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EXCLUSIVE: Laurie Mains on 1995 RWC Poisoning & Rassie Erasmus Feud!

September 07, 202502:02:36
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Everything I did in rugby I did with
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honesty and believing that what I was
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doing was the best that I could do. And
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that's how I would like to be
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remembered. Not so much by what I
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achieved, but what I gave. When I took
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over, I knew my first priority was we
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had to select the right players, but
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rebuild the All Black team. The aim was
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the next World Cup.
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>> The 95 Rugby World Cup.
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>> Oh, I've never stopped thinking about
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that. If we had won that game, I would
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have said that's one of the greatest
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sporting achievements of all time.
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There's no doubt that we were poisoned.
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We hired a private detective over there
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ourselves. The end result of that was at
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the end of that World Cup, we were very
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happy at what we had achieved. This is
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what we envisioned the All Blacks
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playing like. We changed the way test
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rugby has played. Maybe that's a legacy
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I'm most proud of. This discussion we've
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had today has done me wonders. You've
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drawn more out of me than I think any
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other media person has ever done.
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>> Oh, good. You're here. Come on. This is
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the center of performance. Whenever
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there's a top performance in New
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Zealand, it all comes from here. That's
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Lisa Carrington. She's been doing that
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for days. That's the boys who got the
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Holland one in To.
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He did it again. Hey Finn, how's the
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performance going?
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>> Top tier.
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>> Nice. This is our generate room. In here
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you'll find our top performers helping
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Kiwis maximize their Kiwi Saver
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investments. Get in here in maximize
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generate.
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>> Putting performance first.
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>> Lori Mains, welcome to my podcast. Well,
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it's pleasure to be here.
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>> Mate, I'm I'm kind of starruck and
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intimidated as well. Like from what I've
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read about you and learned about you,
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you're a scary dude.
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>> No, don't be. I'm I'm a jackal and hide.
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really when it when I was coaching at
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times had to be tough and pretty direct.
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Uh but I'm a lot more cruisy now.
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>> Yeah. Have you mellowed with age?
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>> I have. Yeah, of course I have. I think
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everybody does. But I I I mean I had
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really good social times with the
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players outside the actual playing of
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the game as well. A different person.
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>> Yeah. How does life look? What are you
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79?
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>> 79.
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>> You're you are aging fantastically.
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>> Thank you. You're you're spritly, you're
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sharp. Um we've been chatting for 10
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minutes um while we get the cameras set
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up and um you're incredibly like proud
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of your your legacy and your
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achievements still. Um what's the
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secret? Um well, I do make sure that I
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eat good food and I do make sure that I
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keep I still do my exercises in the
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mornings and and things like that. I I
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look after myself because I want to live
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life to the maximum and then ideally I
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just drop off one night. I mean, but I
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want to stay healthy up until that time.
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>> Yeah. What does life look like now? Have
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you got grandkids? Are you a grand?
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>> I've got I've got some grandkids. Um,
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yeah,
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my my one of my daughters, her her and
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her children do a lot of fishing, and
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I'm really pleased about that because I
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was a fishing nutter. Trout, salmon, sea
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fishing, did it all. And and she's taken
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up that legacy. I never had any sons, so
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guess where all the fishing gear is
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going. Some of it's been dribbling up
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there. She she lives in uh at Manacow
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Heads, but um some of my gear has
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already dribbled up there, but there'll
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be a lot more going soon because I don't
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do any fishing now. Golf's what I do.
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You go. All right.
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Yeah, I'm I haven't been playing too
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well lately. I compressed a nerve in my
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neck a while ago. And uh my handicap
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slipped out. I think I think it's about
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8 now, but normally I sit around five or
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six.
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>> That's good going. Do you play with
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Justin Marshall at all? That's how I got
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in touch with you. Justin Marshall, one
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of your old players, gave me your number
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>> many years ago. Justin was a member at
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the Hills and I do recall playing with
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him a couple of times back in those
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days, but no, no, I haven't. I've I I
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don't think I've seen just Justin just
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Justin for two or three years. see him
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on television of course, but I haven't
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spoken to him for a while.
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>> Yeah, it must be a strange relationship
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when you you you go through that intense
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relationship of being coach player. And
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who who are you still friends with and
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who do you see on a regular basis? Oh,
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>> your old players.
