SARACENS ARE THE standard bearers in European club rugby, as is very clear after they beat Leinster in the Champions Cup final last weekend.
That applies to their off-field work as much as the quality of what they deliver on it.
Saracens’ coaching staff is one of stability, cohesion and complementary skills.
Director of rugby Mark McCall, his team of five assistant coaches and the club’s Irish performance director Philip Morrow – very much part of the decision-making processes – extended their contracts en masse last year.
Johann van Graan speaks to the media yesterday. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
Defence/forwards coach Alex Sanderson and backs coach Kevin Sorrell are former Saracens players, while kicking coach Dan Vickers joined in 2006, skills coach Joe Shaw has been there since 2013 and scrum/forwards coach Ian Peel came on board in 2015.
Clearly, McCall has plenty of support and it’s a backroom set-up that Munster head coach Johann van Graan must look at with envy.
As things stand, van Graan and defence coach JP Ferreira are the only two confirmed Munster coaches ahead of next season, following last week’s announcement that forwards coach Jerry Flannery and backline/attack coach Felix Jones will leave this summer.
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Flannery and Jones declined contract extensions and van Graan has been left searching for suitable new additions with just weeks of the current season remaining.
“I’m very saddened and disappointed that they are going,” said van Graan yesterday. “Both of them got offered contracts and both of them are leaving for different personal reasons.
“It’s a club that both of them like. We as a group of management and players respect them so much, as we do with all people at Munster rugby. It’s a professional sport and people make decisions and people move on.”
Even before the confirmation that Jones and Flannery will leave, van Graan had been on the record stating his hope to bring in one more coach to “spread the workload”.
Now, he must find three.
“I think firstly it’s identifying who those people are. You want three coaches across world rugby who are the right fit, and all on the same timeline. So in a perfect world, yes, but this is how it’s worked out now, so we’ll take our time in filling the positions.”
Flannery and Jones at training in UL yesterday. Source: James Crombie/INPHO
Van Graan underlined his belief that Munster’s acting CEO, Philip Quinn, and the Professional Game Board had done everything in their power to retain Flannery and Jones.
Their exits leave the Munster staff without any homegrown coaches for the first time, although van Graan stressed that the province’s identity won’t be diluted – even if the newcomers aren’t from Munster.
“It is so important for Munster to keep the Munster-ness of it,” said van Graan. “We have some fantastic people here, [performance analyst] George Murray has been here for 17 years, he is here every single day of his life.