What price for Nic White at the 2019 World Cup?

By Nicholas Bishop / Expert

It’s a compelling mystery. Why are some clubs stronger than others in practice, even when their array of talent does not appear to be as formidable on paper?

Why, for example, are the Highlanders more successful than the Blues in New Zealand, and why have the Brumbies been the most consistent Super Rugby performer in Australia since 1996?

It is the sense of identity and culture within a club which answers that question. It determines what players are willing to put it all on the line, body and soul in the clutch, and win the vital small moments in a game – when the outcomes really matter. Character and culture are more important than talent.

If the Southern Hemisphere is truly unable to staunch the bleeding and prevent the transfer of its playing assets en masse to rich clubs in the North, the next best solution is to ensure that those players end up at destinations where their abilities will be enhanced rather than diminished.

There is the long-term hope that, under the right conditions, they will return to their home country with more to offer than when they left it.

With the advent of a global season – which cannot come soon enough – the possibility may open up of a more structured foreign exchange between clubs in the two hemispheres, so that the development of younger players, in particular, can be accelerated through learning in very different environments.

I have previously examined the positive impact of the Saracens culture on the play of Will Skelton. If anything, the culture and sense of identity at the Exeter Chiefs is even stronger and potentially more durable than that at Allianz Park – which is why the Chiefs are currently nosing ahead of Saracens as the leading team in the English Premiership.

(Johan Schmidt Photography)

Exeter is very much a home-grown club which thrives on the mystery of cultural bonding. It places values ahead of money in the sporting food chain and enjoys very strong ties to the community via its academy and youth programs, and its extroverted involvement in a catchment area based around Devon and Cornwall in the West Country of England.

It is a club which does not waste time navel-gazing, but understands and appreciates its place in the community as a whole.

Apart from British and Irish Lions winger Jack Nowell, the Chiefs are not a team of big names and they do not chase high-value signings from the Southern Hemisphere. Instead, they target overseas players just below the very top level who fit their values and are in it for the long haul. They have been able to generate success on the field, and enjoy the only positive financial balance sheet in the Premiership. The Exeter approach clearly works, even if it is in a minority of one.

When time comes for contract renewal, most of the overseas signings who play for Exeter want to stay. All of their significant imports are Australian – prop Greg Holmes, second-rowers Mitch Lees and Ollie Atkins, back-rowers Julian Salvi and Dave Dennis, halfback Nic White and back three Lachie Turner. Lees was part of the England Saxons’ tour of South Africa in 2016, while Atkins has played a match for Scotland ‘A’.

Holmes, White, Turner and Dennis are established Wallaby internationals with 82 caps between them.

When ex-Queenslander Greg Holmes agreed a new two-year deal with the Chiefs last week, Exeter director of rugby Rob Baxter commented revealingly.

“You look at Greg and how hard he works with the other props and how he works with our young players, here is a guy you can see is desperate to pass on all his knowledge while still playing at a very high level, said Baxter.

“He’s the guy who has probably been the most unfortunate in terms of game time because he’s played very well for us, but he’s ended up at a club where we have three other international tightheads all in the squad.

“That said, he’s still a very important member of the squad and gives us great strength in that front row.”

Holmes may only be ranked third on the Chiefs’ depth chart at tighthead prop, but he has joined the culture by effectively working as a scrum coach on the training and playing fields.

Holmes is building himself into an IP asset of considerable value, and a scrum doctor who should be targeted for a return to Australia when his days in Devon are up.

Number nine Nic White is a player who should register on Michael Cheika’s selection radar much more urgently, even if he ‘only’ has 22 caps and is therefore ineligible under current Wallaby selection rules.

(Photo: Paul Barkley/LookPro)

White is another Australian who has taken to the Chiefs’ culture like a duck to water, after an uncomfortable stint at star-studded Montpellier:

“Exeter has that big country town feel about it. I can see why Aussies get attracted here – very similar type of people, laidback and friendly. The guys down here invest a lot of time into each other which is very easy to slide into,” White said.

“[They play] the type of footy that suits me, keeping the ball in play as much as possible, so I’m enjoying it… It didn’t really work out [at Montpellier]. You go back to the drawing board and think about what is important, which for myself is playing good rugby and being part of a good club.

“A fair few players would want to come here to play the way we do. Not everybody, but certainly for guys who want to run a lot, this is the right place.”