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>> Look, I see I see a few of them. Uh
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Robin Brook comes down here to play golf
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occasionally. Uh Fitzy, we talk from
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time to time. Um, I'll tell you who I am
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do see quite a bit of is both of the
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Barrett brothers, Bowden and Jordi. Not
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Scott. I haven't met him, but because a
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lot of them come here uh for a holiday.
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Uh, Leon uh Leon McDonald used to be
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down here quite often. Um, I didn't
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coach him but always respected him as a
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player.
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>> Yeah. Yeah. You mentioned Robin Brook
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there. I I I got a hold of your your
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book which you told me you've never
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read. Um there's a bit in there at the
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end where you sort of it's like a nice
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tribute to all your players from the 90
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fighter squad and um you Robin Brookke
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was there a joke in the team like people
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people called you dad to him like you
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was he like the teachers pet? No, it was
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was he your favorite? No, it was more I
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think it was more like that with Jamie
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Joseph. Um, Robin, oh, I was, look, I
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every player I was incredibly fond of in
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different ways. Robin was one of those
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players if you felt the team was not
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really focused on a practice uh or by
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Thursday I can tell whether they're in
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the right frame of mind for a game on
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Saturday or not. Robin was one of those
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I'd have a have a crack at him about it
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cuz he he just let it go off his back
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like water off a duck,
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>> but it would have an effect on the rest
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of the team.
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>> Yeah. Oh, so you bonded with him.
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>> Yeah. I know. I like I liked Rob. I
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really respected him. Not only was he a
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skillful rugby player, he wasn't big for
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an international lock, but he was
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incredibly tough
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>> and nobody ever got the better of him.
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That's what I and Zinny was the same.
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But that's what I liked about them.
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Nobody. They wouldn't let anybody get
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the better of them.
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>> Yeah. I'm so excited about this podcast.
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There's so much to unpack and talk
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about. Um some of it might be a little
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triggering for you. By the way,
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apologies that um just over your right
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hand shoulder is um a South African
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jersey. I hope that's a what is your
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what is your earliest memory or
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memories? So, you were born in February
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1946. So, you're you're officially like
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a boomer. Like the the true definition
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of a like a a war a post-war baby. Were
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you a post-war baby or was it just
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coincidence the timing?
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>> Just coincidence. I think you know my
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earliest memories.
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>> What's that? We
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>> I I lived in a street called Ryhill
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Street in Deneden and it was had a great
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big wide grass verge out out in front of
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the house and trees planted every here
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and there and these were adult trees. My
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earliest memories are kicking a rugby
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ball into one of those trees.
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I I mean I had a fascination as a kid
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about kicking rugby balls around and um
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I did it in the backyard. I did it out
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on the street. Um was just something I
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did and I think that is the earliest
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memories I've got
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>> and and I could hardly walk at the dock
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probably only been 3 or 4 years old.
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Natural talent versus hard work. Were
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you natural or uh do you think just
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having having a ball from that young age
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and just kicking it around everywhere
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you sort of you know I think I've I've
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clearly got some good hand eye
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coordination and good timing but I
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wasn't particularly fast wasn't
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particularly big or strong. I had to put
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an awful lot of hard work in.
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>> And yeah there's a photo here in the
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book. This is um yeah you on your test
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debut.
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>> Oh yeah. Christ Church, Lancaster Park,
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1971.
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>> Yeah.
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>> If if you Yeah. How are you the same and
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how are you different to that to that
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kid?
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>> In terms of how how you feel now?
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>> Yeah. That that's hard to say. You know,
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at that time in my life, I had one
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focus. No, I had two focuses. I had my
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family and then I had rugby. And rugby
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dominated
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probably 30 40 years of my life
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>> and it it
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to the sac sacrifice of of other aspects
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of life.
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>> If if you could um pick up a phone and
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FaceTime that 20-year-old Lori Mains
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there, what would you say to him?
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>> Um what would I say? I'd I'd probably
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tell him to
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keep working hard. If if if being a top
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rugby player for a long period of time
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is something you really want to do, then
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you've got to put the hard work in. But
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I'd have a better balance. I' I'd I'd
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advise him to have a really good thing
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about think about his family life, his
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friends, and and and life outside rugby
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and try and get a better balance
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>> than I had.
