Jake White stuns the Brumbies with early departure

By Brett McKay / Expert

The Brumbies have been rocked overnight by the departure of head coach Jake White, less than two months after guiding the two-time Super Rugby champions to this year’s final.

He still had another two years left to run on his four-year contract with the Canberra-based club.

Twitter exploded with the news around 8:30pm last night, and both Chris Dutton from The Canberra Times and Tim Gavel from the ABC confirmed the news around half an hour later, that White had indeed asked for a release from his contract early.

The Brumbies were said to be working through a resolution on the matter with White, but look set to grant White’s request for “personal reasons”.

White has been back in South Africa since the conclusion for the Super Rugby season, and he had previously made no secret that he would spend some time back in the Republic scouting for potential Brumbies recruits.

Numerous reports suggested White was going to meet with the Brumbies contingent within the Wallabies when they arrive in Cape Town ahead of this weekend’s Test Match at Newlands against South Africa.

Fox Sports rugby presenter Nick McArdle told Fox Sports News last night that Brumbies skipper and Wallabies no.8 Ben Mowen was trying to contact White, to urge him to reconsider his request for a release, but both McArdle and Gavel have also suggested there appears little chance of that happening.

Gavel tweeted later that White “wants to stay in South Africa for personal reasons and is not keen to return to Canberra.”

While White and his wife relocated to Canberra, their two sons remained at home in Cape Town while studying at university.

Unconfirmed reports have White eyeing off coaching roles with the Stormers, while a role in Durban was mentioned in reports coming out of South Africa.

Speculation was rife that White’s disappointment in being overlooked for the Wallabies coaching role has played a part in his decision, and this would not surprise me at all.

White told me in the days following that he was incredibly annoyed at missing out on the Wallabies job, particularly since the ARU had approached him to put something together as far back as February.

He was annoyed that after being sounded out personally, and with the ARU knowing full well of his philosophies and approaches to rugby, that they would then ignore all their reasons for making their approach and instead appoint Ewen McKenzie primarily because he was a local.

White had made no secret of his desire to coach internationally again, and it was only last year that he was heavily linked to the then-vacant England job, eventually taken on by Stuart Lancaster, who had been in a caretaker role.

The Brumbies were on the way to a complete rebirth as a Super Rugby force, and admitted in the lead-up to the decider in early August that he had reached the final twelve months ahead of his own expectations.

After taking on a Brumbies side that was a shadow of former glories at the start of the 2012 season, he completely rebuilt the playing group, brought in new assistant coaches and former Brumbies greats in Stephen Larkham and Laurie Fisher, and head-hunted renowned athletic performance coach, Dean Benton, who set about building the Brumbies into the fittest team in Super Rugby.

Despite numerous coaches trying and failing before him, White ensured all Brumbies players relocated to Canberra full time, and played in the local ACT Rugby John I Dent Cup competition.

The move was beginning to bear fruit already, with several local players expected to win EPS contracts in 2014.

On the field, the Brumbies stripped their gameplan back to a very simple territory game in 2012, and added a ruthless competitiveness at the breakdown in 2013, to the point that the Brumbies were the most penalised team in Super Rugby, and were widely pilloried for what was viewed as systemic cynical infringing in their own 22 this season.

White leaving two years early will be a devastating blow to the club, and particularly the playing group, but also to the wider Brumbies Rugby region. He made himself the ‘face’ of the club, was very much committed to returning the club to what he knew as the one of the very best rugby teams in the world.

He was deliberate in bringing back the great names, and very happily ran with the ‘Back to the Future’ theme that I put to him when I first spoke to him in August 2011.

He was intent on creating “the best rugby program in Australia” in Canberra, something he had to do as a point of difference to the bright lights and/or impressive beaches in the other four Super Rugby cities.

That point of difference netted David Pocock at the start of the 2013 season.

Personally, I came to know White reasonably well, and his departure will be disappointing not just for the obvious reasons, but for the fact that he was also so giving with his time to me and the small band of Canberra rugby media.

There were times that we walked out of press conferences knowing we’d been played, but White was always more than willing to provide a quote.

I’ll forever be indebted to White for granting me the unprecedented access he did, in allowing me to shadow him on the night of the Brumbies’ historic win over the touring British and Irish Lions side.

He’d never let a journo or writer follow him on matchday in his entire coaching career.

I’ll be particularly disappointed if he doesn’t return to Canberra, simply because he was going to autograph my feature article – which he heavily re-tweeted and promoted – and the matchday program for me.

And I owe him a beer.

More than anything, though, White enjoyed talking about rugby, and it was nothing for a ten-minute chat to be still going half an hour later. It was impossible not to learn something new each time.

Larkham is the early favourite to assume the head coach role, and that would seem to make sense.

Fisher has spoken of a desire to be a head coach again, but also loves being able to focus just on the breakdown, as he was doing under White’s regime.

