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  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #3842

    @Catogrande said in Foster:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Foster:

    Probably a lot of timing involved with looking good as a coach . Not talking about any coach in particular, just generalising .

    But moving into the right job at the right time taking over the right group of players and vica versa can make or break you .

    A pretty important consideration and as has been alluded to, take SCW. Known as the Bus “cos he weren’t no coach”, but he had some great cattle.

    In re NZ many have compared Henry’s and Hansen’s reigns to Foster without much consideration given to the number of all time greats they had at their disposal - and in their primes. Not to denigrate H&H’s achievements or to make excuses for Foster, but that issue does have a significant impact.

    There's a chicken and egg though - really good coaches lift players, make them better and really have an effect on the team. Dane Coles is a great example; he got turned from a hothead loose rake to a world class hooker with pace and swerve like a back, and niggle like Fitzpatrick.

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
    4
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to nzzp on last edited by
    #3843

    @nzzp said in Foster:

    @Catogrande said in Foster:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Foster:

    Probably a lot of timing involved with looking good as a coach . Not talking about any coach in particular, just generalising .

    But moving into the right job at the right time taking over the right group of players and vica versa can make or break you .

    A pretty important consideration and as has been alluded to, take SCW. Known as the Bus “cos he weren’t no coach”, but he had some great cattle.

    In re NZ many have compared Henry’s and Hansen’s reigns to Foster without much consideration given to the number of all time greats they had at their disposal - and in their primes. Not to denigrate H&H’s achievements or to make excuses for Foster, but that issue does have a significant impact.

    There's a chicken and egg though - really good coaches lift players, make them better and really have an effect on the team. Dane Coles is a great example; he got turned from a hothead loose rake to a world class hooker with pace and swerve like a back, and niggle like Fitzpatrick.

    Oh for sure. I do wonder what England might have achieved back in the late 90s, early 2000s with an effective coach. In all that time of pretty much NH dominance we won only one Grand Slam - and that with a who's who line up of England greats.

    nzzpN 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • nzzpN Offline
    nzzpN Offline
    nzzp
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #3844

    @Catogrande said in Foster:

    @nzzp said in Foster:

    @Catogrande said in Foster:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Foster:

    Probably a lot of timing involved with looking good as a coach . Not talking about any coach in particular, just generalising .

    But moving into the right job at the right time taking over the right group of players and vica versa can make or break you .

    A pretty important consideration and as has been alluded to, take SCW. Known as the Bus “cos he weren’t no coach”, but he had some great cattle.

    In re NZ many have compared Henry’s and Hansen’s reigns to Foster without much consideration given to the number of all time greats they had at their disposal - and in their primes. Not to denigrate H&H’s achievements or to make excuses for Foster, but that issue does have a significant impact.

    There's a chicken and egg though - really good coaches lift players, make them better and really have an effect on the team. Dane Coles is a great example; he got turned from a hothead loose rake to a world class hooker with pace and swerve like a back, and niggle like Fitzpatrick.

    Oh for sure. I do wonder what England might have achieved back in the late 90s, early 2000s with an effective coach. In all that time of pretty much NH dominance we won only one Grand Slam - and that with a who's who line up of England greats.

    I just remember seeing Josh Lewsey (who I rated very highly ) go into England camp and the longer he was there, the worse he got. Classic coaching setup not getting the best from players

    CatograndeC 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • CatograndeC Offline
    CatograndeC Offline
    Catogrande
    replied to nzzp on last edited by Catogrande
    #3845

    @nzzp said in Foster:

    @Catogrande said in Foster:

    @nzzp said in Foster:

    @Catogrande said in Foster:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Foster:

    Probably a lot of timing involved with looking good as a coach . Not talking about any coach in particular, just generalising .

    But moving into the right job at the right time taking over the right group of players and vica versa can make or break you .

    A pretty important consideration and as has been alluded to, take SCW. Known as the Bus “cos he weren’t no coach”, but he had some great cattle.

    In re NZ many have compared Henry’s and Hansen’s reigns to Foster without much consideration given to the number of all time greats they had at their disposal - and in their primes. Not to denigrate H&H’s achievements or to make excuses for Foster, but that issue does have a significant impact.

    There's a chicken and egg though - really good coaches lift players, make them better and really have an effect on the team. Dane Coles is a great example; he got turned from a hothead loose rake to a world class hooker with pace and swerve like a back, and niggle like Fitzpatrick.