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Why did you get the balance wrong? You
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from an outsers's perspective, you seem
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you seem to you seem to have it right.
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You had a fantastic all black career,
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fantastic Otago career. You were a
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builder. You've done well in business.
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You seem to navigate the amateur
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professional thing pretty well.
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>> I did. Uh but I'm going to let you into
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something now. I I I did I I was very
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keen fisherman and uh over summer that
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was I I did a lot of that while still
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keeping working on my overall fitness.
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Um quite often I look back and the one
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of the things I regret about my rugby
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career because you know I had that time
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playing but then I had another 30 years
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or 25 years I think it was coaching
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>> which was all-encompassing.
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I've I was one of these people if I take
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something on then then I give it
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everything I've got and um just
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hyperfixate on it.
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>> Yeah. and and rugby coaching was more
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demanding than playing uh to the
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detriment of my daughters and and wife.
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Uh
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and it's something that I would think
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very seriously about again before going
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into a prolonged coaching career like
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that. I'd have a really good think about
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it
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>> and and make sure that's what I want to
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do. I was an incredibly busy person
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starting a a business.
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um coaching rugby, having a family. Man,
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>> that's a lot. It's a lot of spades to
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the plates to me spinning. Do you That
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That sounds like a regret in a way. Is
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that a regret?
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>> It It It is a little bit. Um
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I'm very very proud of the things that I
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did in rugby.
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But there are things that are more
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important than your own pleasure and
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your own sport.
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>> And uh your family has to come first.
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>> Yeah. I've had Sir Peter Leech on the
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podcast before and he's about the same
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age as you, maybe a year or two older.
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And um he said the same sort of thing
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like he was working so hard, double
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jobs, like building this business that
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he sacrificed family time. And you know,
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it's only when you get older that you
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look back and you realize you can't you
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can't get that time back.
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>> Absolutely. Yeah.
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>> And that's a regret I have. I see quite
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a lot of one of my daughters because she
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lives just down the road in Alexandra.
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So, you know, once a Fortnite
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Max, she's up to spend a day with me or
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so on. But you can't get all that time
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you weren't there. You can't get that
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back.
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>> Yeah.
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I'm sure they understand.
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>> Yeah. And they they were proud of their
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dad and they they if they were asked the
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question at the time,
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>> should he carry on or would you rather
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have him around home much more? They
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would have probably said to me, "No,
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carry, we want you to carry on."
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>> Yeah. Thanks for sharing that. I
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>> I appreciate it. Um Okay, let's talk
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about some fun stuff. So day for the All
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Blacks, 1971 against the Lions. Um let's
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run through some first. So how do you
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find out you made the squad? Is there a
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like a possibles and probables trial? Do
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you hear it on the radio? Do you get a
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phone call?
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>> Uh, we had trolls, but Charlie Saxton,
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who was chairman of the New Zealand
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Rugby Union at the time, uh, come from
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Deneden, and he was a man. He was an all
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black, a great rugby person, and he used
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to mentor me a bit quite often during
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the week. I'd wander into his shop. He
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had a clothing men's clothing shop in
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Deneden and I'd wander in there and have
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a chat to him and got a lot of very very
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good advice. He rang me up uh Sunday
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afternoon it was I remember being at
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home was about I think 2 or 3:00 in the
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afternoon. What did I do as soon as I
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got off the phone? Picked up the boots,
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couple of balls down to Bathgate Park
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and did some practice.
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Unbelievable. Um, and it was a stacks
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team, right? Colin Me, Brian L'ore,
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Grisweily, um, Brian Williams. I think
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Brian Lore,
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uh, came in
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for the third test. So, the first one I
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played in Christ Church, I don't think
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Brian played in that. Um,
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Pet Peter Whiting or the other lock got
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injured and and they pulled Brian in, I
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think, for the third and fourth test. M
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do you had you played against those guys
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prior to that and and whatever the the
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equivalent of NPC was back then. What's
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it like playing against Colin Maid?
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>> Absolutely terrify you just you just
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and I was a fullback. I mean the legacy
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he had. I I first played against him
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judge I can't remember if it was an all
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black troll now or north south game. It
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might have been and I just thought I
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don't want to get caught in the ruck or
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the deck of with him coming in cuz he
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might decide seeing I'm the goal kicker
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that he doesn't want me to carry on cuz
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he he wrote the forward um to your book.
