The David Nucifora Scotland verdict after 'five weeks on the ground'
David Nucifora believes the raw material is in place for him to establish a grassroots structure that will allow Scotland to enjoy long-term prosperity. The 62-year-old Australian recently started work as Scottish rugby’s performance director, charged with “providing a roadmap for Scotland’s next decade of player development”.
Nucifora took on his new role on the back of 10 years as the Irish Rugby Football Union’s high performance director, in which his ideas helped underpin the rise of the national team as one of the game’s leading lights.
The former Australia hooker is “encouraged” by what he has seen at Murrayfield. “The temptation of being able to help reshape something that I believe has a very high ceiling was attractive to me, hence I took up the opportunity to get involved,” said Nucifora.
“The last five weeks I have been here on the ground and I have been really encouraged by what I have seen. There is lots of potential and a number of things that can be attacked very early on to try and make some reasonably quick improvements.
“I don’t see it as being something that is going to materialise overnight. I certainly don’t have a magic wand, but I do see that the structures and the raw material is here to work with so I look at it in a very positive light that we can achieve some really good things.”
Nucifora’s focus will be on trying to create a conveyor belt of talent for national team head coach Gregor Townsend. “Gregor has done a really good job with the team,” he said. “Coming from the other side, you know you are going to be in for a really difficult match when you play Scotland.
“But it’s about being able to be consistent, and you have got to have a system underneath you that allows sustainable success. While you are working hard on keeping that national team doing well, you have got to be driving hard from underneath.
“I don’t want to be referring back to Ireland too often, but the engine of the Irish system is the pathway. It’s the thing that drives it. It does that because a lot of work was put into it over a long period of time to create a system that allowed quality to come through and created a competitive environment.”
Scotland are widely deemed to have their best team in a generation, although many of their key men are in their late 20s or 30s. “The challenge is trying to keep the pointier ends of the game as successful as possible while you’re building something underneath that is solid,” said Nucifora.
“So that is an ongoing challenge, how do you keep those teams being successful at the same time as you are constructing something underneath that hopefully is going to give you the longevity you are looking for?”
Nucifora has no issue with the number of players not born in Scotland currently representing the national team. “You have got to operate within the regulations you have got in front of you,” he said. “You have got to be creative.
“At the end of the day, when it really comes to the crunch, people care about winning. So you have got to find a way to meet that. In the perfect world, you will want more players coming out of the (Scottish) system but you have to squeeze every drop out of every area that you’ve got access to.”
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Not a huge amount of Irelands perceived success can be attributed to Nucifora . Not to say he did a bad job but rather the mechanics were in place before he took over and he did a decent job letting that flow ( could have done better on a few issues ) . Basically the talent available is apple and oranges and Nucifora didn’t put those bedrocks in place in Ireland either .
So basically there's a few good Scottish players, and he'll scan NZ, Aussie and SA for the rest, just like he did for Ireland.