    Oh for sure. I do wonder what England might have achieved back in the late 90s, early 2000s with an effective coach. In all that time of pretty much NH dominance we won only one Grand Slam - and that with a who's who line up of England greats.

    I just remember seeing Josh Lewsey (who I rated very highly ) go into England camp and the longer he was there, the worse he got. Classic coaching setup not getting the best from players

    Classic SCW. Lewsey - great full back, OK wing. Jason Robinson, great wing, OK full back. Now where shall I select these two this week..?

    Edit: And this is a thing with so many coaches. Seemingly making selection and replacement decisions just so they can show they are "coaching".

    MiketheSnowM 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnowM Offline
    MiketheSnow
    replied to Catogrande on last edited by
    #3846

    @Catogrande said in Foster:

    @nzzp said in Foster:

    @Catogrande said in Foster:

    @nzzp said in Foster:

    @Catogrande said in Foster:

    @kiwiinmelb said in Foster:

    Probably a lot of timing involved with looking good as a coach . Not talking about any coach in particular, just generalising .

    But moving into the right job at the right time taking over the right group of players and vica versa can make or break you .

    A pretty important consideration and as has been alluded to, take SCW. Known as the Bus “cos he weren’t no coach”, but he had some great cattle.

    In re NZ many have compared Henry’s and Hansen’s reigns to Foster without much consideration given to the number of all time greats they had at their disposal - and in their primes. Not to denigrate H&H’s achievements or to make excuses for Foster, but that issue does have a significant impact.

    There's a chicken and egg though - really good coaches lift players, make them better and really have an effect on the team. Dane Coles is a great example; he got turned from a hothead loose rake to a world class hooker with pace and swerve like a back, and niggle like Fitzpatrick.

    Oh for sure. I do wonder what England might have achieved back in the late 90s, early 2000s with an effective coach. In all that time of pretty much NH dominance we won only one Grand Slam - and that with a who's who line up of England greats.

    I just remember seeing Josh Lewsey (who I rated very highly ) go into England camp and the longer he was there, the worse he got. Classic coaching setup not getting the best from players

    Classic SCW. Lewsey - great full back, OK wing. Jason Robinson, great wing, OK full back. Now where shall I select these two this week..?

    Edit: And this is a thing with so many coaches. Seemingly making selection and replacement decisions just so they can show they are "coaching".

    Selection is coaching

    Players in their best position
    Combinations which complement and are greater than the sum of the parts

    1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    replied to Victor Meldrew on last edited by
    #3847

    @Victor-Meldrew said in Foster:

    @Windows97 said in Foster:

    I'd have to say that from the heights of 2011, which you could argue was our best All Black team ever that our current day All Blacks are literally results and history-wise the worst All Black team we've ever had.

    They Missed the Bus Kirkpatrick's All Blacks of 1972/73: Amazon.co.uk: Terry McLean: 9780589008000: Books

    I must retort. Oh, and the next 3-4 years were crap as well - despite the NZRFU pretty ruthlessly sacking coaches who didn't get the required results.

    We were crap until about '78. And then we were inconsistent until '81.

    Victor MeldrewV 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • Victor MeldrewV Offline
    Victor MeldrewV Offline
    Victor Meldrew
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #3848

    @booboo said in Foster:

    @Victor-Meldrew said in Foster:

    @Windows97 said in Foster:

    I'd have to say that from the heights of 2011, which you could argue was our best All Black team ever that our current day All Blacks are literally results and history-wise the worst All Black team we've ever had.

    They Missed the Bus Kirkpatrick's All Blacks of 1972/73: Amazon.co.uk: Terry McLean: 9780589008000: Books

    I must retort. Oh, and the next 3-4 years were crap as well - despite the NZRFU pretty ruthlessly sacking coaches who didn't get the required results.

    We were crap until about '78. And then we were inconsistent until '81.

    IIRC 1977 & Mourie was the turning point, that team played smart rugby. But fuck, it was awful time to be an AB supporter.

    Eerily similar to now with a big clamour for the wonder-coach, Bob Duff, to sort everything out. Instead they went backwards.

    dogmeatD 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    replied to kiwi_expat on last edited by
    #3849

    @kiwi_expat said in Foster:

    @Victor-Meldrew said in Foster:

    @Chris said in Foster:

    I hope they keep Foster as coach until 2030 its so amusing watching people try to defend him.

