WEDNESDAYโS PREVIEW OF the 2024 Super Rugby season on Rugby Weekly Extra took a brief detour closer to home in light of the Irish Independentโs overnight report that head coach Dan McFarland is set to leave Ulster with immediate effect.
The Englishman has coached Ulster for the past six years but after a poor recent run of form, Sundayโs URC defeat at Ospreys may well have proved โthe straw that broke the camelโs backโ, according to former Ireland performance coach Eoin Toolan.
The Rugby Weekly Extra analyst joined host Gavan Casey to discuss McFarlandโs departure and said that a coaching change at this stage of a season โ a rarity not only in Irish rugby, but in the sport generally โ suggested that McFarlandโs position at the northern province had become โuntenableโ.
Toolan, who previously coached with Super Rugbyโs Melbourne Rebels and Japanโs Kintetsu Liners, also pointed towards the respective departures of Dwayne Peel and Jared Payne as a turning point for the worse during McFarlandโs tenure.
โThere was an alarming nature to the lack of progression in the squad over the last 18 months,โ Toolan said. โWeโd previously thought they were on an upward trajectory and that seems to have stalled.
Advertisement
โTheir win ratio over the last couple of seasons would still have been pretty high but such are the demands and expectations of what is a pretty talented squad, the pressure has come on it appears. And to leave in the middle of a season, things must be at a pretty low ebb.
โI will go back and say I think the losses of Dwayne Peel and Jared Payne, particularly, were really critical and they coincide with the stall in progression in the team.
โItโs really important who you surround yourself with. The head coach is obviously doing a lot of the background, but the guys that are in front of the playing group day to day, presenting to them: theyโve got a really critical role but on the field and off the field.โ
Toolan added that the process behind the appointment of McFarlandโs successor would be โcritically importantโ.
The former Ireland coach suggested that Ulsterโs squad profile demands a โmore dynamic brandโ of attacking rugby than what McFarlandโs side has produced over the last 18 months, and said that he hoped an Irish coach would be in the frame to take the reins at Ravenhill.
โWeโve talked about it on the pod, about a possible lack of identity in terms of what they stand for as a side,โ said Toolan.
โLike, obviously, theyโve leveraged their maul, theyโve recruited South African-profile types of players at a large expense who potentially havenโt quite paid off for them. And when you look at how talented the backline is, you would suspect they need to embrace a little bit more of a dynamic brand of rugby.
โIt all needs to marry up: your game model, the profile of your squad, where you want to invest, and the profile of coach that you want to bring in to be able to deliver on that formula.
โItโs a really important appointment and you would hope that there is going to be some homegrown coaches at least considered for the role.โ
Elsewhere on Wednesdayโs pod, Toolan and host Gavan Casey also conducted a thorough preview of the 2024 Super Rugby Pacific campaign, with assessments of each teamโs chances, players to watch, and season predictions.
If you are not already a subscriber then sign up here to listen to this podcast and enjoy unlimited access to The 42.
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
Close
18 Comments
This is YOUR comments community. Stay civil, stay constructive, stay on topic.
Please familiarise yourself with our comments policy
here
before taking part.
'To leave in the middle of a season, things must be at a pretty low ebb'
WEDNESDAYโS PREVIEW OF the 2024 Super Rugby season on Rugby Weekly Extra took a brief detour closer to home in light of the Irish Independentโs overnight report that head coach Dan McFarland is set to leave Ulster with immediate effect.
The Englishman has coached Ulster for the past six years but after a poor recent run of form, Sundayโs URC defeat at Ospreys may well have proved โthe straw that broke the camelโs backโ, according to former Ireland performance coach Eoin Toolan.
The Rugby Weekly Extra analyst joined host Gavan Casey to discuss McFarlandโs departure and said that a coaching change at this stage of a season โ a rarity not only in Irish rugby, but in the sport generally โ suggested that McFarlandโs position at the northern province had become โuntenableโ.
Toolan, who previously coached with Super Rugbyโs Melbourne Rebels and Japanโs Kintetsu Liners, also pointed towards the respective departures of Dwayne Peel and Jared Payne as a turning point for the worse during McFarlandโs tenure.
โThere was an alarming nature to the lack of progression in the squad over the last 18 months,โ Toolan said. โWeโd previously thought they were on an upward trajectory and that seems to have stalled.
โTheir win ratio over the last couple of seasons would still have been pretty high but such are the demands and expectations of what is a pretty talented squad, the pressure has come on it appears. And to leave in the middle of a season, things must be at a pretty low ebb.
โI will go back and say I think the losses of Dwayne Peel and Jared Payne, particularly, were really critical and they coincide with the stall in progression in the team.
โItโs really important who you surround yourself with. The head coach is obviously doing a lot of the background, but the guys that are in front of the playing group day to day, presenting to them: theyโve got a really critical role but on the field and off the field.โ
Toolan added that the process behind the appointment of McFarlandโs successor would be โcritically importantโ.
The former Ireland coach suggested that Ulsterโs squad profile demands a โmore dynamic brandโ of attacking rugby than what McFarlandโs side has produced over the last 18 months, and said that he hoped an Irish coach would be in the frame to take the reins at Ravenhill.
โWeโve talked about it on the pod, about a possible lack of identity in terms of what they stand for as a side,โ said Toolan.
โLike, obviously, theyโve leveraged their maul, theyโve recruited South African-profile types of players at a large expense who potentially havenโt quite paid off for them. And when you look at how talented the backline is, you would suspect they need to embrace a little bit more of a dynamic brand of rugby.
โIt all needs to marry up: your game model, the profile of your squad, where you want to invest, and the profile of coach that you want to bring in to be able to deliver on that formula.
โItโs a really important appointment and you would hope that there is going to be some homegrown coaches at least considered for the role.โ
Elsewhere on Wednesdayโs pod, Toolan and host Gavan Casey also conducted a thorough preview of the 2024 Super Rugby Pacific campaign, with assessments of each teamโs chances, players to watch, and season predictions.
If you are not already a subscriber then sign up here to listen to this podcast and enjoy unlimited access to The 42.
To embed this post, copy the code below on your site
Dan McFarland rugby weekly extra Ulster