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I've got a quote here. Um because you
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guys ended up being you he was your
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manager your great friends.
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>> Uh this is a quote. Lori is a typical
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New Zealander. Never flamboyant and hurt
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terribly when his teams lost. He hurt
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more than any player. We'll get to that
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later. I'd arg more than you. Um and the
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and he hurts most when his team failed
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to win the Rugby World Cup. The players
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in turn were upset for him which was a
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measure of the greatness of the man.
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>> Well, sir Colin me on you.
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>> Yeah, that's flattering.
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>> Yeah. Tree and I did get on well. And I
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remember before we went to that World
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Cup,
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my aim was to have the All Blacks as the
00:15:16
fittest team uh at the World Cup and we
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had three camps, three-day camps um over
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the summer period and they were brutal
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if I admit myself. And I I remember
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Colin and Brian both coming. Tao was the
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one that was was legendary and they came
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to me and they said I don't think we've
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ever seen any players work so hard.
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>> Yeah. And in what way? Cuz there was one
00:15:43
there was one here in Queenstown in 1994
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and then the top one in 95.
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>> Yeah. Yeah. Queenstown one that was
00:15:49
gentle. That was really just a mental
00:15:52
exercise. um explaining to the players
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what we were going to do over the summer
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and setting them out in groups to give
00:16:02
Earl and I feedback on what they felt
00:16:05
the direction we should be going and and
00:16:07
so on. what I what I did at those camps.
00:16:12
I mean, they they were incredibly
00:16:15
demanding physically, but I worked so
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hard with the forwards on
00:16:22
the speed of clearing ball and when you
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when you play against teams like
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Australia and now it's South Africa
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where they've got great big loose
00:16:31
forwards who stand one off. They they
00:16:34
used to try and kill the moss, kill the
00:16:36
rucks, have these out here. So that your
00:16:40
your inside backs who are always being
00:16:43
taken care of by these offengway, Tim
00:16:47
Gavin, Simon Pivan, great players and we
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worked very hard on how do we negate
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them? Well, we started that to be fair.
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We started that back in 93 and we
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developed a tactic called pick and go
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and that's where the phrase comes from.
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But a lot of them now they're not
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they're not doing it right. We we used
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to set up and you had to come in very
00:17:15
close, pick and go very close beside the
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ruck so that those players had to come
00:17:20
in and engage. This oneoff passing and
00:17:23
running into people not achieving
00:17:25
anything. You see 18 phases and nobody's
00:17:28
any further ahead than they were. And it
00:17:31
was the way we used to clean out quite
00:17:33
often if the and and and I taught the
00:17:37
guys the sort of rucks to identify where
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you could go in tight and then split it
00:17:43
open then about the fifth player could
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come through pick it up and go straight
00:17:47
through the middle. These are the sort
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of things that need to happen today. But
00:17:52
you know the referee's just let
00:17:53
everybody go to ground. You're not meant
00:17:55
to go to ground on top of the ball in
00:17:57
rugby, but everybody's doing it to
00:18:00
secure their own ball. They go over the
00:18:02
top of their own player on top of the
00:18:04
ball so nobody can get anywhere near it.
00:18:06
Well, yeah, that makes it a bit
00:18:09
difficult, but some of the things we
00:18:11
worked on would still apply. And you
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know, I'm
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make I make uh no apologies for it. I I
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I don't think some of the coaches are
00:18:22
thinking hard enough about how to break
00:18:25
down this close in defense systems.
00:18:31
>> Jess, you're still passionate and
00:18:32
engaged about the game, aren't you? Um
00:18:34
we're recording this on a Monday
00:18:35
morning. Um yesterday morning the All
00:18:38
Blacks played Argentina. You get up
00:18:40
early to watch these games.
00:18:41
>> Of course.
00:18:42
>> Yeah. And you shouting at the TV or
00:18:43
>> No, no, I'm not. No, no. And I never
00:18:46
invite someone round to my house who I
00:18:48
know is going to have a comment on
00:18:51
everything. I I like to concentrate. I
00:18:54
I'll mutter plenty to myself and uh I
00:18:58
mean you see things you think the
00:19:00
referees are getting wrong,
00:19:02
>> you know, the players are not doing
00:19:03
right, but I keep it to myself. Yeah.
