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As Matt O'Connor heads for Leinster... here are 3 challenges he faces
Reproduced with permission from Whiff of Cordite
MATT O’CONNOR WILL be the next Leinster head coach. He’s already met the players according to reports, and the decision will be announced in the next few days.
It’s a swift turnaround from Leinster Rugby, who must have foreseen how things have since transpired with Joe Schmidt from the moment Louis Picamoles scored the equalising try in Lansdowne, or perhaps from the moment BNZ rolled out that 60-burger in June.
But who is this new coach and will he be any good? Confession time: we don’t really know anything about him first hand. So, as always, we welcome input from those who do.
Here’s what we do know. He’s been Richard Cockerill’s right hand man at Leicester since 2008, where his job title was ‘Head Coach’, but he has effectively been their No.2 and before that he worked with the Brumbies, whose attacking style (think George Gregan and Stephen Larkham) apparently greatly informs his rugby philosophy.
Michael Dawson has made two winning appointments in a row by targeting young, ambitious coaches who have served an apprenticeship as a No 2 or performed well with a smaller club. This appointment continues the theme. With both Michael Cheika and Joe Schmidt, Dawson got exactly what the doctor ordered, can he do so for a third time on the spin?
Schmidt’s Leinster ain’t broken, and O’Connor will be tasked with keeping the wheels turning smoothly, while dealing with some bumps in the road that lie ahead (more of this later). Like Schmidt, he’s a technical coach with clear ideas on how the game should be played, and favours a running game with ball-in-hand.
Free-flowing
Without being close enough to the goings on at Leicester, it’s hard to know just how much to attribute of what goes on there to him, but the augurs are reasonably good. Leicester have never been a club readily associated with free-flowing rugby, but they do play a decent brand of footie. They routinely top the try-count in the Premiership, usually by a large margin and were involved in the best game of Heineken Cup rugby of the season, a thrilling 15-15 draw with Ospreys played at breakneck pace for 80 minutes.
Ben Youngs is their key player and the backline works off his running angles and ability to bring those around him into play. Yes, Manu Tuilagi is an important weapon for them and, no, Leinster don’t have any backs of his ilk, but not everyone in the Leicester backline is an Island-built monster. Matt Tait is their fullback and former Leinsterman Niall Morris is holding down a starting berth on the wing. All that said, they did play Toulouse with Thomas “the Tank Engine” Waldrom at openside this season, prompting us to tweet that if they won it would disprove all we thought we knew about the game.
Challenges
Ok, so it’s another attack-minded coach who seems to have the ability to get his team scoring tries. Sounds good.
But what sort of challenge awaits O’Connor? For starters, Joe Schmidt is a tough act to follow. Matching Schmidt’s achievements seems almost impossible but if O’Connor can at least match the class with which Schmidt conducts himself, that will be half the battle. Leicester and Cockerill in particular have a reputation for whinging and that won’t endear him to Leinster fans.
In order to keep Leinster competitive at the sharp end of the Heineken Cup and Pro12, he’ll have to deal with a number of looming obstacles.
Three stand out as the most obvious.
If O’Connor can get over these hurdles, he will be well on his way. Second row looks considerably brighter than it did 12 months ago, with Mike McCarthy arriving next season, Leo Cullen rejuvenated and staying on for one more year, Quinn Roux starting to make appearances (which is more than could be said with Ed O’Donoghue and Steven Sykes) and Devin Toner posting a very strong finish to the season. He inherits a club with strong support, a winning culture and great players.
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