When I first analysed his play for England a few years ago, I felt that White (at least at Test level) was a player the opposition would want to play against. He tended to take too much responsibility on himself – especially in the kicking game – and significantly narrow the variety of the attack.

That has all changed at Exeter. White now has far more strings to his bow and more balance to his game, and that improvement ought to interest the Australian selectors.

Recently I had the opportunity to investigate White’s game against his old club Montpellier [sic] in the European Champions Cup – and the results were mighty impressive.

Passing
For the halfback, it all begins with the speed and accuracy of the pass and his movement between rucks. White was absent at the base of only one of the 110 rucks Exeter created in the game, and the speed and accuracy of his pass, off either hand, was excellent:

These two examples come from the same sequence of play. Throughout the game, White’s passing was crisp and delivered in a consistent plane out in front of the receiver, direct from the base. He has eradicated the negative habit of taking steps laterally without presenting a threat to the inside defence, and that in turn creates more time and space for his first receiver and the men outside.

White also has no problem covering the ground to the far side of the field in order to be present at the base of the first breakdown.

One delivery direct from lineout hit the sweet spot from more than 20 metres away, creating space wide two passes later:

Kicking
White’s expertise in the kicking game came as no surprise, and it was a central plank in Exeter’s plan to exploit the space in behind Nemani Nadolo and force a kicking duel on favourable terms. The following example ended with a Chiefs lineout throw inside the Montpellier half:

Running the arc
White also demonstrated a much finer intuition about when to mix in the run from the base than in previous years, and his ability to break against the first two defenders out to his left was crucial to Exeter’s success:

Although the first offload doesn’t go to hand in this instance, the ‘nine scoot left’ remained a fruitful option for the Chiefs all game:

On this occasion, Henry Slade got sufficiently close to the Montpellier goal-line for the Chiefs to force a score out of the position on the next sequence of play.

It’s not just the initial break and reverse pass by White that’s so impressive, it’s his determination to follow up the break and become the first cleanout player over the top of the England centre when he goes to ground. He not only secures the ball, he drills into his opposite number with force.

This is where the cultural background kicks in at a molecular level, if you like. White makes that extra effort to get to the ball and get down and dirty in the trenches. The desire and heart are there, as it has been all season at his new club.

White was also quite prepared to perform this operation against breakdown monsters as big as Bismarck du Plessis:

He was willing to do all the unglamorous tasks, like going down on a loose tapped ball from a lineout with the hoof-beats of the giant Montpellier forwards thundering in his ears:

I can think of several scrum-halves of recent vintage who would have refused to drop on that kind of ‘rubbish’, and left to it their forwards to clean up! It was only right that Nic White’s dedication to the cause was rewarded with a try of his own (suitably from a ‘nine scoot left’) just before he was substituted out of the game in the 70th minute:

Summary
It is not all gloom and doom in the passage of professional players from the Southern Hemisphere to the North to ply their trade.

If they can find a place in the right team culture, there is no reason they cannot continue to develop as players and thus become even more valuable to their country of origin when they return.

Exeter Chiefs are a hotbed of development for both young English talent and players from overseas. They are already developing Greg Holmes as a coach, and it is important that he brings that IP back to Australia in the near future.

Nic White will still only be 29 years old when the 2019 World Cup spins around, and at present, given the lack of development time afforded to Joe Powell (and Jake Gordon) over the last season, he would make much the best back-up to Will Genia.

He passes well off either hand and has learnt economy of movement around the base. The pass/run/kick balance is much better than it was and he can now fit more harmoniously into a possession-minded team like the Wallabies, who run their attacking plays mostly off ten or twelve.

White has changed his style to suit his circumstances in the English Premiership and it has made him both a more adaptable player and more of a threat to the opposition. Whatever political tweaks need to be made in order to make him eligible for Wallaby selection, they should be made.

What of the future? If the aim of a global season can be achieved, large-scale exchange schemes between clubs in both hemispheres may begin to flourish, developing players and coaches more rapidly and creating new interest for supporters without the permanent loss of players to the opposite side of the world.

The Crowd Says:

AUTHOR

2018-02-05T08:02:49+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


I don't know if he went to Welford Road for the money or on a recommendation from someone like Rod Kafer or Pat Howard (who've also coached there), but the move is looking somewhat ill-timed in terms of his rugby career right now.

