Well the book hasn't been released yet, HJ, so I'm not quite sure what else I am supposed to do.
And yes that may be twisting the truth, but I think someone of his stature in the game should have known better.
have you seen the documentary?The old 'when the team wins it's beacuse of the players and when they lose it's because of the coach' huh? I suppose there were no great players in the 1998 All Black team that lost 5 straight Tri-Nations and Bledisloe games? Or the 5 years between 1998 - 2002 when we couldn't win the Bledisloe? I suppose Phil Jackson isn't that great of a coach either - he's had Jordan, Pippen, Kukoc, Rodman, Grant, Bryant, Shaq etc all play for him over the years. Wayne Bennett is lucky he had guys like Alfie, Lockyer, Petro, Tallis, Sailor, Tuquiri etc in his teams. What about Sir Alex Fergusson? It must be so easy for all of these coaches huh? Bullocks - you can't take the guys record and imply he had little to do with it. When it come to winning results, Sir Henry ticks all the boxes. If you think it's easy, ask any Kiwi's if John Hart and Wyane Smith are remembered as greatly successful AB head coaches?
But he also has the respect of his players and his management team. Something Mitchell/Deans didn't have. When Henry re-applied for the job, players like Dan Carter and Ritchie McCaw backed him over Deans. Big tick given all the success those two enjoyed with Deans in Canterbury. Yes, the RWC result in 2003 was the nail in the coffing for Mitchell but there was a rising feeling of dislike for him and his style in the media, the public and amongst some of the players well before that tournament. And unlike Henry, Mitchell doesn't seem to have learnt from those mistakes.
Henry also worked hard to install a great culture within the ABs. Early on in his tenure he talked about his belief that better people make better players. He was quick to stamp out off-field controversies and made some tough decisions eg. Piri Weepu, Ma'a Nonu and Troy Flavell dropped from the 2007 RWC squad. When was the last time you saw a scandal that involved any AB players? Corey Jane and Israel Dagg out having a few drinks and a smoke a few night before a RWC game. No urinating in public, no stolen laptops, no getting into fights, no making out with some local girls. Pretty tame. And who came down to the pub and pulled them back into line..the same guy who had been dropped 4 years earlier for 'attitude' issues - Weepu.
The 2007 semi-final hurt the ABs and the AB fans hard because unlike 1999 and 2003 where the best team on the day won, the French got the huge 'rub of the green' that day, to put it mildly. For the French to not concede 1 penalty for 50-60mins is simply ridiculous. I'll admit that match-fixing crossed my mind that day - I'm not surprised it did Henry's as well. His job and his reputation were on the line. But he came back, learnt from his mistakes (again) and won the RWC.
You mite not like Graham Henry but you can't take away from the fact that he is a great coach.
have you seen the documentary?
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Documentaries are not a particularly reliable source because they are almost always written and presented with an agenda. It's pretty easy for a film maker to take a snippet from an interview here and there to make it seem like there is some great story to be told, when actually there is not. The people who produce Reality TV are masters of creating story lines out of nothing.
And in any case, that Wallaby team of 2001 was at the height of its powers; beating NZ both games that year and winning the Tri Nations. If the All Blacks couldn't beat them, I don't see why anyone would give the Lions much of a chance, especially considering the Lions dire record of late.
Well, Ted definitely gave them no chance!
I take your point on selective editing, but you still have to do the things they show you doing, and you still have to say the things they show you saying.
Selecting editing or not Ted came across very poorly.Especially with someone who had an impressive CV at the time.
he succeeded despite himself, not because of it.The tour was 11 years ago and 3 years before he took over the ABs.
If Henry was still the same coach in 2011 as he was in 2001 then I think the Lions Tour would be relevant. He wasn't though. Here is a coach who seems to have kept learning from his mistakes, kept honing his skills and at the end of the day, won almost every trophy on offer.
The other thing that I think Henry has done that guys like Deans and Mitchell haven't is that Henry has been able to attract other great minds to work with him. Look at the difference between his and Deans' coaching staff the last 4yrs. And Henry would be the first to admit that those guys have been instrumental in the ABs success just as much as he has been.
he succeeded despite himself, not because of it.
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Yep: supports my view. Tub thumping was dead long before he found out....and he had to be told it was dead.Have you watched the interview?
Yep: supports my view. Tub thumping was dead long before he found out..and he had to be told it was dead.
And I repeat: has he ever done an analysis of AB illegalities? Blaming refs or sport betting is arrogant because it assumes an entitlement to win.
Ones enough - particularly in that context...plus I seem to remember some criticism of the ref(s) in the documentary.Sorry, what other losses has Henry blamed on the ref or sport betting??
Funny how we can watch the same thing and come away with different conclusions.Have you watched the interview?