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Author Topic: EJ Gone Back to Aus  (Read 1148 times)

jamestaylor002

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EJ Gone Back to Aus
« on: January 15, 2023, 11:18:18 PM »

westwaleswasp

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Re: EJ Gone Back to Aus
« Reply #1 on: January 16, 2023, 01:27:34 AM »
Kind of a good move. Eddie will be great for a couple of years. There will be high profile wins, a decent world cup, a decent RC. Then it will slide as it always does with him.

Neils

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Re: EJ Gone Back to Aus
« Reply #2 on: January 17, 2023, 03:42:49 PM »

Revealed: Eddie Jones held 14-month long secret talks with Australia while with England

Exclusive: Lack of non-compete clause from RFU allowed Rugby Australia to make swift move for Eddie Jones having courted him since 2021
By Gavin Mairs, Chief Rugby Union Correspondent 16 January 2023 • 7:24pm


Eddie Jones held secret talks with Rugby Australia over the course of 14 months, Telegraph Sport can reveal.

Jones, who was appointed as Wallabies head coach on Sunday night, had at least three meetings with Rugby Australia leadership including one while on tour with England last summer.

Following his sacking as England head coach, Jones was handed a five-year contract to replace New Zealander Dave Rennie – setting up a potential head-to-head with England in the quarter-finals of the Rugby World Cup later this year.

Remarkably that journey first began over dinner at the Gaucho restaurant in Richmond, south west London in November 2021.

Jones is said to have met with Rugby Australia chairman Hamish McLennan and their chief executive Andy Marinos there following England’s autumn campaign, which included a 32-15 victory over the Wallabies at Twickenham.

It is understood that Rugby Australia had instigated the meeting with a view of sounding out “where his head was” as part of their first steps to see if he would be interested in returning to his homeland to take up the position of Wallabies head coach after this year’s World Cup, when his England contract was due to expire.


“His articulation of club rugby [in Australia], player movements within rugby league and union, the competitive landscape and what needed to be done was very impressive,” recalls McLennan.

Jones is said to have been “100 per cent” committed to England through to the World Cup during the meeting, and again when Jones was entertained McLennan at his home – a stone’s throw from the Sydney Harbour Bridge – where he was also joined by Marinos for a confidential meeting after England’s tour of Australia last July.

At a time when there was intense speculation over his future as head coach, despite the 2-1 series victory, following a second successive Six Nations campaign that featured three defeats, the conversation is said to have centred on “life, rugby and business”.

A further meeting between McLennan and Jones is understood to have taken place during the last year's autumn series at a time when his job was again under severe threat following a disastrous run of results.

The talks resumed and intensified just days after Jones was sacked by the Rugby Football Union on December 19 and replaced by Steve Borthwick.

Rugby Australia were privately said to be astonished that the RFU had not insisted on a non-compete clause in Jones’ severance package which enabled them to fast-tracked their plans, culminating in a deal being struck between Jones and McLennan at the end of last week, despite lucrative offers also on the table for Jones in Japan and France.

Jones’ contract will officially begin on January 29 – his first appointment will be to attend the finals of the Sydney Sevens on that day – and will include the next two World Cups and the British and Irish Lions tour of Australia in 2025.
‘No way I wanted Eddie to go to my big competitors’

England supporters will no doubt be alarmed that Jones, who has spent the last seven years in charge at Twickenham, and the last three planning for the World Cup in France, will now be able to share his intellectual property with one of Borthwick’s side’s closest rivals. Fans may also question why the head coach, with two years left on his contract, was holding talks with potential new employers while his side was struggling to reach the heights of the 2019 World Cup.

“We are great friends with the guys from the RFU,” McLennan told Telegraph Sport. “When we heard that Eddie had been cut we said: ‘Wow!’ “Then when we heard there was no non-compete [clause], we said: ‘Really!’

“There is no way I wanted someone like Eddie to go to one of my big competitors. His global knowledge of the game and our opposing sides is second to none. We didn’t want a rampaging Eddie on the loose.”

The RFU on Monday defended the decision not to impose any restrictions on Jones, a practice that is often commonplace in blue chip companies when a senior employee is paid off.

“When the RFU ended Eddie’s role as England head coach, having considered both the legal and moral perspectives, it was decided it would be unreasonable to restrict Eddie in seeking alternative employment,” said an RFU spokesperson.

Jones declined to comment.

McLennan’s track record in business – he is currently chair of a global digital advertising real estate company – shows that he is prepared to move heaven and earth in the pursuit of talent, leading to the shock dismissal of Rennie just a week after he insisted he would be making no changes to his coaching line-up.

There was a surprise within Rugby Australia at his refusal to work with Jones and McLennan received the unanimous support of his board to pursue the appointment of the Australian.
‘Eddie and I believe we can give the World Cup a red-hot go’

It is understood that Rugby Australia’s sales pitch to Jones included the promise of structural changes that will see the Super Rugby structure become more aligned with the centrally-contracted provincial system in Ireland which has enabled Andy Farrell’s side to move to No 1 in the world rankings.

The promise of having total control over his players – something that he yearned for during his seven years with England – and the opportunity to coach for two more World Cups, as well as the Lions tour and a Women’s World Cup were said to have been the decisive factors.

Rugby Australia are also on the verge of concluding a private equity deal which will give Jones the funds to develop a new domestic structure.

“The announcement has already sent a lightning bolt through the entire Australia eco-system,” added McLennan. “Eddie and I genuinely believe we can give the Rugby World Cup a red-hot go later this year.”
Let me tell you something cucumber

Bloke in North Dorset

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Re: EJ Gone Back to Aus
« Reply #3 on: January 17, 2023, 05:17:13 PM »
Quote
Rugby Australia were privately said to be astonished that the RFU had not insisted on a non-compete clause in Jones’ severance package which enabled them to fast-tracked their plans,
A former Home Secretary declared his department not fit for purpose.

By it’s actions the RFU continues to declare itself not fit for purpose. 

Shugs

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Re: EJ Gone Back to Aus
« Reply #4 on: January 17, 2023, 06:31:24 PM »
His running England into the ground makes sense now!

WonkyWasp

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Re: EJ Gone Back to Aus
« Reply #5 on: January 17, 2023, 10:50:16 PM »
A Mole. 

JonnyD

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Re: EJ Gone Back to Aus
« Reply #6 on: January 18, 2023, 10:24:07 AM »
An Aussie post saying it felt like accidentally drunk dialling an ex, did make me chuckle

Vespula Vulgaris

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Re: EJ Gone Back to Aus
« Reply #7 on: January 25, 2023, 12:27:13 PM »
The only surprise there is Jones declining to comment.  When has that man ever declined to make an inane comment?
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jamestaylor002

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Re: EJ Gone Back to Aus
« Reply #8 on: January 25, 2023, 01:53:03 PM »
Well, Stephen Moore has come out saying he's not particularly happy with the way EJ has been appointed by Rugby Australia, saying that the appointment was rushed (I think he's correct, even if the meetings between RA and EJ were going on for some time). I was expecting something a spicier, judging by how the headline is written.