Former Wallabies coach Michael Cheika has pinpointed funding in teaching at Super Rugby stage as the important thing to a global resurgence as he talked down probabilities of him returning to switch Eddie Jones.
Cheika, the present coach of Argentina, additionally stated there was “nothing there” concerning hyperlinks to the NRL’s West Tigers and stated he wished to be concerned within the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia in ”a technique or one other”, along with his rapid future tied to Los Pumas.
After guiding Argentina to the semi-finals on the World Cup in France, Cheika’s identify has been linked to the position vacated by Jones despite the fact that one other former Wallabies coach, Robbie Deans, stated officers ought to by no means “go back”, as they did with Jones.
Cheika stated he was all about “loyalty” and proper now had nothing in his thoughts anticipate a brief break earlier than serving to Argentina reset plans for the following World Cup.
He stated he was “surprised” at how badly the Wallabies fared on the World Cup as they exited earlier than the quarter-finals for the primary time, which has sparked a evaluation from Rugby Australia.
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But having additionally coached the NSW Waratahs to the Super Rugby title in 2014, a 12 months earlier than guiding the Wallabies to the World Cup remaining in 2015, Cheika stated the significance of the very best home teaching couldn’t be understated when it got here to having worldwide success.
He stated that was the place the priorities ought to be for rugby officers as they appear to rebuild from the wreckage Jones left behind.
“From my experiences, coming back to coach the Waratahs in 2013, we won Super Rugby in 2014, then we got to the World Cup final in 2015. I do believe that coaching at Super Rugby level is just as important as who is coaching the Wallabies team,” Cheika stated.
“That is where the players are being prepared, that’s where it needs so much investment to make sure it’s going well.
“Once your players come to you (as an international coach), you are banking on that work being done of the teams leading in to you. That work, everyone looks at the top end, but the real changes in recent years (are) when we have had good World Cups off the back of Super Rugby teams doing well – the Reds leading into the 2011 World Cup, the Tahs in 2015.
“That success at provincial level inevitably leads to success at the international level.”
Despite the Wallabies’ woeful World Cup displaying and the resultant fallout, Cheika was assured if officers “have a good plan and good people” issues may flip round shortly.
“Hopefully, from this they’ll start to get a real understanding of the things that need attention to make the game, not just the Wallabies, get itself back on track. I am sure it will,” he instructed SEN.
“I know there is a lot of negativity around but it will. Without taking anything for granted, we are getting to a regime of understanding what’s required. Have a good plan and good people around and treat those people well, then things can happen.
“Things can turn around, you have to hold course and have a course to go to. That will be the next step, setting the course going forward.”
Source: www.foxsports.com.au