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http://www.stuff.co.nz/sport/rugby/rugby-world-cup/4522991/Why-we-can-t-win-the-Rugby-World-Cup
A lack of leadership will mean the All Blacks won't win the Rugby World Cup this year, a leading academic says.
Dr David Harris spent four years writing a 292-page document for a business doctorate and concluded the men in black might not have what it takes to end 24 years of pain.
The Auckland University of Technology lecturer cites failures at the 1999, 2003 and 2007 tournaments to support his case.
Harris is aware his conclusion won't be warmly welcomed, writing in the preface to the document: "It is a story that ends with the troublesome conclusion the All Blacks might not be equipped to win the Rugby World Cup in 2011. It might also be a story nobody wants to listen to."
Talking to the Sunday Star-Times, Harris said: "The All Blacks are favourites with bookmakers, they clearly have the best athletes and the highest skill levels, and their win-loss ratio sets them apart from the competition.
"But reliance on the leadership of Richie McCaw and Daniel Carter leaves them vulnerable and in my opinion they are unlikely to win the three games in a row necessary to win the cup, although I hope I'm wrong."
Harris said McCaw's leadership had improved since the 20-18 loss to France in the 2007 cup, where decisions made by senior players, including the captain, were slated in a review commissioned by the Rugby Union
"The problem is if McCaw or Carter are taken out. I don't think the development of leaders to follow them is much better than 2007."
He said leadership, in business or sport, developed through "experiential learning" and that was being hindered in the modern era by immersing young talent in academies, where they constantly met other skilled players.
Harris said a club system was better, because they could learn to lead players of differing abilities.
He said the cup-winning and amateur All Blacks of 1987 came from club rugby. "The idea that you can teach leadership in an academy is flawed."
Harris stopped short of labelling players and administrators arrogant but said some had put up walls around themselves after the failure to win a cup since 1987. "When the public demands the winning of the cup, and you fail to deliver, the natural reaction is to get defensive."
But Fairfax Media head of sport Trevor McKewen was less convinced.
"That's why academics don't coach rugby teams and rugby coaches don't lecture at universities."