STARTING OFFICIALLY ON the 1st of June, the IRFU will have its first ever Performance Director in Australian native David Nucifora.
The appointment is rooted in the governing bodyâs review of the 2011 Rugby World Cup, when the IRFU Committee agreed to develop its âPlan Irelandâ. This plan was seen as the necessary starting point for improved results at the 2015 and 2019 World Cups.
One of the key issues identified was the fact that voluntary committees were making decisions that so heavily affected the working lives of the professional coaches and players in Ireland. That space between old school appreciation for the game and modern day expertise needed to be bridged.
Nuciforaâs newly-created position means the IRFU will have âqualified and experienced professionals being managed by a qualified and experienced professional,â according to chief executive Philip Browne.
Approval to begin searching for a candidate to fill the Performance Director position came as long ago as January of 2013, but Browne is pleased that a patient appointment process has yielded the finest possible candidate for a crucial job in Irish rugby.
Having left a similar role with the Australian Rugby Union in 2012, Nucifora yesterday admitted that âmy first intention wasnât to move overseas.â However, the 52-year-old was attracted to the IRFUâs proposition by the simple fact that the Performance Directorâs role had already been clearly defined.
âFor me, it was really important that that had been done.â
Source: IRFU
One of the key parts of Nuciforaâs work will be to streamline the thinking â and actions â of the entire professional game in Ireland towards the âprimacy of the national team,â while ensuring that provincial success is not sacrificed.
Joe Schmidt will continue to worry about the specifics of on-pitch performances, and Nucifora has âa huge amount of respect and confidenceâ in his ability to do so, having worked with him for three years at the Auckland Blues.
Away from match day and the training pitch, Nucifora will aim to ensure that there is âgreater alignment across a number of areasâ in Irish professional rugby, including management of playersâ game time, player welfare, succession planning, strength and conditioning, medical care, analysis and nutrition.
âIf you lack efficiency, then the people that normally suffer from that will be the players. If we can get a system thatâs very well aligned across all the different components that make up performance, then ultimately the people who will benefit from that will be the players.
âThatâs what Iâll be working on with the provinces and the staff within the national set-up; to see if we can get greater alignment across all areas.â
As Nucifora himself pointed out yesterday, his role is âwide-ranging,â but a key objective is that each of the factors that contribute towards the performances of Irish team on the pitch are âworld-classâ.
Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO
How will the Performance Director cope when a plan that might benefit Schmidtâs Ireland meets with disagreement from one or more of the provincial coaches? Nucifora hopes to avoid that situation as often as possible through detailed planning and communication.
The fact that the provinces had a major say in deciding on the content of âPlan Irelandâ and the creation of his very role is a comfort to the former Wallaby hooker.
âIâm sure that over time there will be differences of opinion; thatâs just the nature of how sport works. But what I am confident of is that a lot of people have had a say into this âPlan Irelandâ paper.
âThat really is the blueprint to fall back on and those people within Irish rugby have said this role was needed to be bring the game closer together. Iâm sure thereâll come times where there will be things we donât agree on.
New Zealand rugby has been praised for its joined-up thinking between franchises and national teams, with the continued supremacy of their senior menâs team the constant aim.
A key part of the NZRUâs success has been the sharing of ideas, be they organisational, technical, tactical, mental or in the strength and conditioning department. Nucifora foresees something similar happening in Ireland.
âThereâs an element of that that youâd want. When you talk about alignment, I donât think you want to stifle anyone in what they bring to the game. There are talented coaches out there [at the provinces] and I think that having variety is an important part of development.
Source: Billy Stickland/INPHO
âYou donât want to create the same beast everywhere and you want players to learn different things from different coaches and then apply it. I do think itâs important that players are exposed to different things.
âIâd like to see the national coaches kept busy during the year, involved in the academy system thatâs already set up, and at the disposal of the provincial teams if they would like to use them.
âBut certainly bringing together the coaching staff from around the country on a regular basis to be able to talk rugby, and share views and ideas so that we donât have a closed shop in one particular province. There shouldnât be any secrets in rugby, I think itâs a very simple game.
âI think if we can create an environment where people are comfortable to share and speak about the game, the players will ultimately benefit from that.â
Read the Plan Ireland âWhite Paper by clicking this link â
âWinning World Cups is achievableâ â Nucifora says Ireland cannot limit ambition
Strong club rugby in Ireland helping to develop U20 internationals â Ruddock
Article source: http://www.espnscrum.com/ireland/rugby/story/220339.html
Nucifora to bring "greater alignment across all areas" of Irish rugby
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