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Brumbies coach plans for grand final

Written By Unknown on Minggu, 21 Juli 2013 | 01.27

Confident ... Brumbies coach Jake White. Source: AAP

IF there was any doubt over the confidence of a Brumbies team playing their first playoff match in nine years, it was shattered by coach Jake White's revelation he has already started planning for the grand final.

A brutally honest White said the Australian trait of rarely talking more than a week ahead is not for him.

While they must first get through the Cheetahs in Canberra on Sunday afternoon, White had no qualms talking about his plans for next week's potential semi-final against the Bulls and then the decider a week later  unlike other coaches who seize up at the mere thought of hypotheticals.

"It's an Australian thing, I'm just amazed by how sensitive they are about 'Should we say this?', 'Shouldn't we say that?', 'Do you think different players will read differently into it?" White said on Saturday.

"I can only use the term of reference I come from, which is if you believe you're going to play in the final in three weeks' time and you've prepared until the 3rd of August and you know what your training program looks like and what your conditioning is like, which injured players you'll be getting back, then surely you'll be playing until the 3rd of August.

"Some people take it as - maybe it's superstitious, maybe it's sensitive.

"I just see it as making sure you've ticked all the boxes

"It's about the players believing they're going to win the tournament, and if you believe you're going to win the tournament then surely we're going to Pretoria next week.

"I'm thinking of going to Pretoria, and if I don't think we're going to Pretoria then we might as well not pitch up tomorrow.

"Without being arrogant about it, if the coach and the team don't believe we're going to be playing semi-finals next week in Pretoria, then I tell you we won't have any chance of winning tomorrow.

"You've got to think ahead because we want to win the tournament. We've got three games, we've got to make sure we know what days we're off, which days we train, what we're doing.

"As the final whistle blows you can't then start preparing for next week."

Veterans George Smith and Clyde Rathbone, who both played in the Brumbies' last finals match, a grand final win over the Crusaders in 2004, presented jerseys to their teammates on Saturday.

White has asked various public figures to present jerseys to the team in the past, but deferred to the flanker and winger for the club's most important Super Rugby match since that triumph.

"It's real, I thought about who we should get, who should say what, what message do we want to get across?" White said.

"You think of motivational speakers, a politician maybe, you think out of the box, we've had Bryce Courtney the author before.

"When I summed it all up I thought the people that are going to be the most apt to talk about finals are the people that have been there and done it, and at this club as well."

Smith and Rathbone spoke about the need for this playing group to appreciate the achievements of their predecessors, but create their own history starting against the Cheetahs.


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Ego's not a dirty word says Mal

Mal Meninga shares a laugh during the Queensland Maroons State of Origin training session. Source: Bradley Kanaris / Getty Images

THE claims that Queensland's Origin success has created a division within the Australian Test team would be concerning were they not so ridiculous.

I was on the 1985 tour of New Zealand when there was a genuine divide between the Queenslanders and players from NSW, and I can tell you as much passion as there is between the states at the moment, those problems are a world away.

I don't doubt there would be some feeling there, and that would be born out of the understandable frustration being felt by the NSW players not having won a series since 2005.

In 1985, the divisions were so bad that at training, the Queenslanders would be standing down one end of the field as a group, while the coach Terry Fearnley addressed the NSW players down the other end of the field.

I know Tim Sheens well enough to know he would never allow such a poisonous atmosphere while he was in charge of the Kangaroos.

In 1985, we played a three-Test series against the Kiwis in the middle of an Origin campaign - a campaign NSW was leading 2-0.

After winning the first two Tests, Fearnley - also the Blues coach at the time - then decided to axe four Queenslanders from the Australian team for the third Test.

They lost.

While talking about the feeling between the two Origin teams in the lead-up to Game Three this year, Greg Bird mentioned how hard it was to bury maroon and blue loyalties to unite under green and gold.

But I think some of his comments were probably picked up and run with by those trying to make more of it than what it really was.

I know Greg well, and like him a lot. And I am a big admirer of how he plays for NSW and Australia.

He is also good mates with Nate Myles.

Both men are tough, hard, passionate, ferocious and parochial players for their states.

