A note to certain posters here: may I plead that we/you do not engender yet another myth in the long lexicon of apologia, excuses and post-hoc rationalisations for the bewildering and hapless decision-making of The Wallaby Master Coach that has culminated, inter alia, in the 'disappointing' RWC campaign.
There is no evidence whatsoever that Deans did not himself govern the choice of his 2008-2011 support coaches, such as they were. He announced Graham with positive PR flourishes in early 2009 (before quietly packing him off the Force just prior to a RWC year...enough said), stood by Williams thick and thin through a manifestly mediocre mini-era of Wallaby forwards evolution, hired Bram van S to do part-time kicking coaching mostly in absentia via video link, never once appointed a clearly defined and dedicated backs or attack coach (instead preferring a mystifying combination of doing this task himself or calling his support coach for backs a 'skills coach', a bizarre term in this context no one understood then or now). Indeed, a number of us here in both 2010 and 2011 posted that we considered Deans' choices of an odd, incomplete sub-structure of under-qualified support coaches his greatest managerial and technical failing, in that it betrayed an implied view that he was in fact The Master Coach whom could direct most technical aspects of elite international rugby himself, a view that has been wholly undermined by outcomes in the field of play.
The obvious flaws in this poorly constructed 2008-2011 managerial system began to be recognised - although never admitted - by JO'N and the ARU when post the Scotland debacle Nucifora began to be inserted the next year on and off directly into the Wallables coaching group. This insertion - and the deficiencies in total coaching capability so implied - accelerated majorly when Nucifora took a very direct role as de facto forwards and set piece coach (sidelining Williams) for the pre and during RWC period. This sort of direct intrusion by a national body into an elite coach's support group is highly unusual, and the core message could not have been clearer.
The 'independent review committee' (which of course was no such thing, all of its member coming solely from Wallaby ARU Board parties) has openly declared that a key focus of its work was to be Deans' support coaches infrastructure. It took 4 tiresome years for this in-your-face penny to drop, which in itself is bad enough. Now we have the media leaks that in effect virtually all of The Master Coach's support team is to be replaced and a new group installed under close ARU supervision (though presumably Deans must have agreed to listen and learn on this subject, hopefully better late than never). The fact that the ARU is having to oversight and intervene in this quite extraordinary manner of essentially telling a team CEO that most of his direct reports were duds and need upgrading - and some of this must have come from the current Wallabies interviewed in this process - says it all. With the possible exception of Blake, Deans was not able to design and build a high calibre group of appropriately technically qualified support coaches of the standard required in today's elite rugby competitions. Further, the ARU has belatedly recognised what many of us have argued prior namely that such a group is an essential component of properly building an elite national rugby team, no one 'master' can in 2012 cover all the crucial technical aspects of the modern game and the skills required in order to forge a consistently winning team.
The 'independent report' has not yet been released by the ARU (unlike Cricket Australia that deemed in similar circumstances it owed its public honesty and full transparency). Given that the ARU is so obviously itself part of this problem of its own making in indulging and over promoting Deans as 'the master', and that the ARU's board is so dominated by its over-long-serving CEO, it's unlikely the Australian rugby public will ever have the benefit of being owned up to. Nothing new there either.