Dwyer was undoubtedly a very good coach, whose merit should be measured against the others at that time. That's not disrespectful at all. But also look at the players he had to coach.I’m not a fan of the Boomer tag, it’s a shit thing to throw at people as a slight. Many Boomers are exceptional at what they do. But Bob Dwyer hasn’t been apart of a high performance program for decades. He wouldn’t have a good idea about modern day sports science, tactics, etc. almost everything he would have taught wouldn’t exist in the modern game. Of course he would have more idea than the average person on certain aspects but he would be a fish out of water if tasked to coach in the modern day. The 60+ guy taking us to the RWC hasn’t left the game and has developed at the same speed the highest level of the game has. Every aspect of life is like this. You could be an IT specialist 20yrs ago but would be out of your depth if you decided to re-enter the profession if you hadn’t been directly involved in it for the last 20yrs. People would laugh at how you tried to problem solve things and the techniques used to apply them.
There would be T2 and T3 sides incorporating more advanced things than Dwyer was in his pomp. The resources at their hands would be multiple what he would of been used to.
1991 - oft quoted as his peak - Campese, Little, Horan, Lynagh, Farr-Jones, Ofahengaue, Poidevin, McCall, Eales, McKenzie (oh, fuck this will give rodha a stiffy), Kearns and Daly. I mean, OK, he did OK with those muppets.
But apart from that, as mentioned above, the requirements to get International teams to top level are so much more complex, the accepted wisdom from over 30 yrs ago just does not apply so much.
Yeah, guys from that era still have a lot of knowledge and coaching IP, but like every field, things move on. What you had to do then as a coach does not make it today, it's the harsh truth.