Elite coaches graduate from SA Rugby school

The custodian of rugby in the country started a programme to equip black coaches with necessary skills to excel in the industry.

A programme to broaden and deepen the reserve of top black coaches in the country bore fruit on Monday with the graduation of 11 ‘students’ from an Elite Coaching Programme run by SA Rugby.

The graduates completed an intensive 18-month programme of learning, mentoring, practical sessions and testing. Seven of the original 18 entrants fell by the wayside during the challenging process.

Rassie Erasmus joined the ceremony virtually from a Springbok conditioning camp to the congratulate the graduates on their success.

“It’s not just a piece of paper that you have earned, it’s a tangible reward for a lot of hard work and effort,” he said. “You have had a chance to enhance your skills in a way that most other coaches did not have. Although SARU can’t make promises, we will look at you first when there are opportunities.”

SA Rugby president Mark Alexander congratulated the graduates on their achievement at concluding a course that was custom-made to support the organisation’s transformation imperatives.

“Rugby can’t survive without coaches and if we are going to ensure that South Africa remains in the top echelons of the global game, we will need world-class coaches to work with our professional player corps,” said Alexander. “We look forward to seeing how your careers will unfold.”

Hilton Adonis, the SA Rugby manager for coaching education, said the objective of the programme was to create a pool of elite high-performance (HP) coaches equipped to successfully navigate the demands of the HP coaching environment, with focus areas including personal mastery, leadership development and change management.

“The programme was developed with coaches and academics to build the capacity of the coaches and included coaching philosophy, diversity management, dealing with the media, stakeholder relationship and strategic planning,” said Adonis. “The programme concluded with a professional review by a peer coaching council.”

The graduates:

  • Etienne Fynn (Sharks)
  • David Manuel (Eastern Province)
  • Norman Jordaan (Western Province)
  • Phiwe Nomlomo (Sharks)
  • Jonathan Mokuena (Lions)
  • Wilbur Kraak (DHL Western Province)
  • Joey Mongalo (Sharks)
  • Jason Oliphant (Sharks)
  • Hanyani Shimange (Western Province)
  • Franzel September (Boland)
  • Labeeb Levy (Western Province)

Read original story on www.sarugbymag.co.za

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