00:19:06
>> I I had a few more questions about your
00:19:08
your your playing days and then then we
00:19:09
can move on to the coaching thing. But
00:19:10
we we can since we're on the coaching
00:19:12
thing, we can we can stick on that. Or
00:19:14
do you want to Doesn't bother me.
00:19:16
>> Okay. Yeah. Best and worst moments is an
00:19:18
all lag.
00:19:23
>> Wow.
00:19:24
Yeah. Do you know um I came in after
00:19:29
I came in after uh the All Blacks had
00:19:32
lost the first test to the Lions in 71
00:19:36
and and that was a great Lions team.
00:19:38
There's no denying that. Second test in
00:19:40
Christ Church we won it and won it quite
00:19:43
comfortably and Kpatrick Ian Kpatrick
00:19:46
scored the try from the other end of the
00:19:47
earth. Um was fabulous try 55 m I think
00:19:52
he ran pushing people off left, right
00:19:54
and center. Um and we deserve to win
00:19:57
that. Then
00:19:59
we played at Wellington and that was my
00:20:04
worst memory that the team could not
00:20:07
well there was two I'll start in the
00:20:09
buildup.
00:20:11
We had training and for some reason or
00:20:12
other Ivan Vdanovich thought must have
00:20:14
thought we weren't fit enough and he
00:20:16
thought he could get us fit on Thursday
00:20:18
and we went to his old schools and the
00:20:20
the mud was about 6 in deep and round
00:20:23
and round and round this paddock we ran
00:20:25
for half an hour. Well, pretty much all
00:20:29
of the team could hardly walk the next
00:20:31
day. And and to be fair, we took the
00:20:34
field not in very good physical shape at
00:20:37
all. Legs, muscles, tight, sore muscles.
00:20:41
Um I think I scored the only try for the
00:20:44
All Blacks in that game, but I missed a
00:20:45
simple kick. I I I think I scored about
00:20:48
15 m to the right of the uprightes and
00:20:52
then missed the conversion.
00:20:54
Uh that was probably my biggest
00:20:56
disappointment because the All Blacks
00:20:59
that day could not be sharp and
00:21:02
aggressive and so on because of what
00:21:04
we'd been through on that muddy ground
00:21:06
on the Thursday.
00:21:08
>> Who who did better um after match
00:21:10
strengs, All Blacks of the 70s or All
00:21:12
Blacks of the '90s?
00:21:16
>> 90s. Really? Really?
00:21:20
We
00:21:22
>> we had a beer sponsor that was uh battle
00:21:25
one.
00:21:25
>> Well, Kevin Robertson, he was a great
00:21:27
friend of the team uh from New Zealand
00:21:31
Breweries and uh he he used to make sure
00:21:34
we were well stocked up. But when I say
00:21:38
the '9s, um, the boys could handle it.
00:21:44
And they only like if you were playing
00:21:47
the following Tuesday, if we're on tour,
00:21:49
for example, and you were playing the
00:21:50
following Tuesday,
00:21:52
no, they the judges in the courtrooms
00:21:54
weren't allowed court sessions weren't
00:21:57
allowed to pick on you.
00:21:58
>> But if you had played and uh there was
00:22:01
some funny moments or whatever, you got
00:22:04
a hammering. Mhm.
00:22:06
>> But uh I mean I that that was one place
00:22:09
where I had no protection. So I used to
00:22:12
get my share of punishment as well and I
00:22:15
think the players appreciated that. I
00:22:17
never outside
00:22:19
formal team stuff. I never pulled rank.
00:22:23
>> I as far as I was concerned I was just
00:22:25
one of the boys and had to comply the
00:22:28
same as them. But you know whatever.
00:22:30
>> And I think the players appreciated that
00:22:33
also. Yeah. So, you took over in uh 1991
00:22:37
after um Chris Wy and and John Hart
00:22:39
failed to win the Rugby World Cup. Um
00:22:42
what was your goal then when you took
00:22:43
over? What were you going to do
00:22:44
differently?