But they are both able to put that aside and put their arms around each while packing down together in the scrum of the Gold Coast Titans or Kangaroos.

Those that seized on Bird's comments claimed that the supposed division in the Test team was a product of perceived arrogance from the Queensland members of the Test team.

Queensland's victory in the third Origin match on Wednesday night is all the proof you need that these players are as far removed from arrogance as you can get.

If these players were arrogant, they would not have won on Wednesday, as simple as that.

And they would never have been in a position to even think about winning eight series in a row, let alone actually achieving it.

These players have a tremendous amount of self-belief, and they also have the healthy egos that all successful people need to be the best.

But that should not be misconstrued as arrogance.

If they were arrogant, their winning run would have ended after three series, or maybe four.

They would have fallen into the arrogance trap of believing that all they had to do was turn up, and things would automatically fall into place.

Arrogance would have meant that they had such contempt for their opponents that they felt they didn't need to do the hard work, or give attention to the little details to get the job done.

Had they thought that way, NSW would have not only won on Wednesday night, they would be on their own winning streak.

Throughout this run of eight years, something that seems to have been lost in the appreciation of Queensland's achievement is the standard of the team the Maroons have been playing against.

The Blues are a fantastically talented, and passionate team.

To beat them, you have to be at your absolute best. Every single time.

There are a lot of things that go into this team; things like hard work, talent, passion, respect, unity and humility.

There is no room for arrogance. What they are and what they have built just mean too much.


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Brumbies up ante on Cheetahs backrow

Ben Mowen on the charge for the Brumbies. Picture: Kym Smith Source: DailyTelegraph

THEY have made a record-breaking 659 tackles between them this season, but the workload of the Cheetahs backrow will get a whole lot busier Sunday afternoon following a warning from Brumbies skipper Ben Mowen.

While Pieter `Lappies' Labushagne, Phillip van der Walt and Heinrich Brussow have carried their team to a maiden finals series with astonishing tackling statistics, Mowen plans to turn that strength into weakness at Canberra Stadium in their qualifying final.

"They rely heavily on those guys, and the way you counter it is you make them do a lot of tackling," Mowen said.

"If you're tackling up around 20 per player, particularly in that backrow, it's going to take a little bit of sting out of their attack.

"We'll make sure those guys get through their usual amount of work."

No backrow combination has ever combined for as many tackles in a Super Rugby season.

Labushagne (averaging 17.4 tackles per game), van der Walt (12.75) and Brussow (13.86) have transformed a team known for its expansive attack into an all-round force.

Cheetahs coach Naka Drotske hailed the trio as a key to his side's first appearance in Super Rugby finals.

"They are a definitely one of the biggest reasons for us making the playoffs, all three of them, the intensity and work-rate they've managed to sustain throughout the season has been unbelievable," Drotske said.

"Luckily we never had injuries in the three loose forwards, they were able to play week in, week out and sustain that intensity."

In just his second season of Super Rugby, 24-year-old Labushagne could today overtake the record of last year's top tackler Marcell Coetzee (273) despite the Sharks backrower playing all the way through to the 2012 grand final.

While it is common to see flankers dominate the tackling statistics, it is unheard of for three backrowers in the same team to be among the top tacklers in the entire competition.

Brumbies blindside flanker Peter Kimlin expects the Cheetahs to pose numerous problems.

"They're a very scrambling team, especially their back three in the backrow, but it's the whole team," Kimlin said.

"They're going to play for each other.

"They're willing to run the ball pretty wide and play enterprising rugby.

"It's certainly not going to be an easy game."

But the Brumbies remain supremely confident, with Kimlin revealing that last year's shock last-round loss to the Blues  which denied them a place in the finals  had served as constant motivation this season.

"What was a really good turning point for us was that Blues game, we spoke about that throughout the whole pre-season this year and going into most games, speaking about how disappointing it was," Kimlin said.

"It's massive, I think we needed that loss last year, and it really put the guys in good stead."


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Japan coach under pressure

Zaccheroni is under pressure after a fruitless Confederations Cup campaign. Source: Toshifumi Kitamura / AFP

JAPAN'S fruitless Confederations Cup campaign has coach Alberto Zaccheroni under pressure heading into the Blue Samurai's East Asian Cup clash with China Sunday night.

