The Stormers seek Australasian guidance and the rest of the Republic should follow their lead

By Armand van Zyl / Roar Guru

In February it was announced that current Stormers mentor Allister Coetzee’s contract would not be renewed with the union, and that he would venture over to Japan to coach a team in their domestic competition.

All the Stormers fans, myself included, rejoiced.

Don’t get me wrong, I have no hard feelings toward the man they call ‘Toetie’, after all how could I? Under his supervision the Stormers have been collectively best South African side in Super Rugby since 2011. They have won three Conference titles while the Bulls and Sharks won just one-a-piece in 2013 and 2014 respectively.

In that time the Stormers have featured in no less than three play-off games, with the fourth on it’s way, and they have been second, second, first and third on the overall log during 2010, 2011, 2012 and now 2015. Coetzee’s tenure has seen winning records over all the other South African sides, his overall winning percentage is over 70 percent and his record at Newlands is onwards to 90 percent.

After 11 painful years of winning nothing, Toetie’s Western Province unit has featured in four of the last five Currie Cup finals, and they finally broke the hoodoo in 2012 by winning the trophy before they won it again last year.

All-in-all Toetie has been the best Stormers coach the history of the club. He can actually speak the English language fluently, a trait not too many South African coaches possess and he is by all accounts a pleasant and reasonable man.

He seldom throws Springboks returning from injuries back into the starting team, unlike Naka Drotske for example, and he actually cares for the well-being of his big name players as well as rewarding the rookies who impress.

Coetzee has had a run filled with controversies, but a good run nonetheless. I for one hope he is successful in Japan and I thank him for his service to the Stormers franchise.

With that being said it is time to move on, and Western Province Director of Rugby, Gert Smal, thinks that we desperately need some Australasian input if we are to become a well-rounded side.

The Stormers reportedly sought the signings of either John Plumtree, Ewen McKenzie, Robbie Deans, Eddie Jones, John Mitchell, Nick Mallett or John Dobson as head coach. Of all these names John Mitchell, Nick Mallett and Eddie Jones have been excluded from contention.

It’s an ambitious list of names and I honestly wouldn’t mind either of them taking over the Stormers apart from John Mitchell.

Nick Mallett, who would be my personal choice, turned down the offer citing that he thoroughly enjoys his job as an analyst on SuperSport and he would have to give up his position on the World Rugby board, which he does not want to do.

John Mitchell turned down the offer because of job security and Gert Smal is only contracted until 2017, so there would be no guarantees of Mitchell being retained as the head coach for the allotted period of four years stretching to 2020, however all is good because apparently now he’s the red hot favorite to take over from Gary Gold at the Sharks from next year.

Eddie Jones also turned down the offer because he aims to coach the Japanese national side in the coming years.

This leaves you with only three other candidates in Plumtree, Dobson and McKenzie.

For those of you who don’t know, John Dobson is the head coach of the Western Province under-21 side and he will assume the coaching role of the senior side in this year’s Currie Cup in the absence of Toetie.

Dobson is a good coach who has carried the junior Western Province team very admirably, but the question of whether or not he can make the step up to Currie Cup level remains, let alone at Super Rugby level.

A lot of Australians will have differing opinions over the quality of Ewen McKenzie after his unsuccessful stint as the Wallabies coach, but I for one believe him to be an excellent Super Rugby coach and that he can add a lot to a team like the Stormers, especially when it comes to creative attacking play.

Word has emerged however that former Sharks head coach and current Hurricanes assistant coach, John Plumtree, is the favorite to take over as the Stormers’ main man.

Plumtree is reportedly only negotiating a release from the Hurricanes so that he can pursue a shot at the Stormers. Only time will tell whether or not the Hurricanes still want him by their side after he’s made such a remarkable improvement to the Canes’ forwards.

The main message here is that Smal recognizes the that while the Stormers’ defence is still looking solid, their attack is not good enough to win Super Rugby.

In fact, the Stormers have only secured four bonus points for four tries in the last four years.

In 2012 they failed to secure a single bonus point for tries. In 2013 they managed to bamboozle that year’s finalist, the Brumbies, at Newlands by scoring the fabled four tries and putting almost 40 on the visitors despite having a relatively weak year in 2013.

In 2014 the Stormers managed to whack the Highlanders with four tries at Newlands and in 2015 they managed two bonus point wins against the Waratahs and the Cheetahs. There has been improvement, but not enough.

Before the Stormers versus Lions weekend, the men from the Cape still sat at second place on 43 points. Disregarding the draw on that particular weekend, their 43 points may have deceived their true form.

A lot has been made about the New Zealand Conference being almighty, and to be fair it has been pretty much dominant. They have three teams in the top six, but were the Chiefs and Highlanders that much better than the Stormers? The log showed otherwise.

At that point the Chiefs won one game fewer than the Stormers and the Highlanders won just as many as the Stormers did, the only thing giving them the edge were bonus points and that is the great downfall of the Stormers.

