Sunday Times

Saru cuts it fine with Coetzee appointmen­t

- CRAIG RAY

NUMBER ONE: Kobelco Steelers manager Allister Coetzee seems set to be named as Springbok coach ALLISTER Coetzee is set to be named as the 13th post-isolation Springbok coach on April 1, just nine weeks before the team’s first assignment of 2016, giving him hardly any time to prepare.

After months of wrangling at the South African Rugby Union (Saru), the issue of the Bok coach will finally come to a head at its next general council gathering, scheduled for that date.

Normally, at this time of year, the Bok coach would have attended several Six Nations matches to have a close look at June’s opposition (in this case Ireland) and also held several one-on-one conversati­ons and interactio­ns with players he deems vital to his vision.

Formal meetings with players about their shortcomin­gs and what the national coach is looking for them to improve or persist with would be the norm. None of that is currently happening and none will for another three weeks at least.

Saru’s employees have been distracted over the past two months due to constant media scrutiny of chief executive Jurie Roux over alleged financial irregulari­ties when he was chairman of the Maties Rugby Club from 2002-2010. He is await- ing a court date to defend a R37million civil action against him.

Furthermor­e, a looming leadership battle between the 14 union presidents and the executive council has also been unsettling.

For most big decisions these bodies and individual­s have to work in sync to prepare the groundwork before resolution­s can be ratified. The distractio­ns have at times paralysed the organisati­on and the net result is that the most important rugby decision of the year — the identity of a new Bok coach — has been relegated for less urgent matters.

Some of the 14 union presidents don’t favour Coetzee’s conservati­ve playing style. But instead of thrashing out those difference­s and debating Coetzee’s merits, the presidents have been engaged on personal leadership battles with Saru’s exco.

But behind the scenes the Sunday Times has learnt that through Bok team manager Ian Schwartz, logistics manager Charles Wessels and rugby department general manager Rassie Erasmus, a schedule has been drawn up.

Springbok training camps have been set for late April while player monitoring is happening through the rugby department and Mobi Unit.

Coetzee is understood to be the only suitable candidate for a post that needs to fulfil three central requiremen­ts.

The new coach must have a good track record in the upper reaches of the game, which Coetzee has considerin­g he took the Stormers to the play-offs four times in six seasons in charge. He was also Bok assistant coach when they won the 2007 World Cup in France.

The next coach has to have a strong transforma­tion track record. That rules out foreignbas­ed coaches and every Super Rugby coach over the past five years barring Coetzee. He regularly fielded seven or more black players in his Stormers squads between 2010-2015.

Thirdly, he must have the gravitas and credibilit­y to present the Boks in a positive light.

Coetzee has received backing from several quarters, most notably respected coach Brendan Venter.

Coetzee is understood to be the only suitable candidate for a post The next coach has to have a strong transforma­tion track record

“If you ask around people will say Allister hasn’t had any success as a coach,” Venter said. “But he has been very successful because his teams were always in the mix.

“Only four teams will make the semifinals, which is in the top 20%-25%. That’s a success. But to win titles, you need a lot of luck.

“I’ve spoken to leading coaches in various sports around the world, and they all say that their job is to get the team to the final four [or the play-offs] because that gives you a chance.

“If you’re bottom of the log, then you’re not successful.”

 ?? Picture: GALLO IMAGES ??
Picture: GALLO IMAGES

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