Bardon
Peter Fenwicke (45)
Every national head coach should be given the opportunity to choose his assistants. If the national union have enough faith to pick him then they should back the guy fully and let him bring in his own people.
Some head coaches wont mind working with whoever is there already or going with who the union think would be best for the job. But as long as they've been given the option of picking their own guys they can't turn around later and say I didn't pick them after turning down that option.
The idea of a super panel of coaches is a good one as long as the head coach is on board. Some guys like assistants who will question them and push them to improve or to consider other ideas/approaches. Others like their assistants to buy into their way of doing things and to be more like a disciple. Puting the wrong kind of people together can cause friction and ultimately be destructive.
I think where Henry came out well was that he had a mix of the two. He had Hansen who had worked under him before at Wales and Smith who challenged him.
Hansen will definitely give continuity and a smooth transition but rugby has a tendency to take forward leaps where the best way to do things is suddenly not the best way anymore and then a new and fresh approach is needed. A good coach can change and adapt but the guy insitu can take longer to change than someone who comes in fresh.
Some head coaches wont mind working with whoever is there already or going with who the union think would be best for the job. But as long as they've been given the option of picking their own guys they can't turn around later and say I didn't pick them after turning down that option.
The idea of a super panel of coaches is a good one as long as the head coach is on board. Some guys like assistants who will question them and push them to improve or to consider other ideas/approaches. Others like their assistants to buy into their way of doing things and to be more like a disciple. Puting the wrong kind of people together can cause friction and ultimately be destructive.
I think where Henry came out well was that he had a mix of the two. He had Hansen who had worked under him before at Wales and Smith who challenged him.
Hansen will definitely give continuity and a smooth transition but rugby has a tendency to take forward leaps where the best way to do things is suddenly not the best way anymore and then a new and fresh approach is needed. A good coach can change and adapt but the guy insitu can take longer to change than someone who comes in fresh.