In 2012 they topped the overall log with the Chiefs hanging about with just two points lower than their total. The shocking thing is that the Stormers secured just two bonus points that whole season and both of them were for losing within seven points. Had they secured as many bonus point wins as the Chiefs that year they would have been eight points ahead of the Chiefs.

In 2013 we saw more of the same as the Stormers ended up at seventh despite winning just as many games as the fifth and sixth placed teams. The only thing that stood between them and the play-offs were bonus points. If they had only scored two more they would have faced the Brumbies in Canberra in place of the Cheetahs.

2014 was just horrible and even five bonus point wins would not have saved them, but this year if they had scored as many bonus points as the Highlanders they would have been ahead of them on points.

The Stormers just don’t score enough tries and it gets them every single year.

Nick Mallett made an interesting comment a few weeks ago, that the Stormers are on par with Kiwi sides when it comes to counter-attacking, but they lack the creativity to actually construct tries on their own and this is reflected in their stats.

Western Province scored 45 tries in last year’s Currie Cup and 61 percent of those tries came from counter-attacking off a turnover ball. This year the Stormers have scored 61 percent of their tries off a turnover ball, exactly the same percentage as last year’s Currie Cup.

What most people don’t see is that the Stormers are just as dangerous as Kiwi sides when you will the ball to them. They often score tries when you kick to them, they often score tries when you knock the ball on and they often score tries from their own 22-metre zone when they turn the ball over. They are like the All Blacks on the counter, but they lack All Blacks creativity from structured attack.

An Australasian coach will help them in this regard.

For far too long has Stormers rugby reverted into the typical South African approach of kicking, defending and leeching on opposition mistakes.

Western Province was always known as a union that tries to play the fifteen man game with just that, fifteen men. Smal promised their fans that he would ensure the Cape side revert back to their roots and this seems like a step in the right direction.

I have been an advocate of Australasian coaching ever since I started watching the game. It’s not that I think that South African coaches are mediocre, they are the best in what they do. South African coaches can turn any team’s pack of forwards into effective mongrels who rise to the occasion, especially in the set-pieces.

South African coaches know how to create strong defensive systems, they know how to get the best out of their teams tactically, but the art of genuine attacking rugby has been lost in their pilgrimages and whether we want to admit it or not we need Kiwi and Aussie coaches to help us get back on track in this regard.

South African players are too methodical in their approach to handling the ball. In our circles being able to pass the ball off either hand is the only prerequisite to attacking play, but we disregard the technicalities and manipulation of true ball handling.

We just don’t see South Africans freeing up their arms in contact, we don’t see them supporting the ball carrier when he makes the break, we don’t see quick flicks in interplay from point A to B to C and then back to B.

We run the ball from one side to another, hitting all the chords, but ignoring the pentatonic scale and that is what is fundamentally wrong with our rugby.

The truth is that South African rugby is only one facet away from playing the complete game and we have all the tools to play it.

We already have strong set-pieces, strong kicking and physicality, but we also have the players to play the attacking way, we just don’t use it. Australasian input will help, we’ll develop good linking play and we’ll still retain our traditional strengths. The head coach may be a Kiwi, but those around him are still South African.

I hope I see the day we finally realise how close we really are to challenging the All Blacks.

The Crowd Says:

2015-06-16T02:33:21+00:00

Rollaway7

Roar Guru


AVZ I am going to stop you and say the bulls require change more then the Stormers do. The bulls should not hire Stonehouse, he is more of the same, deep ingrained Afrikaner rugby style types. The Bulls can do with a international coach but it will have to be an ex forward, so Ewen will have to pack his bags for Pretoria and remember to buy a generator for his new house. Will also go a long way to help transformation. Deans Should take the sharks gig, I don't know what is going to inspire the Sharks. BUT there is no better time to transform SA rugby: RWC year with most of the old heads moving on All the big clubs have cleared out their old coaches Lots of good young players have gained experience this year The time is now, bring in NZ and Aussie coaches to change the mind set. Lions and Rebels final next year, both teams are young and experienced,

2015-06-16T02:22:17+00:00

Rollaway7

Guest


Where is Peter De Villiers????

2015-06-15T22:12:29+00:00

Red Kev

Roar Guru


I saw an article saying Thor has signed for Toulon. Of course it's Toulon so it's probably premature, but that must be a worry for the Stormers.

AUTHOR

2015-06-15T21:50:50+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


Hopefully Toetie also appoints Burger as captain.

AUTHOR

2015-06-15T21:49:25+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


But as you say, the Lions aren't scoring all the tries "yet". If they continue in this vain then I can see them competing with the big running sides.

