Tana Umaga talks Moana Pasifika's 'purpose', Aaron Mauger's advice and more
Coaching Moana Pasifika is unlike coaching any other club in professional rugby, but that’s exactly why Tana Umaga wanted the role.
The chance to represent his Samoan ‘aiga and harness the Pacific region's raw talent ultimately made the appointment a natural fit for the former All Black.
But, with the team finishing bottom of the table in both of their opening seasons in the competition, the hill the club must climb remains steep.
The bigger picture is front and centre for Umaga.
“The purpose of Moana Pasifika resonates with me,” he told Stuff.
“Assisting Pasifika players for the betterment of not just themselves and Moana, but also Samoa and Tonga. That made it easier for me to make this decision.
“I have had head coaching experience and there were tough lessons I had to learn around that.
“But also, watching other people working in that role and learning from them some of the things I can bring forward to this role now. That made it easier for me to say I’m ready for this.
“With being an assistant coach, I enjoy that. You just focus on one role, you go home and it’s pretty easy, you don’t have to think about much else, other than that role.
“Head coach is different, there’s a lot more on it. But I believe I’m better equipped to handle those things outside of it and build a group that I know can handle it as well.”
The results of the first few seasons will be happily forgiven if the club can build a foundation for future success and streamline local development pathways, but there is pressure on that timeline.
“That’s an understanding and realisation that there’s a big picture to what we’re doing,” Umaga said.
“In Super Rugby, we’re still trying to get those wins. It is a fine balancing act and we won’t know if we’ve got it right until we start playing.
“Learning from previous campaigns and the experiences we’ve had as coaches, we have got an experienced coaching group (Tom Coventry and Stephen Jones) and taking from this player group that’s been around for a while, we know the big picture, but we also know the responsibility for Moana and Pasifika rugby, is to get rewards and we need to start having success on the field.
“That’s what everyone is looking for. That’s what people want to support, so we’ve got to make sure we earn their support through putting in good performances that they’re proud of, and also that we’re proud of.
“Winning goes a long way towards putting more bums on seats and getting financial assistance. We’re not kidding ourselves.”
With a record of 25 losses and three wins, previous Moana coach Aaron Mauger knows the challenges the club faces intricately.
Umaga revealed that the two had spoken before he made his decision to join the club.
“Right at the start, when I was initially thinking about the role, Aaron contacted me and it was really good to get his gauge,” Umaga said.
“He’s always offered his ear if I want to talk to him about anything and I’m sure I will at some stage.
“I’ve also understood the experiences I’ve had in teams I’ve been a part of and made sure I’ve implemented that.
”Going from the learnings of other guys, not just Aaron, but listening to the senior players who were here the last couple of years.
“I’ve got a good connection with some of them, while I was away with Samoa, so I have a good understanding around some of the issues and also some of the positive aspects that happened last year.
“I’m trying to make sure we build on the positive ones and see what we can do about those other issues we’re working away on.”
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Australia definitely the game of the weekend. Wallabies by 3.
Go to commentsSmith is playing a different game with the rest of the backs struggling to understand. That's the problem with so called playmakers, if nobody gets what they're doing then it often just leads to a turnover. It gets worse when Borthwick changes one of them, which is why they don't score points at the end. Sometimes having a brilliant playmaker can be problematic if a team cannot be built around them. Once again Borthwick seems lacking in either coaching or selection. I can't help but think it's the latter coupled with pressure to select the big name players.
Lastly, his forward replacements are poor and exposed either lack of depth or selection pressure. Cole hemorrhages scrum penalties whenever he comes on, opponents take advantage of the England scrum and close out the game. Is that the best England can offer?
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