There used to be when the Tahs was run as a separate entity to NSWRU. In 2018 they were reunited.
The NSWRU board has (at least in my time following) always had that representative style appointments from sub-unions making up roughly half the board.
Shute Shield, Subbies, Country all have a boardmember.
When there were two boards, there was overlap of about 3 people (in the final one in 2018 it was Davis, Kerry Chikarovski and Tony Crawford).
The former Waratahs board used to have a player rep on it too.
I did look the board composition myself a couple of days ago.
My first though was that as a President, Al Baxter appears to make a good prop forward.
Which is kinda ironic.
With all the criticism re recruitment and neglect of Shute Shield. What are peoples NSW side from non signed players?
I tried doing this last week and was shot down pretty quick but I will give it a go from last years Shute Shield and not selected for super rugby for NSW - excuse spelling
1. Jed Gillespie / Charlie Abel
2. Mahe Vailanu
3. Tim Metcher
4. Jack Margin
5. Nathan De Tuoit
6. Michael Icely
7. Christian Poidevan
8. Pat Sio
9. Harrison Goddard
10 . Rodney Iona /Angus Sinclaire
11. James Turner
12. Enoka Muliufi
13. Tautatalasi Tasi
14. Tyson Davis
15. Tim Clements
The team isn't going to win a super rugby title but I reckon they could give this weeks tahs a shot
When NSW Rugby split off a separate board to run the Waratahs, people were worried it would split the professional team away from the community teams. And then re-uniting the two boards was supposed to help bring the two back together. I don't think it worked either way.
Whilst there's a lack of professional sports administration experience on the board, the representation should lead to great unity across all rugby in NSW. Of course it doesn't, but that's the way it should work.
With all the criticism re recruitment andneglect ofrefusal to prop up a Shute Shield competition with unjustified handouts that make its desire to be even semiprofessional a complete joke.
Waratahs chairman Roger Davis has returned serve after sacked coach Rob Penney made explosive comments in the Herald, but shied away from taking responsibility for recent woes or answering questions as it emerged NSW Rugby has approached Michael Cheika for advice on how the franchise’s coaching structure could look in the future.
“I don’t have anything more to say about the decision to retire the coach that hasn’t already been said,” said Davis via text message. “I’m sorry Rob feels the way he does and understand the pain but many of the assertions are either inaccurate, not time sensitive or disingenuous. Our focus now is on the future and building a successful high-performance team.”
Yes, NSWRU wouldn't have any interest in making the Shute Shield better would they?
I was thinking this morning about the supposed lack of long-term planning, which has seen us go from premiers in 2014 to what we are today.
The issue, to me, wasn't a lack of long-term planning so much as we picked the wrong plan - on a coaching level at least.
Our plan on the surface was sound: Cheika takes us to glory, builds a system and then hands the keys to his loyal offsider Daryl Gibson, who has spent the last three years learning the ropes under the great master. He gets to drive a Ferrari and all he has to do is keep it on the road.
In reality, a few things happened that saw that plan fail. Gibson wasn't as good a coach as we'd hoped. There was an exodus of talent that we struggled to replace - Skelton, Phipps, TPN, Douglas, Jacpot, Palu, Kepu etc. And there wasn't the next level of youth there that could take the reins effectively.
There are some real similarities to the situation in the Reds a few years before, as the transition from Link to Graham saw a similar plunge in form.
So my question: is this the death of the 'assistant coach grooming' model? The idea seems sound in theory, but is there much evidence of it ever working at provincial level? Outside Steve Hansen I can't really think of a success at international level either.
Obviously there were many more problems that the coach transition model the Tahs used, but if you look back to try and chart where this all started to go wrong you probably do end up at the moment that Cheika left and gave the keys to Daryl.
.
I just saw this on the Roar
BREAKING: Waratahs sack interim head coaches for "failing to meet on-field expectations"
https://www.theroar.com.au/2021/04/...es-for-failing-to-meet-on-field-expectations/
Surely that can't have happened already?
April fools mate
Did not even look at the date, the way the NSW board is it really could happen
So my question: is this the death of the 'assistant coach grooming' model? The idea seems sound in theory, but is there much evidence of it ever working at provincial level? Outside Steve Hansen I can't really think of a success at international level either.
.
Does anyone in RA track this kind of thing?