Article is either a wind up, or the editor is drunk.Read an article in the Courier Mail today about Ewen McKenzie being the #1 choice to coach the All Blacks if Henry doesn't win the World cup.
Kiwis employing a Aussie coach? Shit, we are more like to see a former NSWelshman Victorian coaching the Reds and a Queenslander good ole New South Wales boy coaching the Tahs before this happens! oh wait....
why would the super 15 championship winning coach want to lower himself to coach a poxy little island in the south pacific
edit: two poxy little islands
I think there may be some fire where there is this gossipy 'Link to coach ABs' smoke...
...From multiple sources, I do not believe Link has been 'promised' in any form the Wallabies' coaching position in 2014.
Somewhere, I have to believe Link is seething over the little public recognition he has been given outside the QRU and the regular praising of Deans by his ARU employers despite very limited hard results actually delivered, plus the still-not-clearly-explained contract extension to late 2013. I don't think Link has finally signed his contract extension with the QRU, and it would not surprise me one bit if he was quietly letting it be known he'd consider offers outside Australia. After all, aside from Henry, what other elite rugby coach anywhere has achieved as much in the last 5 years in objective, measurable terms? Signing Link would be coup for almost any elite rugby team, anywhere.
Article is either a wind up, or the editor is drunk.
John Kirwan eyes All Black coaches job
DUNCAN JOHNSTONE Last updated 05:00 13/09/2011
Auckland raised John Kirwan makes no secret of the fact that he wants to coach New Zealand.
But the man who set the standards as a modern wing in the black jersey is realistic about his chances of getting that job - for the moment.
"If they called me I would certainly say yes. But I don't think the phone is going to ring," the 46-year-old said when reminded that the All Blacks position was open for applications and he is off contract in December.
"I'm a coach .. I want to be the best that I can be and that's the best job in the world. That would be the proudest moment in my life.
"But at this stage I'm concentrating on playing in this league. I've got to get a team ready for a big challenge. My focus is the World Cup."
And he's doing a damn fine job. Japan were one of the upstarts of the opening weekend, pushing France to the extreme and winning plenty of fans in the process. Now they have set their sights on the All Blacks in Hamilton.
"Competing with a top-five side like France gives us great confidence. What we need to do is back that up week after week and keep playing the game that suits us and keep that level of passion in there as well. I think the courage and commitment of our guys was fantastic. But we need to do that for 80 minutes."
Kirwan is a proud All Black who has embraced the Japanese game and is passionate about the potential of rugby in Asia. He coached at club level in Japan from 1999 to 2001 and is now in his fifth year with the national team on the back of an apprenticeship with the Blues and four years with the Italian national side.
He has strongly advocated Japanese inclusion in an expanded Super Rugby competition and believes a better pathway needs to be found for the Brave Blossoms in the test scene.
"It is really important that we have an even game," he says of world rugby. "The IRB have done a great job with funding for the Pacific Nations Cup and we have got tournaments now that we are involved in that are making us better. The next challenge is a path for us to the Tri-Nations and for some of the second-tier unions in Europe, a pathway to the Six Nations. That would give us the competition... the future is definitely tournaments for the second-tier nations."
That would help Japanese players gain the mental toughness needed to nail opportunities like the one they let slip against France where the biggest upset in World Cup history went begging.
Before the tournament, Kirwan was adamant Japan could bring a special brand of rugby to New Zealand. He was thrilled they were able to exhibit some of that against France and equally delighted in the appreciation shown to his side by the big crowd at Albany and by others in subsequent days.
"This is the home of rugby and everyone knows the game. That's why it's so nice for me to get some compliments about the team. They knew that we played well... and that we missed an opportunity."
Friday is another opportunity but a bigger challenge - on and off the field. This will be a game where Kirwan's team are judged by non-rugby people in Japan because the All Blacks are held in such high esteem.
"So it's important that we show the same courage we did last week. We are preparing like we did against France. We have a game plan and we are going to try to attack the All Blacks where we think we have seen some weaknesses.
''You can't give the ball to the All Blacks; you can't give them any breathing space. But it's important that we implement some of our stuff as well."
I'd suggest those have more to do with the expansion of Super Rugby and the success of the Reds.For the record though at the moment I'm more than happy to see RD in top job..I think he's done a great job in building depth & reigniting interest in the code..
If he was to be so Machiavellian, you'd think he'd come up with a plausible story.I don't think Link has finally signed his contract extension with the QRU, and it would not surprise me one bit if he was quietly letting it be known he'd consider offers outside Australia.
I don't know why that sheltered workshop that is the NZRU has permitted those travesties, but even they aren't that daft to select johnny foreigner to coach the All Blacks.but the nzru arent adverse to the idea of foreign coaches - becuase nuci coaches auckland and phil mooney coached otago
I get it that the siege mentality is an essential part of the Queensland spirit, but do you really think that Link is seething over a lack of public recognition outside the Reds' home state?
I think he received plenty of accolades from everywhere in the rugby community. Plenty of Waratahs fans, including myself, hold him in very high regard for what he achieved in Sydney previously and were sad to see him go. He's been sensational for the Reds and Australian rugby in general. How often do you hear people say "The Tahs/Rebels/Brumbies/Force are my team, but I love to watch the Reds"? (Rhetorical question by the way - the answer is often). And whilst he'ss undoubtedly achieved a lot with the Reds, I think he'd give some credit to Phil Mooney for the some of his recruitment decisions also.
So you think there might be something to the gossip about coaching NZ? I'm pretty sure it wouldn't be coming from NZ, so are you suggesting Angry Link has been putting his name out there? I strongly doubt it. Of course he wouldn't have been promised the Wallabies in 2014 - why on earth would the ARU arrange a job like that 3 years into the future?