Bit of a moan I had about Otago rugby on another thread:
That Friday night performance - or at least what I saw of it inbetween watching the Alex Park and Forbury Park trots - was spineless/gutless/whatever abject adjective you want to throw in there. But was I surprised? No.
Where do the problems start? Well, it's more a case of "when". The "when" being 1996-1998, when professional rugby was a fledgling business and Otago, strangely enough, was on top of their game, storming through to dominate the 1998 NPC. But while that was happening, what was going on behind the scenes? Nothing. The succession planning from the Otago union has been nothing short of pathetic - whether it was a case of not clicking about the priorities of young rugby players in this new environment or whether it was a case of sitting on their hands, I don't know. But what I do know is what has been laid in front of Otago fans over the last 10 years. Which, bar a useful season or two, has been ****.
There's no doubt the University of Otago was a massive boon for the union in attracting young, intelligent rugby players (and even the not so intelligent ones like Marc Ellis) in the last 50 years, and that was great - regardless of the bleating from Hawke's Bay fans about us stealing their players. You should have had a decent tertiary instutition in your province, then maybe you might not have lost them in the first place? But as soon as the landscape of professional rugby changed, Otago needed to evolve with it, but, for whatever reason, they didn't.
Yes, there were the likes of the Otago Institute Of Sport set up as early as 1998, but all that apparently succeeded in attracting was local players from the local high schools (Carl Hayman is one graduate who springs to mind). While under-the-table scholarships might have been going on at Otago in the early 1990s, these should have been ramped up in the professional era, offering the brightest minds in Otago rugby a rugby contract ALONG with a fully-paid scholarship (course fees at least) for a three-to-four year degree.
Couple that with Southern Man's (yes, the Southern Man of this very Cricket Web parish) pertinent complaint about not retaining local players and you can see why we're in the mess we're in.
The coaching has hardly been of the highest quality either - the biggest ****-up of all was the charmed existence of Greg Cooper. What does it say to young, hard-working club coaches, when a coaching novice gets handed the rep assignments on a silver platter? And what did he manage to do? Drive away hard-working players in droves and play some of the most depressing style of rugby I've seen from Otago/Highlanders sides in years. Glenn Moore is a step in the right direction - a hard-nosed bugger whose players actually respect and want to play for, but Steve Martin seems too polite, nice and - well, insipid.
I have few qualms with Richard Reid too - he's a step up from the aloof Russell Gray who looked stately in his winter overcoat wandering around Carisbrook and that's about it - but the whole administration has been working away from their strengths as well. I've moaned about this in the past as well, but the union, in all their infinite wisdom, binned the Student Ticket/Beer/Bus deals with the student pubs for several years, driving away a massive core of their average crowd. It's hard enough to get out to Carisbrook from North Dunedin if you don't have a car without having these deals - which the pubs understandably loved - withdrawn. Add the boring pattern of play and the clear lack of heart from all players in the Otago team bar - say Newby, Donnelly and ... that's about it - and is it any wonder we are greeted with the sorry spectacle of 2000 turning up to an Otago match?
Something is rotten in Otago rugby - nay, a lot is rotten - but it's not too late. Play the new stadium/long-term education-employment aspects/balanced lifestyle card as often as possible to prospective Otago players; ****, even offer an overseas province sabbatical with, perhaps, Castres (and their ex-Otago players), for young players, just anything, for ****'s sake. And whatever you do, keep All Blacks like Adam Thomson in the province for as long as possible. Young players want to see clear pathways in place.