2018-02-05T07:18:03+00:00

Fin

Guest


Hi Nick, In your experience do you think these kind of events are worth attending for young Australian coaches? Two of Australia's last three Wallabies coaches, Robbie Deans and Michael Cheika, will host a summit for coaches next week in the lead-up to the Brisbane Global Tens event. Rugby Australia, Queensland Rugby Union and Duco Events are organising the event, which will also have Crusaders coach and former All Black Scott Robertson, whose side won last year's Super Rugby title. Deans, Cheika and Robertson will spend four hours answering questions at the summit at Suncorp Stadium and will do their best to share their wisdom with coaches from around the country. It will be held at midday on February 8 and tickets cost $60. Deans, who had a 58 per cent winning record with the Wallabies from 2008 to 2013, is coach of the Japanese team Panasonic Wild Knights at the Brisbane Tens. "The best thing any coach can do is to continue to learn and grow," Deans said. "The coaching summit is one of those opportunities. Not because you will have an opportunity to interact with coaches who currently operate at the elite end of the game but more so because you can learn from the lessons they have learnt along the way." Robertson added: "I'm equally looking forward to hearing what Robbie and Michael have to say – hopefully I'll pick up a few tips myself." It comes after 80 level-three and four coaches from around the country gathered last week for a four-hour conference and hands-on session at Rugby Australia headquarters in Sydney. Australian men's and women's coaches Andy Friend and Tim Walsh spoke to the group and were on deck to run some technical sessions on RA's indoor field.

AUTHOR

2018-02-04T08:29:30+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Eddie's still desperately trying to find a 7 to prove himself right about Chris Robshaw Colin... but Robbo will still be playing the role come the next WC.

AUTHOR

2018-02-04T08:28:03+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


BB is quite a good point of comparison Phil - still not quite sure whether BB's a 10 or a 15, outstanding rugby player though he is :)

AUTHOR

2018-02-04T08:26:24+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


He's been good, but his replacement James Ryan is also good enough to start for Ireland!

AUTHOR

2018-02-04T08:24:34+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


yep they're keen to tap the Japanese up for financial input!

AUTHOR

2018-02-02T07:36:39+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Thanks Fin - yes it's strange... the media will always ask players about their great triumphs and victories, but a player tends to remember the tough, oppositional moments rather more clearly... And when you think about it, isn't that what we all value in our lives? Not the moment of reaching the summit, but the effort, the creation of the muscle (which we didn't always have) to get us there. The silent failures - just like Michael Jordan's comment about his defeats (and times when he didn't make the game-winning shot) we discussed a couple of months ago... That's clearly what Thorn really remembers and it will become the marrow of his coaching life. "I’m probably a pretty doughy guy but I did listen and learn and watch coaches, players, experienced stuff myself,” Love it.

2018-02-02T07:13:19+00:00

Fin

Guest


Hi Nick, I thought would find this article of interest. The most-treasured memories in Brad Thorn's storied 22-year, dual-code career weren't necessarily the ones involving trophies. They were the bad moments - the deep, dark struggles from which success eventually bloomed. With Queensland arguably at one of their lowest Super Rugby ebbs, new Reds coach Thorn wants his players to see things from the same perspective. Thorn won the Bledisloe Cup, Super Rugby, Heineken Cup, Rugby World Cup, State of Origin and the Super League as a player - but surprisingly, he looks back fondly on Brisbane's horror 1999 NRL season. The Broncos were bottom of the ladder with just one win after the first 10 rounds, but rebounded to win their next 11 in a row to reach the finals. "We got kicked straight out of the finals but people don't talk to you about that when they talk about the great moments," Thorn said. "That was when you had the fight in front of you. "People talk about the finals we won but a lot of times I loved it (when) things weren't going your way and you just had to stick together. "Those are the times you cherish - they're just as big to me in my memory." Thorn also enjoyed big form turnarounds with the Highlanders in 2013-14 and, as a coach, turned easybeats Queensland Country into NRC champions. He has designs on doing the same with the Reds, who haven't reached the Super Rugby finals for four years. "I don't want to be a guy that's talking a whole heap about that," Thorn said. "I'm not a great orator or a massive talker about stuff - I prefer action, so we'll see how we go." Thorn said he had absorbed plenty of coaching lessons from Wayne Bennett, Robbie Deans, Steve Hansen and Sir Graham Henry. "I'm probably a pretty doughy guy but I did listen and learn and watch coaches, players, experienced stuff myself," he said. "If you don't care about your mates or who you're representing, if you don't have that stubborn drive to just want to (do) whatever it takes to get the job done ... that's the sort of stuff that brings your footy stuff to life."