00:22:46
>> Well, the first thing was that the team
00:22:48
had to be rebuilt because
00:22:51
unfortunately for Alex, those players he
00:22:55
had built a hell of a strong team and a
00:22:57
hell of an impressive record. And by the
00:23:00
time that 91 World Cup came around, they
00:23:03
were just falling. Many of them were
00:23:05
falling off the other side
00:23:07
>> and they didn't quite have and and there
00:23:09
was
00:23:11
I don't know there seemed to be a bit of
00:23:13
an Oakland Canterbury
00:23:16
conflict in the in in that All Blackton
00:23:19
uh team in 91. But but those players
00:23:22
were were going off the off the good
00:23:25
side. So when I took over, I knew my
00:23:29
first priority was we had to select the
00:23:33
right players but rebuild the all black
00:23:36
team. So we took a big punt. We there
00:23:39
was quite a few of those older players
00:23:41
we left out in in ' 92 and some of them
00:23:46
like Sir Foxy um and um Steve Mcdal and
00:23:51
players like that we kept in
00:23:53
>> because you know to take advantage of
00:23:56
their experience and Foxy is a great
00:23:58
team man and and so was Steve Mcdal.
00:24:00
they wanted to help the players around
00:24:03
them and so
00:24:06
that the aim was uh and and uh the aim
00:24:11
was the next World Cup. It wasn't this
00:24:15
year. We had to try and maintain the
00:24:17
pride of the All Blacks in winning
00:24:19
games, but we had three years or or I
00:24:24
gave myself two and a half years to
00:24:26
rebuild that team and and we struggled
00:24:30
with some positions.
00:24:32
Couldn't settle on a 5'8 first 58 after
00:24:35
Foxy. and nobody was sort of standing up
00:24:38
and then at the last minute who comes
00:24:40
along Andrew Mertton
00:24:43
>> you know um there was there was things
00:24:45
like that but that happened we we had
00:24:48
the same problem with fullback we we
00:24:50
tried a few they didn't
00:24:53
they didn't take the elevation up to
00:24:55
test level as well as we'd hoped they
00:24:58
would and then Glenn Osman turned up you
00:25:01
know the year before so we were lucky
00:25:04
from that perspective
00:25:06
And um they all and and Jonah of course
00:25:10
>> not we we now this is an interesting one
00:25:13
cuz we
00:25:15
I was told about Jonah by uh a gentleman
00:25:18
by the name of De Smith who was manager
00:25:20
for the New Zealand secondary school ste
00:25:23
and he said you got to have a look at
00:25:24
this kid he's uh 18 now he's just
00:25:29
phenomenal rugby player. So Earl and I
00:25:32
went off to um
00:25:35
where was it? Pokawia it might have been
00:25:37
the sevens tournament that year he was
00:25:40
playing and we looked at each other
00:25:42
after we'd seen him in a couple of games
00:25:44
and I said to what are you thinking? He
00:25:47
said I reckon I'm thinking the same as
00:25:48
you. I said wing? He said yes. Not a
00:25:53
number eight. And here was the
00:25:56
reasoning. He had this incredible talent
00:25:59
which we all know about but atund I
00:26:03
think he was about 110 kgs at that stage
00:26:06
but so were so was Tim Gavin and so was
00:26:09
Willie Offengway and so was Rodba from
00:26:12
England and England was one of the teams
00:26:15
>> we specifically feared in that coming
00:26:19
into that World Cup and we had a bit of
00:26:21
payback for them so we said he's not
00:26:23
going to be able to give us that magic
00:26:25
as a lose forward. So, let we've got two
00:26:28
years to make a wing out of him.
00:26:31
And boy,
00:26:34
he he he
00:26:36
did some very good things in 94 with a
00:26:39
ball in hand. Come 95,
00:26:43
I said to him, you can go and play in
00:26:47
the sevens. I'd like you to go and play
00:26:49
in the sevens. Now, there's two reasons
00:26:51
for that. Uh we knew he'd get fit
00:26:54
playing sevens. very very fit cuz the
00:26:56
seventh coach at that time was really
00:26:58
tough.
00:26:59
>> Titch a titch and I think he was harder
00:27:01
on the players than I was and that's
00:27:03
saying something about fitness but he
00:27:05
was ruthless so and he he would work on
00:27:09
those B ball skills that Jonah needed.
