Force set to supersize for Super Rugby
New Western Force coach Simon Cron has set his sights on turning his side into one of the buffest teams in Super Rugby Pacific, and says simply making the finals won't be considered good enough.
Cron has been tasked with turning the new-look squad into a powerhouse after taking over as coach from Tim Sampson.
Pre-season training doesn't officially start until October 1, but Cron is keen to get the ball rolling early.
One of his initial aims is to add significant size and strength to his squad to help transform the Force into a beefed-up unit.
"One of the things we need to do is dominate the contact zone," Cron told AAP.
"Rugby is a pretty simple game. If you win the gain line, it goes a long way to winning the game.
"So right now we've increased the focus on weights and the mass.
"We're looking at nutrition, and our strength and conditioning coaches are working on world-class weights programs.
"It's about putting on lean muscle mass, not fat."
Super Rugby Pacific is a 12-team competition, with eight of those clubs qualifying for finals.
The Force only narrowly missed out last season despite posting a woeful 4-10 record.
Billionaire owner Andrew Forrest wants to turn the Force into one of the best rugby clubs in the world, and Cron is embracing the challenge.
It's why merely making the finals in 2023 won't be considered a success.
"I would not set the bar at finals, because it's too low a bar," Cron said.
"I'm not OK with it."
There has been plenty of player movement at the Force since the end of last season.
Veterans Jeremy Thrush, Richard Kahui, and Greg Holmes all retired, while Fergus Lee-Warner, Kyle Godwin, Santiago Medrano, and Jake McIntyre are among the players who have left the club.
Wallabies hooker Folau Fainga'a headlines the new recruits, which also includes former Rebels skipper Michael Wells and ex-Chiefs flyer Chase Tiatia.
The Force's acquisition of former Reds playmaker Hamish Stewart o n a two-year deal was crucial after five-eighth Reesjan Pasitoa suffered a serious knee injury that could rule him out for the entire 2023 seas on.
Cron, a former NSW Waratahs assistant who was coaching Japanese club Toyota Verblitz when he was poached by the Force, wants to introduce an exciting style of play next season.
"The type of rugby will be high skill, high tempo type game, which I think suits the squad we have," he said.
"For me, ball beats man. We've got to make sure all our players can catch, pass, run, tap, trigger - all those things."
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Perenara is super woke, the treaty of long ago is irrelevant to a game of rugby in Italy. By referencing it and claiming the countries going through tough times is clearly because Perenara doesn't agree with the democratically elected government of New Zealand that people from all ethnicities voted for. Perenara is making it divisive and political despite many of his team mates that wouldn't agree with his decision. The Allblacks saved this year's worst performance to combine it with the most divisive haka statement. Perhaps it's overdue now for NZ rugby to leave the haka for home games only, ensure that only the players that want to do it are included and never again have 'insertions' added by political activist players.
Go to commentsI expected a larger win than this and the ABs were off slightly whilst the rested Italians were well up for this and gave a real committed performance
Frustrating but a lot of those ABs forwards have done huge minutes this tour and Italy are not the side from the World Cup
Remember they beat wales and Scotland in the 6N
Drew with France and lost to England by 3
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