    It's not people defending Foster. It's people not believing the hype that a coach who's undoubtedly good at SR level but with minimal and patchy experience at international level - and zero experience at Test level - is the magic solution to restore the AB's to the glory days, that NZR knows he will do this but there is some secret illuminati plot within NZR to prevent it happening.

    So you end up with stupid arguments that Foster should be sacked as he lost to a team we've never lost to before, but a different criteria should apply to Robertson as he needs time to settle into the role due to inexperience at Test level.

    International experience has nothing to do with coaching ability, you've either got 'it' or you don't.

    It's a skill that is innate & in-built for guys such as Jones, Razor, Galthie, Erasmus, etc..

    Foster just doesn't have 'it', the evidence is... he has achieved underwhelming results in every head coaching role across his 20 year coaching career with Waikato, Chiefs, & now the All Blacks...

    Kirwan was the head coach of Italy & Japan, he was a poor Blues coach, after coaching Wales for 12 years Gatland lost 8/8 of his Chiefs matches, their worst losing streak ever. Experience is irrelevant in many cases.

    What is your evidence (examples welcome) that Robertson has the innate / in built skill to be an international coach?

    kiwi_expatK 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • S Offline
    S Offline
    Steve
    replied to TheMojoman on last edited by
    #3850

    @TheMojoman said in 2022 All Blacks NH tour:

    @Machpants said in 2022 All Blacks NH tour:

    Gawd he's an unispiring speaker

    He's full of cliches - learnings, excitement blah blah blah

    I can’t stand him. Razor is definitely a younger players coach . More inspirational. Foster is limp. You’d get more lift from a cheese sandwich .

    CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    replied to Victor Meldrew on last edited by
    #3851

    @Victor-Meldrew

    Ah the 70's a great time to be growing up supporting the AB's NOT!!!

    I didn't bother replying to the original post that caused this little diversion as I thought @booboo summed it up nicely.

    Add to the similarities it came after an era of game changing global dominance, by a team stacked with all time legends coached by one of the greats.

    Here's that decade's record Won 24 - Drew 2 Lost 15. Nine of the wins were against Oz, Ireland and Scotland who were the equivalents of today's Argentina I guess.

    By comparison Fozzie's era has been a golden age ...

    boobooB 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • CrucialC Offline
    CrucialC Offline
    Crucial
    replied to Steve on last edited by
    #3852

    @Steve said in 2022 All Blacks NH tour:

    @TheMojoman said in 2022 All Blacks NH tour:

    @Machpants said in 2022 All Blacks NH tour:

    Gawd he's an unispiring speaker

    He's full of cliches - learnings, excitement blah blah blah

    I can’t stand him. Razor is definitely a younger players coach . More inspirational. Foster is limp. You’d get more lift from a cheese sandwich .

    Public facing speeches where you can't/ don't want to say certain things are a very different situation to dealing with players. We are only seeing one side here. Player comments seem to dispel that claim.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • boobooB Offline
    boobooB Offline
    booboo
    replied to dogmeat on last edited by
    #3853

    @dogmeat said in Foster:

    @Victor-Meldrew

    Ah the 70's a great time to be growing up supporting the AB's NOT!!!

    I didn't bother replying to the original post that caused this little diversion as I thought @booboo summed it up nicely.

    Add to the similarities it came after an era of game changing global dominance, by a team stacked with all time legends coached by one of the greats.

    Here's that decade's record Won 24 - Drew 2 Lost 15. Nine of the wins were against Oz, Ireland and Scotland who were the equivalents of today's Argentina I guess.

    By comparison Fozzie's era has been a golden age ...

    Even the "good" years had their disasters. Cornelson's (father of the Japan player) 4 tries, the Bastille Day Massacre, 1st Test v France '77 etc etc

    kiwiinmelbK dogmeatD 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelbK Offline
    kiwiinmelb
    replied to booboo on last edited by kiwiinmelb
    #3854

    @booboo said in Foster:

    @dogmeat said in Foster:

    @Victor-Meldrew

    Ah the 70's a great time to be growing up supporting the AB's NOT!!!

    I didn't bother replying to the original post that caused this little diversion as I thought @booboo summed it up nicely.

    Add to the similarities it came after an era of game changing global dominance, by a team stacked with all time legends coached by one of the greats.

    Here's that decade's record Won 24 - Drew 2 Lost 15. Nine of the wins were against Oz, Ireland and Scotland who were the equivalents of today's Argentina I guess.

    By comparison Fozzie's era has been a golden age ...