While Zaccheroni has mostly enjoyed a golden run during his three years in charge of Japan, including 2011 Asian Cup glory and a more-than-comfortable qualifying run to the 2014 World Cup, the former Milan, Inter and Juventus boss has suddenly found himself under scrutiny.

Japan lost their three matches at last month's Confederations Cup in Brazil, where they were in the tougher group that also included the hosts, Brazil and Mexico.

But their hard task didn't earn Zaccheroni much sympathy in Japan, and nothing less than East Asian Cup glory will satisfy fans of the Blue Samurai.

That's despite Japan fielding a second-string side due to clubs not being obliged to release players for a tournament being played on non-FIFA dates.

"Of course we'll be playing to win," Zaccheroni told The Japan Times.

"But this is an experimental squad, and if I had to choose between winning with the players not being able to show what they can do, or not winning but finding that one or two of them have what it takes to play for the national team, I'd take the latter.

"We'll be up against three different types of teams. It's a fantastic competition, and we need to make the most of it."

Zaccheroni's squad includes five players from the Japan side that finished fourth at last year's Olympics.

In contrast, China are the only team at the four-nation East Asian Cup to be fielding virtually a full-strength team.

Also the only nation among the four that won't be at the World Cup next year, China are desperate to lift the East Asian Cup for a third time, having won the competition in 2005 and 2010.

Embarrassed after losing 5-1 to Thailand in a friendly, the Chinese Football Association sacked coach José Antonio Camacho in June and replaced him in an interim capacity with Fu Bo, who had previously guided his nation's under-22 team.


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Marquee plan to get Izzy back

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Israel Folau during the Wallabies training session. Source: Philip Hillyard / News Limited

DEPARTING Bulldogs boss Todd Greenberg sat next to Wallaby winger Israel Folau at the State of Origin on Wednesday night.

It got tongues wagging about the superstar's next career move and the possibility of him returning to the NRL in 2014.

They watched from seats outside the chairman's suite at ANZ Stadium, where Folau is employed as an ambassador to mix with sponsors and guests.

The Sunday Telegraph can reveal the NRL will now consider introducing marquee player signings, outside of the salary cap, to help keep superstars like the former GWS player in the game.

The Bulldogs have a leagues club that makes a $30 million annual profit yet can't sign the Wallaby winger because of the salary-cap restrictions.

A marquee player exempt from the cap would allow them to pay Folau $1 million-plus a year and secure his signature tomorrow.

The NRL's chief operating officer Jim Doyle says the marquee player allowance has to be considered amongst other ideas.

"We will consider everything," Doyle said. "The salary cap has to be modernised. We all agree on that. It is designed to keep a level playing field and stop clubs from going broke.

"But we have to make sure something is in place to ensure we keep our best players."

Greenberg would not go into detail about his night at the football and conversations with Folau.

But he likes the system so successfully used in football and other major sports.

"It's got merit and we should consider it," he said.

The marquee player allowance has made the A-League the massive success it is today, allowing Sydney FC to sign Alessandro Del Piero, Newcastle Emile Heskey and the Wanderers Shinji Ono.

It has lifted crowd numbers, sponsorship, revenue and TV ratings.

The NRL will have to move quickly if they want Folau back in 2014.

He is under contract to rugby union until December and will play in the Bledisloe Cup matches before making a decision.

He has yet to commit to the Waratahs or ARU for a contract extension.

Those closest to Folau say he has enjoyed the rugby union stint but he prefers rugby league.

The marquee player signings would be a huge boost for all clubs, not just the Bulldogs.

The Roosters, who have enjoyed a 63 per cent home crowd increase since signing Sonny Bill Williams from the All Blacks, could secure him on a long-term deal.

The Wests Tigers could have kept Benji Marshall for the rest of his playing career and in a job after football and still been able to sign the club's most promising youngsters.

Karmichael Hunt would have been kept in rugby league, too, instead of switching to AFL.

Former NRL boss David Gallop was against the marquee player signings because it favoured the richer clubs and some couldn't afford it.

