It will be one of the primary goals of new chairman David Kirk to fix all that. He moved decisively on a significant and uncomfortable coaching change in the middle of a World Cup cycle after a review – following Liam Napier’s Herald reports suggesting the dressing room had been lost.
That internal review may have been so damning and player feedback so trenchant that maybe Kirk had little choice. However, some will still feel a little surprised Robertson wasn’t retained, albeit with a group with far more international experience around him or even over him in the form of a director of rugby, for example.
That’s what happened with Foster. After a troubled 2022, he was persuaded to drop assistants Plumtree and Mooar, bringing in forwards coach Jason Ryan and strategy/attack guru Joe Schmidt. It worked: 2023 results were better, although changes to Robertson’s regime will go deeper than that.
All Blacks coach Scott Robertson during his two-year tenure. Photos / Photosport
He structured his coaching group with himself at the top, rather in the style of an NFL coach or an EPL manager, both of whom do little hands-on coaching. It’s understood Robertson has denied that or at least diluted that perception but any such structure is now gone. It takes little imagination to see senior players wondering why, if they signed up with Scott Robertson, assistant coach Scott Hansen adopted the role of senior coach. Wrong Scott, surely.
Perhaps the mentoring candidates of Wayne Smith and Joe Schmidt were simply not available or have conditions. Smith’s last major rescue mission was to help win the World Cup with the Black Ferns, but he is 68 now and, although he was whistled in to help Robertson for a time before last year’s Eden Park win against the Springboks, he seems to prefer a part-time professorial/mentoring role. Schmidt is under contract to Australia until July and is standing down as Wallaby coach to spend more time with his family – something an All Blacks role inevitably makes more difficult. However, he may yet be an option.
The gossip suggests Jamie Joseph will take over as head coach and forwards coach Ryan may be retained. NZR are rumoured to be interested in freeing the innovative Tony Brown from his South African obligations. Dave Rennie is off-contract in Japan soon.
Any combo of Joseph-Brown-Schmidt-Rennie appeals, with Brown and Schmidt bringing huge intellectual property with them from the likes of the Boks, Ireland and Australia. However, it must be said there’s a lot of ground to cover yet before any of those appointments.
This is also a stern test for Kirk and his chairmanship. In normal circumstances a CEO would drive the process and bring a coaching appointment to the board but, with no CEO yet appointed, Kirk was cast as kingmaker and has laid down a marker here.
Kirk is a clear thinker with a successful business record, no stranger to pressure and tough decisions. He captained the Baby Blacks in 1986 after the schemozzle of the Cavaliers tour of South Africa. Passed over for the 1987 World Cup captaincy amid player politics emanating from that tour, he ended up being skipper after Andy Dalton’s injury, hoisting the inaugural World Cup at Eden Park.
He was also an integral part of John Hart’s record-breaking Auckland team and knows the value of organisation, strategy, attention to detail and player motivation. I can remember him firmly (but politely) upbraiding me during those days after I’d praised the pass of a rival halfback. A halfback’s pass was not just measured by length, he said, but by speed, accuracy and length. Fair enough.
The Robertson exit comes as the All Blacks face one of their most daunting schedules: four tests against the Springboks (and four games against South Africa major franchises), seven tests as part of the new Nations Championship (including France, Ireland and England), and two Bledisloe tests – 13 in all, only four at home. It’s tougher than a World Cup year.
Kirk wants consistency on the field, difficult in 2026. He must also clean NZR’s executive, commercial and high-performance stables, also no easy task. The cutting of Razor is likely the first stroke of many on which Kirk’s reputation will depend – and he will want to bury any further symptoms of Manchester United syndrome.
Paul Lewis writes about rugby, cricket, league, football, yachting, golf, the Olympics and Commonwealth Games.