
Rugby must tackle its coaching respect issue after Milton Haig quits
This focus on high-performance coaching set-ups is a result of the surprise announcement on Wednesday that New Zealand Under-20 head coach Milton Haig, having steered the team to a Rugby Championship title a few weeks ago, has stepped down just days before the team is due to depart for the Junior World Championships in Italy.
Haig, an experienced coach who has strong provincial experience in New Zealand, was at the helm of Georgia at the 2015 and 2019 World Cups and has spent time with the Japanese club Suntory Sungoliath, said there were differences in opinion between him and his assistants about the team's style of rugby.
He obviously felt those different views were irreconcilable and that, if he didn't have the support of his fellow coaches (Jarrad Hoeata, Alex Robertson and Craig Dunlea), it would be best for the team – specifically the players – if he fell on his sword.
It was the honourable thing to do – a selfless act that demonstrated a recognition that ego and personal ambition can never be put ahead of the interests of the team.
But can the same be said of his assistants, who, based on the facts as they have been presented, didn't seem to recognise that they were there to support and facilitate Haig's strategic vision and not impose their own?
Milton Haig, when working with the US women's team. Photo / Getty Images
Haig's actions may have been honourable, but the longer-term ramifications of a head coach sacrificing himself to appease his assistants are potentially significant and dangerous for the elite game.
Whatever happened to sucking it up? To not liking something but doing it anyway because that's your job?
There are workplaces across the country where people won't agree with the strategy being pursued by the boss, or don't particularly like their management style, but they get on with doing what is required and requested because this is part and parcel of being an adult and beholden to uphold professional standards.
Rugby, to its credit, has tried to build collaborative coaching environments where assistants and specialists are encouraged to own their field, but perhaps there needs to be a re-evaluation in the wake of Haig's departure about how far down the track they want to go in this shift away from authoritarian regimes.
There's room for assistants to be empowered, but not so much that they forget the subordinate nature of their roles.
The best environments should operate with an element of professional friction, but not so much that the pushback undermines or disrespects the head coach's ultimate authority.
Haig's unexpected decision to quit is not quite the isolated act it may seem. It marks the third time in as many years that a New Zealand national team has had some kind of dramatic and sudden shift in its internal coaching dynamics.
In 2022, the Black Ferns were left scrambling to put a coaching team together only five months before the World Cup. Last year, All Blacks assistant Leon MacDonald quit after just five tests.
MacDonald's departure was explained as a lack of compatibility between him and head coach Scott Robertson. Leaving aside the question of why this discovery wasn't made earlier, when they worked together at the Crusaders, it does suggest that there is a creeping problem of people thinking that their ambition to be a head coach should be catered for in any role they take.
Something seems wrong with the wider culture – that there has been a failure to manage expectations, define boundaries and instil within all those entering the elite coaching ranks that teams need not only a clear hierarchy, but for that hierarchy to be recognised, respected and understood.
New Zealand's great strength in previous eras was the ability of high-performance coaching teams to be able to disagree but commit.
Between 2004 and 2011, when the three heavyweight figures of Graham Henry, Steve Hansen and Wayne Smith coached the All Blacks, the latter two didn't always agree with what the former was trying to achieve or the way he wanted them to do it, but they knew and respected that what they felt was ultimately not important.
It was Henry's vision they were there to implement, not their own. Maybe now that a generation of Millennials is starting to win high-performance roles, that same ingrained respect for the hierarchy isn't there.
Someone needs to get on top of this and restore order before every national coaching team is undermined or disrupted by the chaos that unfolds when there is confusion about who is in charge.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

NZ Herald
13 hours ago
- NZ Herald
All Black Shannon Frizell eyes Rugby World Cup return alongside Richie Mo'unga
Richie Mo'unga might not be the only All Black returning to New Zealand next year to target a place in the World Cup squad, with another former influential figure likely to move home. Mo'unga is expected to return home next year after playing a third season for Japanese side Toshiba.

RNZ News
13 hours ago
- RNZ News
Kumeū rugby field destroyed by burn-outs
The damage caused to the rugby field at Kumeū. Photo: Supplied A 19-year-old man has been arrested after burn-outs destroyed a rugby field in Kumeū. The Kumeū Rugby Club fields were found torn up on Saturday morning, covered in tyre marks. Police later identified a vehicle of interest after help from the public and arrested the car's owner. The Hobsonville teen has had his car impounded and been charged with intentional damage and other driving offences. He will appear in the Waitakere District Court at an unconfirmed date. Sergeant Graham Bennett said locals found the damage on Sunday morning. "A furore ensued on the community grapevines given a prized community asset had been damaged. "Information was quickly passed onto police which was followed up and a vehicle of interest was identified. Bennett thanked the members of the public who supplied the information. "It's a reminder about consequences, and we will not tolerate this behaviour in the community given the risks posed and damage created." Sign up for Ngā Pitopito Kōrero , a daily newsletter curated by our editors and delivered straight to your inbox every weekday.

1News
16 hours ago
- 1News
More than 1000 former rugby players join concussion lawsuit
The number of former rugby players taking legal action against sports governing bodies on claims they suffered brain injuries during their careers has grown to more than 1000, a British law firm said overnight. Rylands Garth, based in London, said more than 520 ex-players from rugby union and rugby league joined the lawsuit by Friday last week, which was the deadline for new applicants set by a court ahead of a hearing in July and before the case potentially goes to trial next year. It takes the total number of players who are part of the lawsuit to approximately 1100, Rylands Garth said in a statement. The former players contend, according to Rylands Garth, that "rugby governing bodies failed to take reasonable action to protect them from the impacts of concussive and sub-concussive blows during their playing careers, despite knowing of the risks". Claimants are seeking compensation from World Rugby, the English Rugby Football Union and Welsh Rugby Union — governing bodies in 15-a-side rugby — and the English Rugby Football League and British Amateur Rugby League Association — from 13-a-side rugby league — for lost earnings, medical bills and care costs associated with their injuries, the firm said. ADVERTISEMENT "Rylands Garth is also calling for urgent and substantive reform of the game to better protect the safety of current and future players — including the creation of an independent brain health ombudsman for the sport," it said. Among those to have previously joined the class action was World Cup-winning former England hooker Steve Thompson, former New Zealand prop Carl Hayman and former Wales flanker Alix Popham. "This surge in claimants exposes the deep-rooted issues in rugby," Rylands Garth said, adding: "Players continue to play almost all-year round, with many elite players soon to embark on extremely physical summer tours across the rugby world. We will continue to fight for justice for those who gave so much to the game." In a joint statement issued by World Rugby, the RFU and the WRU, the governing bodies said they "are aware of the latest update shared by the claimants' legal representatives with the final number of claimants." "We now await full details of their diagnosis and the claims being made. Our thoughts are with any former player facing challenges. "Across the game, we continue to build on a strong foundation of world-leading initiatives designed to make rugby union as safe as possible." That includes "smart mouthguard technology in the elite game, trials of lower tackle height in the community game, and the continued rollout of brain health services to support former players". ADVERTISEMENT Rylands Garth said it also represents approximately 130 former football players who are taking similar legal action against soccer governing bodies. The next court hearing for the soccer case is due on June 26.