2018-02-01T15:45:10+00:00

GusTee

Roar Pro


Thanks mate!

AUTHOR

2018-02-01T14:55:33+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Thanks Colin, I'll keep an eye out for Addison when I next watch a Sale match :)

AUTHOR

2018-02-01T14:54:31+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


I understand where you're coming from Gus.... I'd agree it would have been better if the fourth franchise had been based in Perth - but I only realized the strength of support in WA when events reached a crisis. There was a real passion visible - as there is in your post.

2018-02-01T13:29:05+00:00

Colin N

Guest


Yeah, James has time on the ball and a good off-loading game, just didn't have the greatest 2016/17. Like Haley, I think they suffered from 'second-season syndrome.' Watch out for his brother too. He's meant to be the better of them and was outstanding in Sale's Anglo-Welsh game against an experienced Northampton last weekend. Addison's the one for me though, it's just a shame he keeps picking up injuries, otherwise I reckon he would have had at least 20 caps by now. Qualifies for Ireland as well, so that's an option should England keep ignoring him.

2018-02-01T09:57:32+00:00

Fin

Guest


Hi Nick, Here's a really old article from the roar which I thought you might be interested in. http://www.theroar.com.au/2009/08/20/all-blacks-impressed-by-swans-strategy/

2018-02-01T06:55:45+00:00

GusTee

Roar Pro


Hello Nicholas A good article but herewith a somewhat tongue in cheek response. The best Australian example to fit within your opening comment about some clubs being stronger than others, is without doubt "The Rebels" circa 2017. Poor player recruitment, woeful performance, overstated public support, poor match attendance, non-existent coaching and questionable administration. But then they were backed with unlimited funding and support by "Billy the Kid" Pulver and "Con Em All Camo" and now they are the strongest RU club in Australia. Makes one think a bit, hey!! MAY THE FORCE BE WITH YOU

AUTHOR

2018-02-01T06:21:55+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Anyway, just to re-iterated the original question, do you think there will be much interest for QC from the NH? I don't think he's good fit in France - other than somewhere really progressive like La Rochelle - because the game is too much of a massive physical plod there... In England I would have thought that Wasps, Quins and maybe even Exeter could be more likely destinations.

AUTHOR

2018-02-01T06:17:40+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Yep Sale not know for producing outstanding back-lines but they're getting there now - and JOC at 15 or 14, all day long! That boy Sam James is a player I really rate.

AUTHOR

2018-02-01T06:14:43+00:00

Nicholas Bishop

Expert


Great comment Colin - applies to Nobby and anyone outside he Midlands maybe? :D

2018-02-01T00:38:37+00:00

Tony

Guest


Spot on Jimbo81..Always his favourites are in the starting 23 everytime.All his favourites are Waratahs apart form Moore ( now retired) and Genia the rest a tahs or players that have to be picked as they are too good not to be left out of the 23. Coleman Korobiete Hodge.Ultimatley Chekko is hoping this is his team in 2019. 1 Robertson 2 TPN 3 KEPU 4 Skelton 5 Simmons 6 Hanigan 7 Hooper 8 Dempsey 9 Phipps 10 Foley 11 Naiyaravoro 12 Beale 13 Rona 14 Cam Clarke 15 Folau 16 Latu/Roach/Fitzpatrick 17 Ryan 18 another tom Robertson prototype 19 Holloway/Dennis 20 Coleman 21 Mason 22 Horne 23 Gordon

2018-02-01T00:33:12+00:00

MitchO

Guest


Mate you guys are the experts but I'd be inclined to leave him in the line where he did do okay against SBW. He just has to take the space and force people to run around him. For me that is less dangerous than a back three player who drops a lot of high balls.

2018-02-01T00:22:59+00:00

Colin N

Guest


Sale said they signed him as a 10 but quickly realised he was a better 12 or 15. He's played a bit of both but when they signed Janse van Rensburg on a short-term loan, he basically played solely at 15 and has done very well. However, MacGinty - their first choice 10 - is now out for a lengthy period so O'Connor may be shifted inside as they don't really have too many other options there. That Sale backline has some serious talent: De Klerk, O'Connor, Yarde, Solomona, McGuigan, Haley, Addison, James.

More Comments on The Roar

Read more at The Roar