Northern Edition
Select Edition
Northern Northern
Southern Southern
Global Global
New Zealand New Zealand
France France

Storm coach Bellamy's advice to embattled All Blacks coach Ian Foster

(Photo by Darrian Traynor/Getty Images)

Craig Bellamy isn’t resorting to any fast fixes to arrest Melbourne’s alarming form slump that has seen the Storm lose their last four NRL games, but had some advice for All Blacks coach Ian Foster who is under similar pressure.

ADVERTISEMENT

Ahead of their fixture against the Warriors in Auckland, Bellamy was asked about the All Blacks, who this month suffered a historic series defeat against Ireland piling the pressure on coach Ian Foster.

The master coach shared similar advice for Foster.

“He should just stick to what he believes in, what he knows works for the All Blacks,” Bellamy said.

Video Spacer
Video Spacer

“There’s no miracle cure, as we know over the last month, so make sure you stick to what your values and beliefs are and don’t drift off into something that’s not that important or isn’t going to help.”

Meanwhile, with the 13th-placed Warriors playing just their second home game since 2019 after being forced to relocate to Australia due to COVID travel restrictions, Bellamy said they deserved some kind of compensation from the NRL.

He was also open to shifting their annual Anzac Day fixture from Melbourne to Mount Smart.

“I don’t know what – but we could give them four, five or six competition points to start with as they probably deserve it,” Bellamy said.

“What they’ve done for the game has been unbelievable … they’ve made a lot of sacrifices, a lot more than any other team in the competition.

ADVERTISEMENT

“We all should tip our hats to the Warriors, congratulate them, and be really grateful for what they’ve done for our game.”

Once a top-two lock, injury-hit Melbourne have dropped to fifth and are in danger of surrendering hopes of a top-four finish and a finals second chance.

Ahead of their clash with the Warriors in Auckland on Friday night, the Storm coach says he’s going back to basics rather than search for anything new.

Bellamy says he wants to see more consistent effort from his players if they’re to avoid equalling their worst run of consecutive losses since 2012.

ADVERTISEMENT

They were able to overcome five-straight losses late in that season to win the premiership but they had the likes of superstars Cameron Smith, Billy Slater and Cooper Cronk steering the ship.

“We’re looking at the things that are important to our game and most of those things are around consistent effort,” Bellamy said on Thursday in Auckland.

“That’s probably what we haven’t been so good at in the last couple of weeks.

“We don’t want to panic because that won’t get us anywhere.

“For us it’s not about winning or losing at the moment it’s about finding a bit of form and being more consistent with doing the things that we know are important to us to perform.

“We’ve gone back to really nailing those things down at training, and then hopefully, we’ll improve in the games.”

ADVERTISEMENT

Toshiba Brave Lupus Tokyo vs Kubota Spears | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 Final | Full Match Replay

Saitama Wild Knights vs Kobe Steelers | Japan Rugby League One 2024/25 Bronze Final | Full Match Replay

Boks Office | Episode 42 | Investec Champions Cup Final Review

Spain's Incredible Rugby Sevens Journey to the World Championship Final | HSBC SVNS Embedded | Episode 14

Australia vs USA | Pacific Four Series 2025 | Full Match Replay

New Zealand vs Canada | Pacific Four Series 2025 | Full Match Replay

South Africa vs New Zealand | The Rugby Championship U20's | Full Match Replay

The Game that Made Jonah Lomu

Trending on RugbyPass

Comments

0 Comments
Be the first to comment...

Join free and tell us what you really think!

Sign up for free
ADVERTISEMENT

Latest Features

Comments on RugbyPass

S
SK 25 minutes ago
The Reds' 'whimpering' exit shows Super Rugby scrums still matter

The Scrum remains a key platform in the game. There may be fewer set in SR Pacific and fewer penalties given but you cannot escape its importance and that is how it should be. The scrum cannot become an irrelevant thing in Rugby. It deserves its own space in the game however too much time is spent setting a scrum and thats where the refs need to be more strict. They need to demand effort from players and award 10metres or penalties if the scrums are not set fast enough by one team or the other. The sixty seconds to set will only help if its enforced strictly. The Refs in the Top 14, URC, Champs Cup and Prem have been too slack in adequately policing the times setting scrums. Too many teams simply dawdle at scrum time because they are on the back foot. Theres nothing more frustrating than watching a clock count down and players having a chat with the ref at scrum time or stand up because they packed in badly. Refs need to get serious on it. In 1995 scrums were set in seconds. The laws came in to make them safer but now its way too time consuming. I feel like too often refereeing is done according to feeling and not mandate. There needs to be consistent standards across the game. While SR referees will penalise a 9 for not using it in the 5 seconds it rarely happens in Europe. Andrew Brace did it this weekend to Embrose Papier but that was after like 10 seconds. The Refs need to get more assertive about time wasting and following the time limit guidelines and this needs to happen across all leagues at once. Only then will we have a game for all refereed at the same standard.

35 Go to comments
TRENDING
TRENDING Australian-born replacement for Lions as prop ruled out of tour Australian-born replacement as Lions lose prop for tour
Search