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'It is unlikely we'd be able to find a high calibre coach at short notice and one who'd step in at this point'

Howard Mnisi, Southern Kings

Isuzu Southern Kings director of rugby Robbi Kempson will continue performing the role of head coach to the Eastern Cape team until the end of the current Guinness PRO 14 season.

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Kempson remains determined to appoint a high calibre coach to take charge of the senior team but he has given up any hope of that happening before the end of the 2019/2020 campaign and has instead set the start of the next season as his target for a head coach to be installed.

The Kings are seven games into the current PRO 14 season, meaning they are a third of the way through it. Kempson took up the coaching reins when plans to appoint a coach, initially intended to be a coach with an overseas coaching background, fell through during the pre-season.

Kempson is an interim coach, meaning he will step aside and focus more strongly on his directorship role once he has appointed a head coach. That isn’t going to happen at this point of the season though so he has accepted that he will be the coach for the foreseeable future.

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“I do intend to have a new coach in place before the start of next season but we are too far into this campaign now and you can’t expect a new coach to come in mid-season,” said Kempson.

“I will continue to coach the team until the end of the current campaign. It is unlikely we’d be able to find a high calibre coach at short notice and one who’d step in at this point. If there was someone like that it would be someone who has just been sacked by his province or club, or is unhappy at his club, and that would be far from ideal. We are looking for someone of calibre.

“I will coach the team until we find the right guy. We don’t want to take a scatter-gun approach to the coaching appointment and then stumble along through a succession of different coaches. We want to get the right guy the first time.”

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Kempson said he was sure such a person would become available once coaches start coming off contract at the end of the northern hemisphere club season.

“There must be someone of calibre who will be available soon, once the season is over, I just don’t think it will happen in mid-season,” he stressed.

Kempson said he had been helped by the astute signings that had been made when it came to his assistant coaches as well as the support he was getting from his board of directors.

“We have Braam van Straaten and Vuyo Zanqa working with us as assistant coaches and now Swys de Bruin is with us as an attack coach on a consultancy basis. We have good individuals helping out and that makes it easier for me.

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“What is important is that we must just carry on improving incrementally and continue our improvement as a unit.”

The Kings will next be in action in the PRO 14 when they travel to Scotland to play Edinburgh on 4 January.

PRO14 / Brendan Nel

The Season 5- Episode 5

A single kick ends up being the difference between a successful season or a failed campaign and Hamilton hearts are tested in the Tauranga rain.

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Oh no, not him again? 2 hours ago
England internationals disagree on final play execution vs All Blacks

Okay, so we blew it big time on Saturday. So rather than repeating what most people have all ready said, what do I want to see from Borthwick going forward?


Let's keep Marcus Smith on the pitch if he's fit and playing well. I was really pleased with his goal kicking. It used to be his weakness. I feel sympathy for George Ford who hadn't kicked all match and then had a kick to win the game. You hear pundits and commentators commend kickers who have come off the bench and pulled that off. Its not easy. If Steve B continues to substitute players with no clear reason then he is going to get criticised.


On paper I thought England would beat NZ if they played to their potential and didn't show NZ too much respect. Okay, the off the ball tackles certainly stopped England scoring tries, but I would have liked to see more smashing over gainlines and less kicking for position. Yes, I also know it's the Springbok endorsed world cup double winning formula but the Kiwi defence isn't the Bok defence, is it. If you have the power to put Smith on the front foot then why muzzle him? I guess what I'm saying is back, yourself. Why give the momentum to a team like NZ? Why feed the beast? Don't give the ball to NZ. Well d'uh.


Our scrum is a long term weakness. If you are going to play Itoje then he needs an ogre next door and a decent front row. Where is our third world class lock? Where are are realible front row bench replacements? The England scrum has been flakey for a while now. It blows hot and cold. Our front five bench is not world class.


On the positive side I love our starting backrow right now. I'd like to see them stick together through to the next world cup.


Anyway, there is always another Saturday.

7 Go to comments
C
CO 2 hours ago
Scott Robertson responds to criticism over All Blacks' handling errors

Robertson is more a manager of coaches than a coach so it comes down to intent of outcomes at a high level. I like his intent, I like the fact his Allblacks are really driving the outcomes however as he's pointed out the high error rates are not test level and their control of the game is driving both wins and losses. England didn't have to play a lot of rugby, they made far fewer mistakes and were extremely unlucky not to win.


In fact the English team were very early in their season and should've been comfortably beaten by an Allblacks team that had played multiple tests together.


Razor has himself recognised that to be the best they'll have to sort out the crisis levels of mistakes that have really increased since the first two tests against England.


Early tackles were a classic example of hyper enthusiasm to not give an inch, that passion that Razor has achieved is going to be formidable once the unforced errors are eliminated.


That's his secret, he's already rebuilt the passion and that's the most important aspect, its inevitable that he'll now eradicate the unforced errors. When that happens a fellow tier one nation is going to get thrashed. I don't think it will be until 2025 though.


The Allblacks will lose both tests against Ireland and France if they play high error rates rugby like they did against England.


To get the unforced errors under control he's going to be needing to handover the number eight role to Sititi and reset expectations of what loose forwards do. Establish a clear distinction with a large, swarthy lineout jumper at six that is a feared runner and dominant tackler and a turnover specialist at seven that is abrasive in contact. He'll then need to build depth behind the three starters and ruthlessly select for that group to be peaking in 2027 in hit Australian conditions on firm, dry grounds.


It's going to help him that Savea is shifting to the worst super rugby franchise where he's going to struggle behind a beaten pack every week.


The under performing loose forward trio is the key driver of the high error rates and unacceptable turn overs due to awol link work. Sititi is looking like he's superman compared to his openside and eight.


At this late stage in the season they shouldn't be operating with just the one outstanding loose forward out of four selected for the English test. That's an abject failure but I think Robertson's sacrificing link quality on purpose to build passion amongst the junior Allblacks as they see the reverential treatment the old warhorses are receiving for their long term hard graft.


It's unfortunately losing test matches and making what should be comfortable wins into nail biters but it's early in the world cup cycle so perhaps it's a sacrifice worth making.


However if this was F1 then Sam Cane would be Riccardo and Ardie would be heading into Perez territory so the loose forwards desperately need revitalisation through a rebuild over the next season to complement the formidable tight five.

28 Go to comments
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