This will be a big blow for the Brumbies, but their measure of a club now may not be through what White began for them, but how they build upon his foundations.

Their new era starts today.

The Crowd Says:

2013-09-28T21:46:58+00:00

Phantom

Roar Rookie


I would give Robbie Deans a go for 2 years

2013-09-27T10:03:26+00:00

stillmatic1

Guest


your second sentence is all that needs to be said, peterK. the rest is nonsense and designed to pad your argument and moral indignation. don't worry old sport, some noisy kids will be having a party next door soon....... mike is right, it seems there are a few people here who want to believe how employment contracts SHOULD work, not actually how they DO work. one party sought a release, the other granted it and the reasons for either action are irrelevant in this case. also, as many have pointed out, why continue with a coach (or anyone really) who doesn't have their heart in the job? if we didnt care when someone like falou did the same thing, then why care now? maybe because it doesn't benefit oz rugby perhaps!? the law must be impartial and not tied down to what each one of us think is morally correct.

2013-09-26T23:25:47+00:00

Garth

Guest


Yes.

2013-09-26T23:14:01+00:00

Red Kev

Roar Guru


I don't think you'd ever eat another banana if we showed you how we bend them :)

2013-09-26T22:28:39+00:00

bilo

Guest


What???? What are you talking about? The word Achievement wasn't even in you original post. Suggest you get a dictionary and thesaurus.

2013-09-26T22:19:44+00:00

soapit

Guest


and you wouldnt really want someone coaching your team under those circumstance even if you had success in getting him to stay.

2013-09-26T22:08:57+00:00

soapit

Guest


you lose 8 consecutive races to go down 9-8. thats how

2013-09-26T21:46:37+00:00

formeropenside

Guest


top of the log in 1996 and 1999, but lost the semi each time, semi-finalists in 01. 5th (when the top 4 went through) a few times. For the period before 2002, yeah, a powerhouse. Thats before I even start on the Super 10.

2013-09-26T21:29:47+00:00

formeropenside

Guest


sure, agreed, as long as its Queensland

2013-09-26T21:04:13+00:00

fernando marzano

Roar Rookie


Hi nickoldschool I´m glad to hear from you again, yes you are right. When I arrived home from my job, I read the news that Mario closed his contract for 3 more years in Montpellier, in Argentina we are 12 hours behind of Australia. I like your idea too, Fabien Galthie was Phelan assistan coach before Graham Henry, and he did a great job, he not only was an smart player, he definetely is a great coach too. Regards

2013-09-26T19:45:06+00:00

soapit

Guest


or just quite naive in the politics of aus rugby, strange after coming from SA where i'm sure there must be just as much

2013-09-26T19:44:00+00:00

soapit

Guest


and at the end of the day ownership is 9/10th and all that. whats owned in this case is the individuals time and if the club started being silly and unreasonable on compassionate release the individual just wouldnt turn up or get n a plane like sbw

2013-09-26T19:37:14+00:00

soapit

Guest


are you saying he would have had a clause that said 4 years...or shorter if you want to leave for family reasons? he asked for a release from his contract. doesnt that say he was breakiing it? not sure about 2 years but i do think players and coaches should have to pay something if they change their mind after signing a contract.

2013-09-26T19:32:21+00:00

soapit

Guest


remind us of his criteria for success again?

2013-09-26T14:43:46+00:00

Tatah

Guest


'They were both entitled to do what they did'. You've obviously read both Deans and Whites' contracts then champ. Why are both of them so entitled?

2013-09-26T14:34:05+00:00

Tatah

Guest


You still owe me rent formeropenside. I don't care how much your landlords. Pay up.

2013-09-26T14:23:09+00:00

Rob na Champassak

Roar Guru


Joke (noun) 1. Something said or done to evoke laughter or amusement; a. Something not to be taken seriously; a triviality. Honestly, what do they teach you at school up north? Just the mechanics of bending bananas?

2013-09-26T14:19:10+00:00

Rob na Champassak

Roar Guru


;) Thanks, ZG, ILDHGS.

2013-09-26T14:15:09+00:00

Tatah

Guest


You do the same. You've used public funds, you could hardly be less subtle. Did the rules get changed mid way through? If you can't compete, then don't. Spare us the whining when you lose, unexpectedly, in the statistically greatest choke ever.

2013-09-26T14:04:28+00:00

PeterK

Roar Guru


White did not have a get out clause. Yes technically he asked for a release and received it. However if you listen to Fagans media interview he expliciltly pointed out he had no choice, White was in SA and he could not force him to return to australia. Hence they are in discussions now. I do not believe he could enforce the australian contract against White in SA or elsewhere overseas, ie if he would not release him then somehow stop him coaching someone else, the aust courts have no juridiction, and on a civil matter you cannot extradite. Only hope would be the IRB stopping him but that would be restraint of trade. They cannot even enforce transfer fees being paid between french clubs and PI players. White has less integrity and loyalty by a long way than McKenzie.

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