http://www.theaustralian.com.au/spo...or-ewen-mckenzie/story-e6frg7o6-1226375575483
Poaching ideas, not players, on menu for Ewen McKenzie
- BY:BRENT READ
- From:The Australian
- May 31, 2012 12:00AM
EWEN McKenzie believes the days of rugby union poaching high-profile league players are over. Ideas, however, are still fair game.
South Sydney coach Michael Maguire meets with QLD Reds coach Ewen McKenzie at Redfern Oval. Picture: Gregg PorteousSource: The Daily Telegraph
So, over lunch at Redfern Oval yesterday, the Queensland Reds coach and his South Sydney counterpart Michael Maguire exchanged thoughts on their respective clubs, codes and cultures.
For both, it maintained a long tradition of thinking laterally in search of improvement. In Maguire's case, he counts Manchester United's Alex Ferguson among the brains he picked during his time as coach of Wigan in the English Super League.
Even now, he trades text messages with the world's most famous football coach. McKenzie may not boast Ferguson's profile, but he shares a history of churning out successful sporting teams.
"That's what you do when you are in the coaching business," McKenzie said.
Maguire added: "I got introduced to him through a mutual friend, and obviously it's great to have a coach of his calibre willing to share a few moments with what he's done over his career and how he's developed Queensland rugby union."The team culture is in common. You can talk to other coaches about how you influence that."
"I'm always open to those great coaches. I was lucky overseas to have a chat with Alex Ferguson. I think you can always learn lessons from everyone who has done it in front of you.
"As a young coach, I'm willing to listen and learn and take some good things out of those coaches."
All that listening and learning is paying dividends for Souths. The Rabbitohs have won their past four games and will travel to ANZ Stadium for Saturday night's game against Canterbury in fourth place.
"It's an important game and a big game," Maguire said.
"The Dogs are going along really well at the moment.
"We need to make sure we're right on our game because every time you play the Dogs, it's always tough."
McKenzie likes what he sees. It's hard not to. As he sat in the Redfern Oval cafe, a stream of rugby league talent walked in and out, among them Greg Inglis and Dave Taylor.
McKenzie was involved in the last great raid on rugby league, when Wendell Sailor and Lote Tuqiri crossed the divide.
"We haven't been concentrating on that space at all in the last period of time, and I'm not concentrating on that space," he said.
"There's a lot more players these days that play both codes at school. You have to be relevant, you've got to have a team, you've got to have a program and a pathway, and the kids will make decisions. I think the days of signing 28- or 29-year-old converts, those days are probably over."
As for Souths' chances of ending a premiership drought of more than 40 years, McKenzie confessed to being no expert on the game of rugby league.
But even he could sense something special brewing - and he wasn't referring to the coffee.
"They have a lot of good players here and I know one thing - you can't win a comp unless you have enough good players," he said.
"I have seen a lot of good players walk around.
"You can tell how people relate to each other and you can see they have good harmony."