RedsHappy
Tony Shaw (54)
Poor development pathways are a major issue and it's not only players, it's the coaches who aren't being developed.
Of the 5 professional coaches in the Australian system we currently have 4 who learnt their trade overseas; Penney (NZ), Rennie (NZ), Thorn (NZ) and Dave Wessels (SA). That's 80% to 20%.
If we add the Force's Tim Sampson it's 2 out of 6 who've come through Australia or 33% to 66%.
We're simply not producing either players or coaches of sufficient quality in sufficient quantity to be at the very top of international rugby.
Even when we look at some of our better players in recent times we have players who can't pass both ways, can't defend in the line in their playing position and can't kick when they are playing in positions where this has always been considered a core skill. All of these guys have been in the Aust pro development system since their teens.
100% and if anything it's the paucity of the coaching development pathways that is the even bigger problem. The jury is well and truly in - rugby is a code whose playing standards and player skill development are deeply reliant on competent coaching both technical and in terms of holistic team development and preparedness.
In fact, IMO it can be argued that in Australian rugby, even today, we have an effective surplus of talented rugby players in relation to the calibre and experience of the coaches required to further guide and develop them. This fact has led to major problems of our global team competitiveness and squad depths. This issue may in fact be our biggest single 'hidden from plain sight' core code-wide problem.