Cotter’s payday puts coaches on a par with stars
By Gregor Paul
Montpellier, by offering Vern Cotter a reported package worth $1.6 million a year, may have begun a global remuneration shift which will see coaches usurp players in the payment stakes.
Cotter, the former Bay of Plenty coach, was headhunted by the ambitious Montpellier club this year when Scotland decided not to renew the Kiwi’s contract.
According to reports in France, Cotter is being paid around €1 million a year, making him the best paid coach in the world and financially as well looked after as the likes of Daniel Carter, Charles Piutau and Ma’a Nonu, who are thought to be among the highest paid players in the world.
While Cotter’s package reflects the enormous budgets within the French Top 14, it also signals that there is a growing recognition within rugby circles that coaches have become the new stars of the game.
It is now increasingly accepted that the difference between the top teams is not typically the quality of their players — although that is relevant — but the ability of the coaching group to harness and direct the team. And even then, it is not so much technical coaching where the real currency lies, it is in Former All Black Sean Fitzpatrick
the tactical application and general well-being and psychological management of the team that matters most.
The best coaches can have huge impacts. Steve Hansen inherited a world champion All Blacks team and yet who would say he didn’t have an immediate influence in making them better? There’s been no single quality that he’s brought to drive the team to a higher level, but his true value can be summed up in saying he’s kept the squad harmonious, focused, driven and absolutely certain about what they are trying to achieve.
The same could be said of Joe Schmidt with Ireland. The Irish have been on the rise for the past decade. Their booming Celtic tiger economy has flooded the game with a bit of cash which allowed Ireland to vastly improve the respective strengths of their provinces.
Between 2007 and 2012, they were threatening to emerge from a nearly side to a genuine contender, but only made the breakthrough when they installed Schmidt as coach. Since he arrived, Ireland have become more resilient, creative and composed. Their depth has increased, and for the first time in 111 years, they defeated the All Blacks last year.
Schmidt has made a huge difference, as has Eddie Jones with England. He arrived in early 2016 after England had bombed at their own World Cup and parted company with previous coach Stuart Lancaster. Jones, experienced, smart, innovative and edgy, has turned England into the sort of force everyone feared they could be.
There’s no surprise that the best teams in the world have the best coaches.