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'Great coaches don't hang around waiting': Did Castle make a subtle Rennie dig at NZR?

By Online Editors
(Photo by Brett Hemmings/Getty Images)

Rugby Australia boss Raelene Castle has revealed the organisation made contact with Dave Rennie six months ago about the possibility of the Kiwi coach taking over at the Wallabies.

Rennie was officially confirmed on Wednesday as the next head coach for the side, with his contract taking him through to the 2023 World Cup.

Speaking to Radio Sport's D'Arcy Waldegrave, Castle said Rugby Australia wanted to be proactive in their recruitment process after Michael Cheika indicated he would not seek another term at the helm if the side did not win this year's World Cup.

"We needed to make sure we had options, or at least understand what the market was telling us about availability; great coaches don't hang around waiting for job offers, you have to go looking for them and make sure that you understand what their contract situations are," Castle said.

"We'd certainly had some conversations with Dave – I'd met with him and then when we exited from the World Cup and Michael said that he wasn't going to step forward I could continue conversations with Dave.”

(Continue reading below…)

While Castle met with Rennie initially about half a year ago, Rugby Australia could not engage in contract negotiations until they knew what their coaching situation would be going forward. After a quarter-final exit, they were able to proceed with their recruitment process and had come to an agreement with Rennie within the following month.

Rennie was thought to be among several candidates in contention for the vacant All Blacks coaching role. However, he said by the time New Zealand Rugby had come knocking he was set on joining the Wallabies. "He was by far and away the most outstanding candidate," Castle said.

"We believed he was the best fit not only from a performance coaching point of view but also a cultural point of view and his experience in bringing groups of people together is very sound.

"Dave's proven ability both at the Chiefs and what he has done in a short time with the Glasgow Warriors to bring together a group of men and build a culture where they all want to work together toward the same thing is one of his best skill sets and that is something we know will be very valuable to us. We had a plan and we worked really hard to execute it.”

- New Zealand Herald 

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