But as one prominent official said: "Why should the weaker clubs hold back the rest of the game?"


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Team of heroes saving our stars

Former NRL players who are part of the NRL Welfare Unit. Source: Jeremy Piper / News Limited

"HELLO," he says. "Who is this?"

The caller sounds nervous. In a faint voice, he says his name.

"Who mate?" Dean Widders says to him. "I can't hear you."

The caller speaks up and reveals his name.

"Oh," Widders says, now knowing he is speaking to an NRL star.

"How are you, mate? What can I do for you?"

Widders smiles for a moment before his joy is swallowed by a deep frown. One of nine full-time welfare staff working at NRL Central, he knows this call isn't going to be good.

"The phone always rings," Widders says. "A lot of people need help. It can be anyone at any time and I am always prepared for the worst."

The Sunday Telegraph's special investigation into NRL welfare can reveal at least one player a day calls for help.

Admitting to gambling, depression, alcoholism or simply asking for advice on how to deal with injury, the players call and the 44 full-time welfare staff, which include the likes of Widders, Nigel Vagana and Andrew Ryan, listen.

Forget the salary cap cops and the integrity unit, the TV rights chasers and the recruitment officers, the NRL Welfare Unit is the emerging force that just could be the most important department in the game.

The Welfare Unit is the cutting edge department confronting and addressing the biggest issues in our game. The Sunday Telegraph can reveal:

* The NRL Welfare Unit is working with at least 12 players with gambling issues;

* They are working with at least 12 players who have admitted to having an alcohol problem;

* At least 16 NRL players have suspected depression, with an average of one at every club;

* Four NRL clubs are monitoring players' sleep to help diagnose depression;

* The Welfare Unit has a goal to make sure every NRL player owns their own home by the time they retire;

* They have a team of 25 that mentors players through apprenticeship with an average of 12 players at every club now completing a trade.

GAMBLING AND ALCOHOL

THE TIGERS charge down the tunnel, chests puffed and fists' clenched. The Broncos are already waiting on the field. The players scream "let's go" and slap each other on the back. Owen Craigie is the only player walking. The former Origin star comes out last and then stops before he reaches the field. He looks to a Tigers officials.

"Is my pay in, mate?" he asks.

"I have to pay some people off after the game."

Owen Craigie lost everything. A staggering $3 million to gambling throughout his career. He has told people at the Welfare Unit he dropped balls because he was thinking about money. He also has no doubt gambling destroyed his career.

The NRL Welfare Unit estimates that there are at least two Owen Craigies playing in the NRL today. They are doing everything they can to help them avoid blowing it all.

Paul Heptonstall was the man in the tunnel that Craigie asked about the cash. The former Tigers employee is now heading the NRL's welfare program. He admits gambling is a problem in the game.

"There would be definitely some Owen Craigies in the NRL today," Heptonstall said. "And a lot of those people have reported themselves to the club. Gambling is a problem because it is silent. They can gamble online at home without anyone knowing and it is a problem that can ruin lives."

The Welfare Unit has taken the extraordinary step of encouraging players to call NRL and tell them if one of their teammates has a problem. Respected former players like Widders, Vagana and Ryan tell players they are letting down their mate if they don't report the problem.

"I have players ring and tell me they are concerned for someone else," Widders said.

"We encourage them to do that and they want to because they keep an eye out for one and another. Teammates now are starting to look out for each other. They know the signs and are willing to report it.

"The whole thing we teach is that if you don't do anything about it you are letting down your mate. We educate them about the damage and how to know if someone is in trouble.

"We teach the guys to look out for little signs.

"Is a guy asking you for money? Has he asked for loans from the club or from others? When he is out does he spend ridiculous amounts of money or disappear? He is probably gambling all his money."

The Welfare Unit this year hired professional actors and sent them to all the NRL clubs to show them how a problem gambler might act.

"A lot of approaches come in to the welfare staff after this sessions," Heptonstall said.

"Stuff like, 'Can you keep an eye on him because I lent him money and I'm seeing some stuff'."

Widders is one of the former players charged with helping suspected gamblers. It isn't an easy job.

