial challenge for White, while the other, far larger test comes in the form of building a squad with the quality of depth to push those players for their starting spots, as well as providing all-important injury and internatio­nal cover. In this area, White will have to really earn his pay cheque.

If there is a silver lining for White, it’s that other players are emerging at key decision-making positions such as Ross Braude (halfback) and Ethan Wentzel (first five-eighth).

Lock down potential starters at those positions and it is a big step towards sustained success on the pitch. Paarl Gim products Stravino Jacobs and Dawid Kellerman could offer incisive threats outside of them, too.

There are talents there for White to work with, certainly, though it’s not the abundance of prospects across all positions that some franchises can call upon, nor that the Bulls themselves enjoyed a few years ago when they were far more aggressive in their recruitmen­t of youngsters. The Varsity Cup and Currie Cup competitio­ns are going to have to be closely monitored if the veteran coach is to truly rebuild the Bulls and turn them into the preeminent franchise in South Africa.

He’ll need savvy recruitmen­t from those competitio­ns to put together a competitiv­e side in the short-term, something which will make integratin­g those talented youngsters smoother and better allow for a successful long-term vision for the franchise.

A silver lining to the current suspension of the season? White has plenty of time on his hands to sit down with his coaches, hours of player footage and an assortment of agents, and make sure that his plan for success in the coming years is as comprehens­ive and realistic as possible.

This article was originally published at www.RugbyPass.com

and is reprinted with permission.

 ?? Photo / Getty Images ?? Veteran coach Jake White has a job on his hands as the Bulls looks to drag themselves out of the Super Rugby mire.
Photo / Getty Images Veteran coach Jake White has a job on his hands as the Bulls looks to drag themselves out of the Super Rugby mire.

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