AUTHOR

2015-06-15T21:48:08+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


That is why I said "Harry's stats, and a few others". That translates to me referring to more than just Harry's given stats. In saying that, if de Allende is our best with only 23 offloads then we are in trouble. A quick flick through a number of stats like meters made, linebreaks, passes, offloads per team, line breaks per carries, try assists, amount of tries itself shows we're all still behind. We all are, Lions and Stormers included. It is interesting to note that the Stormers and the Lions were far more conservative against Australasian opponents. The Lions' stats against the Crusaders and Blues do not make for good reading. 34 kicks from hand being the average in those two games. The Stormers didn't kick so much when they went over, but they really failed to inspire in any attacking play anyway. More worrying is this : The Stormers only actually attacked when they faced the Cheetahs and the Lions. The other games were very forward, set-piece oriented. The Lions on the other hand gathered most of their running stats when they played against South African opposition, the only exceptions were the games against the Highlanders and Waratahs, which were at home yet again. This is why I don't buy into the Lions being attacking gurus. Like the Springboks they have no problem playing a fast, open game at home, but the moment they go overseas they revert to a conservative style of rugby. Another little fact is that the Lions only gathered four bonus points this year, one of which was for losing within 7 leaving them with only three bonus points for tries, two against the Cheetahs who leak tries like champions. So it's two bonus points for the Stormers and three for the Lions. Not much in it. It is the holy truth that the Lions lead the way in our conference when it comes to attacking play, but putting them in the same class as the Highlanders is silly. The sad truth is that we are, the Lions included, still way behind.

AUTHOR

2015-06-15T21:22:34+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


Good man.

2015-06-15T21:16:44+00:00

etienne marais

Guest


That sounds just about right. I hope AC sees it that way too. Harry, I have a good feeling; I think your boys are going to Wellington.

2015-06-15T21:04:40+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Etienne, I haven't heard yet, but to have the right balance, I'd start Rhodes at 7, Kolisi at 6, and Burger at 8, with Carr coming on when Rhodes tires (and Carr play at 8; Schalk shift to 6, Kolisi to 7).

2015-06-15T20:52:01+00:00

etienne marais

Guest


And Carr, de Allende, Burger are (almost) always there to support the guy making the break. So is Kriel, Hougaard and Pietersen.

2015-06-15T20:48:41+00:00

etienne marais

Guest


It's going to be great to watch. See him do his best Thor impersonation this coming Saturday. (Who starting at 6 and 7, from Carr, Kolisi, and Rhodes?)

2015-06-15T20:46:01+00:00

etienne marais

Guest


AvZ, I suspect you misuderstand "Harry's stats" slightly. They relate directly to the first of your troika in the paragraph that I quoted from your article. So either you misunderstand the stats, or you misunderstood your article.

2015-06-15T20:35:11+00:00

etienne marais

Guest


Yes, 6 out of 15 on the list are Lions. So that covers (and disputes) the 1st (and possibly the 2nd point) in the above assertion. The larger issue is this: even conceding that the Lions did not score that many open filed tries, one certainly cannot accuse them of not employing very enterprising and undpredictable attacking plays. Exactly the type of plays that we see the 'Canes and 'Landers do week in and out...just not as effective...yet. I am not a Lions fanboy, just fully respecting of their entertaining efforts. My argument actually underscores AvZ's central point, which is that it is all about coaching. This the Lions have proved: We do have the players (even so-called "no-name" brand players), it is just the right reward structure (e.g. not being dumped for making enterprising mistakes) that needs to be put in place by the coaching staff. Ackerman seems to have gotten this right (mostly).

2015-06-15T20:25:42+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


I'm looking forward to Schalk Burger using the Brumbies and Waratahs to claim his ticket to the World Cup.

2015-06-15T20:24:07+00:00

Harry Jones

Expert


Nick Mallett or Robbie Deans.

AUTHOR

2015-06-15T20:22:26+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


As Harry's stats confirm and a few other, the Lions may play with speed and intensity, but their interplay still is still nothing to write home about. Their bonus points for tries aren't really all that either and I rarely see them pass from A,B to C then back to B and A again. They're more like A,B,C, insane ruck recycle, A,B,C, lather, rinse, repeat. Compared to the stats such as offloads, meters gained, line breaks, defenders beaten of other top teams, the Lions are about average. But that doesn't mean that they haven't been spectacular.

AUTHOR

2015-06-15T20:18:19+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


That ought to be an interesting contest. The last time the two faced one another, Skelton was taught a lesson in physicality. A rematch would be enlightening.

AUTHOR

2015-06-15T20:17:16+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


Thanks Digger. Uhm, you know that's a tough one to answer. Half of the time I always wonder why the Cheetahs aren't tearing everyone apart piece by painful piece.

AUTHOR

2015-06-15T20:16:03+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


I did write two paragraphs about Deans, but the editors took it out. Maybe it was something I said?

AUTHOR

2015-06-15T20:15:13+00:00

Armand van Zyl

Roar Guru


Enjoy it while it lasts mate! Before long you'll be looking in awe how we combine brutal Bok play with enhanced Kiwi like handling!... Oh who am I kidding? My grandchildren probably wouldn't even see that day either.

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