"I have to be soft when I approach them," Widders said. "You don't want to go straight up to them and accuse them of having a gambling problem. You don't want to point at a couch and say, 'Sit down, you have a problem.'

"You work towards that by first making contact and just talking to them. If I hear of someone, I just ring them and ask them to catch up for lunch. You talk about footy and just ask them how they are going and they will eventually tell you.

"If they want to do something about they will own up. And that is the only way you can help them. They need to admit they are having a problem.

"I have at least four or five that I am working with now that have admitted to having a gambling problem.

"The good thing about the game is that the culture is not bad. The culture doesn't encourage them to make it worse. They want to help.

"Everyone wants to make them better."

Alcohol is also an issue, but it is not as bad as you think. Many league players have sworn off the grog. The NRL's hard line on behaviour has filtered through.

"I don't know if alcohol is the problem, but they use it as an outlet," Widders said.

"I have been dealing with four or five that have needed to deal with issues that have led them to alcohol. We need to start talking to them young. We need to fix it there. The thing is the game doesn't put up with it anymore. We have set high standards.

"They will ruin their careers now and we tell them that. Their issues come out when they are drunk and that is when they get into problems. They will lose it all because clubs don't muck around and I tell them that."

THE UNIT

SEVEN MEN and two women sit behind their desks at NRL Central. They tap on their keyboards, shuffle through papers and they banter about everything from cricket to Kevin Rudd.

Ryan, Widders and Vagana are among the nine that joke and laugh while confronting the biggest issues in the game.

There are another 35 fulltime staff working on the ground, with the unit growing to 44 from just one in 14 years. They are charged with implementing programs that equip players to deal with any issues they have.

From money to depression. Alcohol and gambling. And life after football.

"It is wide ranging," said Widders, who is charged with looking after the Indigenous players. 

"My role is to assist players in all areas of the game, everything to apprenticeship programs to welfare and education."

Heptonstall heads the unit. He is looking to root out problems before they become serious.

"We don't want to be reactive, just picking them up when they are on the back page," Heptonstall said. 

"We don't want them to get there. I can tell you there are plenty more issues out there that don't hit the media.

"We want to work out this issues and get them before they get there. At the NRL we have a responsibility. The core responsibility of a club is to have footy players that win footy games, they aren't there to make sure they are successful after football. But at the NRL, we feel it is our responsibility. We want to produce good men that are prepare for life."

Vagana, Widders and Ryan are among the men that talk directly to the players. The former stars have their trust and know exactly what each and every one of them might be going through.

"I take at least five phone calls a day," Vagana said.

"Basically what we do is work with their lives off the field. Off the field covers about 20 or 30 areas. Everything from family, literacy, culture challenges, relocations. Players can call with serious issues or just to ask about their form. We want these kids to be the best they can and be prepared for whatever comes there way."

TRADING UP

AN NRL career can end at any time. In fact, 60 players will play their last NRL game this year and the average career span is just 52 games. The NRL want every player to be able to walk into a job.

Former NRL journeyman Adam Peek thinks every player should work one day a week. The prop, who played for seven clubs, not only thinks it will help them with their football, but also prepare them for life.

Peek estimates about 50 per cent of NRL players he knows have had no job skills and limited employment prospects when they retire. He and a team of 25 club apprentice mentors are attempting to change that. An average of 12 players at every NRL club are now involved in a trade.

"There are plenty of blokes I know who have retired and had nothing," Peek said. "Some don't own their own houses and struggle to find a job. They really struggle with it, and have a tough time. We need to prepare players for life after football.

"We can get a bloke to finish an apprenticeship by the time he is 20. We can begin working with them when they are young and get them a trade while they are still playing."

Peek thinks every player should work, even at the height of their careers.

"I found I played my best football when I kept busy," Peek said. "I was one of the few that worked during my career and it helped with the way I played. Working one day a week, and through the off-season is a good thing. I tell all the NRL players they should work.

"I am pushing NRL clubs to get their players working and I would like to see every player at least working in the off-season. The game has a responsibility to ensure these guys have something to fall back on if it all comes crashing down."

Former Bulldogs and Shark Corey Hughes is one of a number of ex-players putting back into the game. He and fellow former Shark Luke Covell are helping put 16 young players through apprenticeships.