    Even the "good" years had their disasters. Cornelson's (father of the Japan player) 4 tries, the Bastille Day Massacre, 1st Test v France '77 etc etc

    I was at the cornelson 4 tries game and reeves French team flogging us at eden park with running rugby as a teenager.

    It was a bit like now in that it felt like we were stuck in an older style game plan that doesn’t appear to be as effective as it used to be

    Victor MeldrewV 1 Reply Last reply
    0
  • kiwi_expatK Offline
    kiwi_expatK Offline
    kiwi_expat
    replied to MajorRage on last edited by kiwi_expat
    #3855

    @MajorRage said in Foster:

    @kiwi_expat said in Foster:

    @Victor-Meldrew said in Foster:

    @Chris said in Foster:

    I hope they keep Foster as coach until 2030 its so amusing watching people try to defend him.

    It's not people defending Foster. It's people not believing the hype that a coach who's undoubtedly good at SR level but with minimal and patchy experience at international level - and zero experience at Test level - is the magic solution to restore the AB's to the glory days, that NZR knows he will do this but there is some secret illuminati plot within NZR to prevent it happening.

    So you end up with stupid arguments that Foster should be sacked as he lost to a team we've never lost to before, but a different criteria should apply to Robertson as he needs time to settle into the role due to inexperience at Test level.

    International experience has nothing to do with coaching ability, you've either got 'it' or you don't.

    It's a skill that is innate & in-built for guys such as Jones, Razor, Galthie, Erasmus, etc..

    Foster just doesn't have 'it', the evidence is... he has achieved underwhelming results in every head coaching role across his 20 year coaching career with Waikato, Chiefs, & now the All Blacks...

    Kirwan was the head coach of Italy & Japan, he was a poor Blues coach, after coaching Wales for 12 years Gatland lost 8/8 of his Chiefs matches, their worst losing streak ever. Experience is irrelevant in many cases.

    What is your evidence (examples welcome) that Robertson has the innate / in built skill to be an international coach?

    Maybe, because he has developed a track record that quite comfortably exceeds what Robbie Deans, Wayne Smith, Graham Henry, Dave Rennie, etc.. ever achieved at Super Rugby and provincial level?

    Razor is obviously a once in a generation coach, and players such as Izzy Dagg who've played under NZ's greatest coach (Wayne Smith) have stressed that Razor is on his level.

    A dogmeatD MajorRageM 3 Replies Last reply
    1
  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    replied to booboo on last edited by
    #3856

    @booboo I didn't even mention the loss to the JAB's as it wasn't a test

    Plus the numerous other losses to non-test sides

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • A Offline
    A Offline
    ARHS
    replied to kiwi_expat on last edited by
    #3857

    @kiwi_expat said in Foster:

    @MajorRage said in Foster:

    @kiwi_expat said in Foster:

    @Victor-Meldrew said in Foster:

    @Chris said in Foster:

    I hope they keep Foster as coach until 2030 its so amusing watching people try to defend him.

    It's not people defending Foster. It's people not believing the hype that a coach who's undoubtedly good at SR level but with minimal and patchy experience at international level - and zero experience at Test level - is the magic solution to restore the AB's to the glory days, that NZR knows he will do this but there is some secret illuminati plot within NZR to prevent it happening.

    So you end up with stupid arguments that Foster should be sacked as he lost to a team we've never lost to before, but a different criteria should apply to Robertson as he needs time to settle into the role due to inexperience at Test level.

    International experience has nothing to do with coaching ability, you've either got 'it' or you don't.

    It's a skill that is innate & in-built for guys such as Jones, Razor, Galthie, Erasmus, etc..

    Foster just doesn't have 'it', the evidence is... he has achieved underwhelming results in every head coaching role across his 20 year coaching career with Waikato, Chiefs, & now the All Blacks...

    Kirwan was the head coach of Italy & Japan, he was a poor Blues coach, after coaching Wales for 12 years Gatland lost 8/8 of his Chiefs matches, their worst losing streak ever. Experience is irrelevant in many cases.

    What is your evidence (examples welcome) that Robertson has the innate / in built skill to be an international coach?

    Maybe, because he has developed a track record that quite comfortably exceeds what Robbie Deans, Wayne Smith, Graham Henry, Dave Rennie, etc.. ever achieved at Super Rugby and provincial level?

    Razor is obviously a once in a generation coach, and players such as Izzy Dagg who've played under NZ's greatest coach (Wayne Smith) have stressed that Razor is on his level.

