The New Zealand Herald

Why the chump Chiefs need a new coach

- Gregor Paul

Languishin­g at the foot of the New Zealand conference and below even the hapless Reds, the Chiefs are paying the price of making a poor coaching appointmen­t.

When speculatio­n mounted in late 2016 that the Chiefs were lining up Colin Cooper to take over from Dave Rennie, it was easy to dismiss as unlikely to be true.

Easy, because it lacked ambition. It was the equivalent of picking vanilla in an ice-cream parlour with exotic and bold flavours.

It reeked of the Chiefs putting a safe pair of hands at the helm at the end of a season which had seen the club’s reputation all but destroyed following their infamous post-season celebratio­ns.

Rennie had told the board in August 2016 that 2017 would be his last season.

It gave the Chiefs an extended period to find his successor but when

neither Warren Gatland nor Joe Schmidt were remotely tempted, an element of panic seemingly set in.

The club’s then chief executive Andrew Flexman had handled things extraordin­arily poorly in the early stages of the Stripperga­te scandal when he called into question the integrity of the complainan­t and then stropped off from a media scrum as if he couldn’t understand why so much fuss was being made of a little high jinks.

He, and no doubt other key figures at the club, were feeling under all sorts of pressure late in 2016 and Cooper rode in like the white knight he wanted to be, offering staid, sensible decision-making and a calm voice.

Vanilla suddenly looked good. Cooper is a genuinely credible figure, widely respected and admired for his years of service.

At 60, he’s by some distance the oldest New Zealand head coach in Super Rugby and it was his maturity, reliabilit­y and steadiness that drew the Chiefs to him.

But what looks to have not been asked during the appointmen­t process is whether Cooper could bring the Chiefs a title.

Yes, he could bring stability and reassuranc­e. Yes, he could bring Super Rugby experience, and yes, he could ensure discipline would be good on and off the field.

What about a title, though? Did anyone involved in the appointmen­t process really consider that question with the depth and seriousnes­s it deserved?

If they did and concluded the answer was yes, Cooper could turn the Chiefs back into champions, then it would be intriguing to know how that conclusion was reached.

He had eight seasons as head coach of the Hurricanes, who for much of his tenure had an incredible array of talent, and the closest he got was making the final in 2006.

So with the greatest respect to Cooper, a rugby man to his core, a likeable and affable character who is loyal, determined, knowledgea­ble and quaintly but not overly oldschool, there is nothing in his history that says he’s ready or capable of taking a Super Rugby team to a title.

More likely, the Chiefs’ appointmen­t team were never focused on success, or if they were, they considered it to be stabilisin­g the club and keeping it scandal free rather than winning titles.

That’s why they are just one place ahead of the Sunwolves and losing touch with the other New Zealand clubs, all of whom have coaching teams they can justly argue have the pedigree to bring titles.

Presumably the Chiefs franchise realise they are not going to win Super Rugby in 2019.

But what about 2020? Can they see things changing so radically next year that they are going to be 14 places higher?

What evidence do they have that such a turnaround is possible?

They made an appointmen­t that was understand­able in 2016 but it has run its course, ceased to fit the club’s needs, and to double down and give Cooper the third year of his contract would be not so much unjustifia­ble as unforgivab­le.

Profession­al sport has to be driven by more inspiring values than chasing stability. The Chiefs need a new coach and a new aspiration.

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