The Star Late Edition

Super Mario has Pumas firing

- MIKE GREENAWAY

LAST YEAR, Wallabies coach Michael Cheika’s emotionall­y-charged farewell to his forwards coach, Mario Ledesma, said it all about the stature and respect the Argentinea­n enjoys in the upper reaches of rugby’s hierarchy.

Cheika had watched the former Puma hooker transform his wobbly scrum in time for the 2015 World Cup in England, where the Wallabies’ rock solid set-piece was a novel cornerston­e of their advance to the final.

“It is not easy to let you go, you have been awesome for us but I understand how passionate you are about your country and our loss is Argentinea­n rugby’s gain,” Cheika told Ladesma when he chose not to renew his contract with the Wallabies and return to his native country.

Ladesma has already, by some margin, fulfilled Cheika’s prophecy that rugby in Argentina would be boosted by the “the scrum doctor”, as he is reverently known.

This year, having coached the Jaguares to the play-offs for the first time, the 45-year-old was an unanimous choice to step in as Pumas coach when Daniel Hourcade fell on his sword in June. It was really a case of Hobson’s Choice for Hourcade after a sorry Pumas team lost at home in two Tests against a depleted Wales team and then heavily lost to a second-string Scottish team.

Under Hourcade, since finishing fourth at the last Rugby World Cup, the Pumas had won six Tests and lost 22, including all six in the Rugby Championsh­ip last season. In the June Tests, the same players that excelled under Ladesma seemed disinteres­ted under Hourcade. Clearly they were making a statement that they wanted Super Mario, as the fans lovingly refer to him, to take over the national team.

It did not take Ladesma long to sort out the underperfo­rming Jaguares this season. They started the season poorly, losing three of their first four games but then Ladesma’s magic began to work and they went unbeaten in four matches in Australia and New Zealand, where they beat the Blues and the Chiefs, and they also went unbeaten against South African opposition in Buenos Aires.

How has Ladesma done it? Firstly, he is a national hero in Argentina and is hugely respected and adored for his unstinting contributi­on to the Pumas over an internatio­nal career that earned him 84 caps between 1996 to 2011. In any other major rugby country he would have earned well over a 100 caps but for much of the profession­al era, Argentina played half of the average number of Tests of the other top countries.

An obvious priority for the scrum doctor was to treat the Jaguares’ ailing scrum. It seems inconceiva­ble that this aspect of the Argentinea­n game had fallen into a state of disrepair given that the famed “bajada” scrum technique was the principal weapon of the Pumas for decades.

The Jaguares scrum advanced for the first time in three years of Super Rugby, and another area of notable improvemen­t was their discipline.

“In our rugby there is sometimes a conflict between the amateur spirit and the profession­al side of the game,” he said. “So we have been working on that and also learning how to be the best profession­als we can be by working harder to transcend ourselves.”

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