How Scott Robertson felt 'cornered' when unsuccessfully interviewing for All Blacks job
Crusaders coach Scott Robertson has revealed how Graham Henry cornered him with difficult questions during his interview to become Steve Hansen’s successor as All Backs coach. Robertson’s candidature was unsuccessful, the position instead going to Ian Foster, Hansen’s assistant.
It has left Robertson vowing that the next time he applies for the job he will make sure he is as articulate as he can be having learned his lessons from Henry’s unrelenting scrutiny.
Speaking on the Will Greenwood podcast about his failed bid to coach his country following a number of successful years at the helm of the Super Rugby-winning Crusaders, Robertson explained: “I had bought a new suit for the presentation and in the end I just thought: 'I'm just going to be myself', and then the questions just came at me.
“And they were great - I wanted them to challenge me. Graham Henry was on the interview panel and was really deep. He put me in a corner with a couple of questions and he wouldn't let me out. It was quite a challenging moment and made me think. I left like I maybe hadn't articulated myself as well as I could have or should have.
“I knew they were coming, and I just did my best. I walked out of there thinking they knew what they were going to get and how I was going to coach it. And I believe I had the rugby public knowing that I was going to give everything and that a potential change was what the All Blacks needed.
“I was clear that I felt I could make a real difference and bring my own personality. I'd coached 80-odd per cent of the players (at Crusaders) and had a lot of success with them.
“I outlined who I thought would be there for us at the next World Cup in 2023 and where we needed to develop some players, some depth. It didn't go my way - but I respect the process. If it was about the continuity thing, and if that’s why Ian got it, then great, I’ll get it another time.”
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Not really a surprising selection. You could say that this is a game in which Rassie could have been more radical with his starting 15, with an experienced bench as insurance. But to be honest there are not that many ways for him to do that within the tour squad. Maybe you could argue for starting Esterhuizen and/or Moodie.
Go to commentsI can't get onboard man :)
I really do understand your point of view but I'm absolutely convinced these coaches are not capable of improving England and I believe we have a lot more potential.
If I implied England were brutally efficient against NZ, that's not what I meant. England were terrible against NZ. The only time we got even close to scoring a try was an interception, we snatched and missed 3 drop goals because we had no idea how to penetrate your defence and if it weren't for some uncharacteristic errors then NZ would have put 40+ on the board as you've said. There are some things we did well of course. Some of the collisions were pretty brutal but efficient is not a word that applies to that performance.
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