"I was lucky enough to learn a trade before football," Hughes, a carpenter, said.

"But these guys go straight from school into full-time football. They are straight into money and careers and that is fine until it ends and if you don't have anything to fall back on, you are in a bad place. Everyone who comes into the '20s thinks they are going to make it and they don't need anything else. We are trying to change that. "

Hughes works about 12 hours a week. He speaks constantly to his young brigade, making sure they are turning up to work and enjoying what they do."

The NRL's work has 500 NRL & NYC players who have completed or are currently enrolled in a Vocational Education Program.

Several other former and current NRL players are involved. Dene Halatau, Michael Weyman, Jason Clark and Matt Ballin are all mentor players while still playing themselves. Former Bulldog Brad Morrin is at the forefront of the fight. The company he works for the, Australian Training Company, provides young players with pre-apprenticeships.

DEPRESSION

PEEK STOOD in a corporate suite at ANZ stadium during Origin III. Handing out cards. He stuffed them into hands, slipped them into pockets and left them on the bar. The cards had numbers for organisations that deal with depression. He knows it is not only a problem in society but also the game.

"Depression is an issue," Peek said. "I had some problems when I finished my career and it had an impact on both me and my wife. Other players I know have had it. We are on the front foot at the NRL. We have programs and we are addressing it.

"It is hard to deal with and we are trying to make people are aware of it. Looking back, and knowing what I know now, I can say I played with many guys that had depression. I know what the indicators are now, and they had it. We need to teach every player what the indicators are and teach them how to help their mates."

Heptonstall revealed four clubs are monitoring players sleep in a bid to diagnose depression. He and his unit are teaching both clubs and players what to look out for encouraging them to ask for help.

"It can be extremely tough for these young guys with football careers," Widders said.

"They have huge pressure to make it, not only from themselves but also from their community and family. A lot of people put unfair pressure on them."


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McKenzie eyes All Blacks as Reds exit

Ewen McKenzie's tenure as Reds coach is over after the side's loss to the Crusaders in Christchurch. Picture: Phil Walter Source: Phil Walter / Getty Images

THE full scope of the job that Ewen McKenzie now faces as Wallabies coach was exposed in Christchurch just a month out from his first collision with the All Blacks.

Just as the Wallabies pack was bullied into a chastening third Test crash by the British and Irish Lions, the Reds challenge in Super Rugby was extinguished without the pack power to light a flame for the backs.

The breakdown efficiency and verocity of the Crusaders made sure the Reds were largely on the back foot all night. From that position, it doesn't matter how good your halves are in Will Genia and Quade Cooper.

It would be interesting to imagine Cooper behind an All Black pack. The Christchurch crowd on Saturday night might still boo him in black such was their relish for that sideshow fun.


Re-live all the action in Match Centre, featuring video highlights!


McKenzie will have to assemble a more forceful Test pack in front of Cooper and Genia for the August 17 Test against the All Blacks in Sydney. James Horwill, Rob Simmons and James Slipper, in the beaten Reds pack on Saturday night, will have to find far more in gold.

All Black kingpins Dan Carter and Kieran Read were huge and will be out to put a lock on the Bledisloe Cup again.

McKenzie wasn't thinking Wallabies behind his hollow eyes after the 38-9 loss.

"Different scenario, different circumstances, different time...tonight was not about that," McKenzie said.

How far short of the grand upset the Reds had planned was painful for McKenzie.

"We spoke before the game of making this memorable. Unfortunately, we are stuck with a memory none of us want," Mckenzie said.

"You don't want to finish up that way.

"It rankles with me and the guys that it was an uncharacteristic performance to see our defence let us down. We haven't given up four tries all season.

"Mind you the Crusaders were good. They were really sharp and once we got behind one the scoreboard it's hard to chase the game against them."

McKenzie now turns spectator and will watch Sunday's Brumbies-Cheetahs play-off in Canberra with his Wallabies' glasses on.

Big forward performances will be rewarded because the Wallabies have to find that starch and firepower to compete against the All Blacks.

The Crusaders also showed more grit in the tough moments and their kingpins Kieran Read and Dan Carter really stood tall.


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