    Don't you think it may have a bit to do with the players and financial reserves he inherited. Crusaders have had the massive benefit of only having to carry two contributing provinces and being able to recruit heavily into the pair of them as players see a clear selection path that others can't offer. Yes Razor is clearly a very good coach. But how would others have done in comparison? The Aussie and Saffer teams were on the slide. They have lost a few matches v the other NZ sides after all.

    Crusaders are consistently better than other super teams at playing to the limit of the rules and testing the refs. Having an experienced core of players certainly helps that and is expertly done. But I don't see the masterful attacking plays that you seem to expect of the ABs.

    My take is that the Crusaders approach is not so sure to be as effective against the better international coaches. All theoretical but hopefully that explains why some of us are not as sure as you are about coach capability.

    kiwi_expatK ChrisC 2 Replies Last reply
    0
  • dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeatD Offline
    dogmeat
    replied to kiwi_expat on last edited by
    #3858

    @kiwi_expat said in Foster:

    who've played under NZ's greatest coach (Wayne Smith)

    Ironically not the greatest record as an international Head Coach....

    So, there is a precedent for a coach coming out of Christchurch with a good provincial record and struggling to make the step up. Which is what I think others are saying.

    1 Reply Last reply
    2
  • MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRageM Offline
    MajorRage
    replied to kiwi_expat on last edited by
    #3859

    @kiwi_expat said in Foster:

    @MajorRage said in Foster:

    @kiwi_expat said in Foster:

    @Victor-Meldrew said in Foster:

    @Chris said in Foster:

    I hope they keep Foster as coach until 2030 its so amusing watching people try to defend him.

    It's not people defending Foster. It's people not believing the hype that a coach who's undoubtedly good at SR level but with minimal and patchy experience at international level - and zero experience at Test level - is the magic solution to restore the AB's to the glory days, that NZR knows he will do this but there is some secret illuminati plot within NZR to prevent it happening.

    So you end up with stupid arguments that Foster should be sacked as he lost to a team we've never lost to before, but a different criteria should apply to Robertson as he needs time to settle into the role due to inexperience at Test level.

    International experience has nothing to do with coaching ability, you've either got 'it' or you don't.

    It's a skill that is innate & in-built for guys such as Jones, Razor, Galthie, Erasmus, etc..

    Foster just doesn't have 'it', the evidence is... he has achieved underwhelming results in every head coaching role across his 20 year coaching career with Waikato, Chiefs, & now the All Blacks...

    Kirwan was the head coach of Italy & Japan, he was a poor Blues coach, after coaching Wales for 12 years Gatland lost 8/8 of his Chiefs matches, their worst losing streak ever. Experience is irrelevant in many cases.

    What is your evidence (examples welcome) that Robertson has the innate / in built skill to be an international coach?

    Maybe, because he has developed a track record that quite comfortably exceeds what Robbie Deans, Wayne Smith, Graham Henry, Dave Rennie, etc.. ever achieved at Super Rugby and provincial level?

    Razor is obviously a once in a generation coach, and players such as Izzy Dagg who've played under NZ's greatest coach (Wayne Smith) have stressed that Razor is on his level.

    All jokes aside is he your Dad or something?

    This isn’t even a debate or discussion. The level you put him on, with NO international results is beyond absurd.

    CrucialC 1 Reply Last reply
    3
  • KiwiMurphK Offline
    KiwiMurphK Offline
    KiwiMurph
    replied to gt12 on last edited by
    #3860

    @gt12 said in Foster:

    I think I missed Carlos’ comments, anyone link easily?

    'Far too predictable': Carlos Spencer slams All Blacks after 'frustrating' performance

    'Far too predictable': Carlos Spencer slams All Blacks after 'frustrating' performance

    Rugby legend Carlos Spencer has slammed the All Blacks after a “frustrating” attacking display during their 38-31 win over Japan on Saturday.

    ACT CrusaderA 1 Reply Last reply
    1
  • kiwi_expatK Offline
    kiwi_expatK Offline
    kiwi_expat
    replied to ARHS on last edited by kiwi_expat
    #3861

    @ARHS You can't fluke 6 titles in 6 years - it took Robbie Deans 9 years to win 5 titles.

    Winning percentages of NZ Super Rugby coaches (more than 30 matches):

    Razor 85%, Henry 82%, Boyd 76%, Smith 69%, Rennie 67%, Blackadder 63%

    Victor MeldrewV 1 Reply Last reply
    2

Foster, Robertson etc
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