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Rugby must tackle its coaching respect issue after Milton Haig quits
Rugby must tackle its coaching respect issue after Milton Haig quits

NZ Herald

time6 days ago

  • Sport
  • NZ Herald

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.

Tom Savage: I am more nervous about doing the haka than playing Super Rugby
Tom Savage: I am more nervous about doing the haka than playing Super Rugby

Telegraph

time25-03-2025

  • Entertainment
  • Telegraph

Tom Savage: I am more nervous about doing the haka than playing Super Rugby

Tom Savage is trying to explain a career trajectory that resembles something close to the 1990s TV Show Quantum Leap where the main character, Sam Beckett, starts each episode occupying a stranger's body. For eight years, it was perfectly normal as he made nearly 200 appearances for Gloucester in the second row. Then, as Savage says, it gets 'a bit funky' as he swapped Kingsholm for Suntory Sungoliath in Japan and now the 35-year-old Londoner finds himself captaining Moana Pasifika, a team designed for players of Pacific Island heritage, in Super Rugby. 'I am probably in as much disbelief as anyone that I've ended up here,' Savage says. 'I still don't really know how it all happened, but it is the coolest thing that ever happened to me.' Savage is the only European player at Moana Pasifika but it is a mark of his popularity that he took over the captaincy from injured New Zealand flanker Ardie Savea in the defeat by the Chiefs last weekend. While much of the novelty of playing with and against All Blacks on a weekly basis has started to dissipate for Savage, who is in his second season at Moana, the prospect of performing the club's cultural hakas, the Tau Moana and Fa'avae, still fills him with terror. 'I'm more nervous about both of those than I am about any aspect of the game,' Savage says. 'In this team, you're either from the Pacific Islands, or you've been born and raised in New Zealand, and they have been doing it from day dot. My eldest is now five years old, and she's already doing some form of haka at school. 'I think being a bit older now, I don't get embarrassed. I'm prepared just to put the work in. I'm not going to be as good as those boys at it. If you watch me, I might be a beat or two out and I might get the odd action wrong, but just as long as I'm trying as hard as I can I don't think anyone's going to have any issues with that. It is awesome to be a part of, but it is incredibly surreal.' To rewind slightly, Savage was picked up by Gloucester in 2011 while playing for Hartpury University. He loved playing for the Cherry and Whites and never envisioned representing another club but then there was a change of coaching staff and a new contract was slow in materialising in 2018. His agent then told him Suntory Sungoliath were in the market for a second row of his build, which led to some frantic Googling. A week later, he had signed. Savage would spend four years in Japan, where both his children were born, although he never fully got to grips with the cultural differences. 'I attacked the languages as hard as I possibly could,' he says. 'I was by no means fluent, but I got to what I call cafe and supermarket Japanese. I could hold my own in a restaurant. 'I often say, with Japan, there's foreign countries and then there's foreign countries. Everything is so different there. A lot of it in a really good way. You can leave your wallet and phone on a table, walk away and it would still be there hours later. But then when my wife gave birth they don't actually have pain relief in the hospitals. There's not even gas and air, so my wife just breathed her way through it.' After four seasons, Savage was again looking for a new challenge and asked his agent if there was anything going in Super Rugby. 'Like many people my age back home, I think I first fell in love with rugby watching Super Rugby on Saturday mornings,' Savage says. The answer came back that Moana Pasifika, then in their second season, were interested and so Savage was packing his bags for Auckland. 'They were having a bit of a changeover around the squad and staff and were trying to build their way up a little bit. They were looking for someone like myself, an experienced, professional guy in that lock space, and sort of my name fitted the bill. That's how it all came about, really. 'The demographic of the team is a lot of Samoan and Tongan players, but there's Fijians and guys from Cook Islands and Niue. And then there's me. That is the make-up of the team. Tana Umaga, the head coach, is trying to build an identity that we are unapologetically Pacific Islanders.' It did not take long for the team to accept Savage, so much so that the Tongan contingent have tried to claim him as 'Tomasi'. 'We work on our cultural roots on a daily basis,' Savage says. 'These guys are playing for where they're from, which is a super powerful thing, but, fundamentally, we are still a rugby team and anything that was new or different to me very much just became the norm after a week or two. I think anytime you join a rugby team the most important thing is that you buy into everything that is put in front of you and work your socks off. That's what I did and will keep trying to do.'

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