‘Coaching by committee’ fires Harlequins revival following Gustard’s exit
➤ Club have been in no rush to find new director of rugby, but have reaped the rewards of specialists in each department
On Jan 20, Harlequins were floundering in seventh place in the Gallagher Premiership and had won just two of their eight matches. A week earlier, Phil Gustard – the director of rugby in all but name – had been sacked.
Eight games on, something curious has happened; Harlequins have started winning again – and winning well. They now sit third: no team in the league have scored more points this season; or made more clean breaks and turnovers; and only Exeter have scored more tries.
Most curious of all, however, is that the club have achieved this without replacing Gustard – not yet, anyway. When the ex-saracens and England coach departed, first-team responsibilities were bestowed upon former half-backs Nick Evans and Charlie Mulchrone, who have looked after the backs, while former Wales tighthead Adam Jones and former Ireland hooker Jerry Flannery have continued with their scrum and line-out duties, with the latter also taking on responsibility for defence.
Harlequins have opted to discard a hierarchical coaching structure with an omnipotent senior individual in favour of a committee. Billy Millard, the club’s rugby general manager, has admittedly been keeping more of an eye on the first team than usual since Gustard’s departure – Millard’s usual role involves overseeing all of the club’s rugby operation, including the development, women’s and academy sides – but, on the whole, the Fantastic Four of Evans, Mulchrone, Flannery and Jones have been left to crack on. And crack on they have.
“We are a different team now, playing with a lot more confidence,” says Jones. “The workload has upped a bit and it’s been challenging – which is great.
We are all trying to share the workload as much as possible.
“Fla [Jerry Flannery] is the most experienced [coach], having worked under Rassie Erasmus. But, as a coaching group, we all played to a pretty high standard. While it doesn’t necessarily transfer, we have been able to draw on our playing experiences. It’s working well at the moment and the boys are playing well.”
One of those “boys playing well” is club captain Stephan
Lewies – “a hard-nosed South African who says it how it is”, says Jones. So well, in fact, that the club rewarded him this week with a new long-term contract.
No one is better placed than Lewies to judge the work of Quins’ quartet of coaches. “A huge amount of credit has to go to [them] for stepping up,” Lewies says. “Not a lot of teams would have given us a chance, so we only had one way to go. We spoke about it and we came out fighting. We haven’t changed much in terms of style from anything we did previously. It was just about sharpening that, growing closer as a group of players and playing for each other.”
Are there more disagreements when the team is effectively being run by committee? Not according to Lewies. “Obviously, they debate it in their group and see what would work better against a particular opposition. There’s Billy adding value, too. And he brings a differing perspective.”
The club are still hunting for a senior coach to lead them, with Millard due to return to his more general post. What role the incoming
‘Obviously, they debate it in their group and see what would work better against the opposition’
body plays – head coach or a more powerful director of rugby – remains to be defined.
Considering the acclaim that the four-part band have received, though, would introducing an outsider be unwise? Lewies is unsure.
“The main thing for a rugby club is to get results on the pitch, and we are doing that,” he says. “The question is whether we can keep doing it and for how long. I’m not sure anyone could say now that they knew the answer. Hindsight is always easiest, so probably in the future we’ll know which call was best, but for now I don’t have an answer.”
While Lewies struggles to predict the future, Jones grapples with rationalising the present. Since Gustard, a man who was “always great” to Jones, upped sticks, the former Lions prop has not quite been able to explain the provenance of Quins’ resurgence – except “hard work”.
“It’s a weird one,” Jones says, “but look at football, for example, where they would usually bring someone like Sam Allardyce in and then go on a run. We haven’t quite done that yet, I’m not sure if Sam knows much about rugby, but the results speak for themselves.”