00:27:14
He thought we'd basically left him out
00:27:17
of the All Blacks. So no way. And um who
00:27:22
did I get? Might have been Rushy. I got
00:27:24
to have a word to him and say, "You you
00:27:26
encourage him just to keep going,
00:27:28
Russia. We're not We still want him. We
00:27:30
just This Sevens is all about making you
00:27:33
a better player." So anyway, he he stuck
00:27:36
in there. Came down to Deneden and
00:27:38
played in a North South game and just
00:27:41
ripped it apart. And he he it was like
00:27:44
being in that sevens and then coming
00:27:47
back to 15s. He realized what his role
00:27:50
was as a wing. and uh well the rest is
00:27:53
history.
00:27:54
>> Yeah. And from you've dropped some
00:27:56
amazing names in just in that last
00:27:58
answer. Um you know Osborne Merens Lomu
00:28:02
how does um a a 50 whatever year old you
00:28:06
know Caucasian man from Otago jail or
00:28:08
connect with like an 18year-old South
00:28:10
Oakland tongen 46 please
00:28:14
I think oh late 40s. Um my bad. Uh
00:28:20
well, because I'd been involved like I
00:28:22
had an incredibly successful
00:28:26
three years with my club team,
00:28:27
>> we we won the uh it target competition
00:28:31
three years in a row and I don't I think
00:28:34
in the in the second two years I think
00:28:36
we only lost one goat and so I've gone
00:28:41
from player
00:28:43
to a year as an assistant coach then the
00:28:45
coach and I'm dealing with many of the
00:28:48
same players. players that I actually
00:28:49
played with. And then I then I moved on
00:28:52
to At Targetago and um
00:28:57
I I think there's something I might just
00:28:59
throw in here.
00:29:00
>> After two years with Southern I was
00:29:03
invited to be the assistant coach with a
00:29:05
target. Now the coach at the time and
00:29:07
there's no don't want any names but the
00:29:09
coach at the time had a different
00:29:12
philosophy on how the game should be
00:29:14
played than I did. So I said to the
00:29:16
chairman of the Itago Rugby Union,
00:29:18
"Look, it's no there's no point. I mean,
00:29:21
I'm going to say what I think and it's
00:29:24
going to be at odds with the coach. It'd
00:29:27
be better if I, you know, get someone
00:29:29
that'll work better with him on that. I
00:29:31
I' I'd work with him, but I'd have my
00:29:34
say as well."
00:29:36
So I actually turned that down. And then
00:29:40
the following year uh the chairman came
00:29:43
back to me and he said well well we'd
00:29:45
like to make you coach this year will
00:29:47
you go for that and I said absolutely.
00:29:49
>> I said I've done my three years at my
00:29:51
club got some success I need another
00:29:53
challenge.
00:29:55
>> So uh that's how and and so that kept me
00:30:00
you know I I because I was coaching all
00:30:03
the way through till the time I got the
00:30:06
All Blacks. Of course I could relate to
00:30:08
those younger players because I never
00:30:10
got out of the habit of doing it.
00:30:12
>> Yeah, I'm thinking like different
00:30:14
personality types as well like you
00:30:15
mentioned um you know Glenn Osborne and
00:30:17
Andrew Merens like they No, they were
00:30:19
pranksters. They were Americans, right?
00:30:21
>> Yeah. Lara, did you um Yeah. Did you
00:30:23
enjoy that or did you find that
00:30:24
tiresome? No. Loved it.
00:30:27
>> And uh John Timmy was another one. and
00:30:29
and Mark Ellis, I tell you that they
00:30:33
here we'd be building up to a test match
00:30:35
and those two would be competing against
00:30:37
each other doing 100 press ups or
00:30:40
whatever, you know. And I said, "Listen,
00:30:42
guys, save that for Sundays and Mondays.
00:30:46
Don't you doing it on Thursdays when we
00:30:48
got a big test match coming up?" Well,
00:30:50
one day we had a test match in Deneden
00:30:53
and I see Alice towards the end of
00:30:55
practice. I see Alice and Timu. We're
00:30:58
down at uh Logan Park and I see them
00:31:01
disappearing around behind the
00:31:03
university club pavilions there and I
00:31:06
just knew what was going to be going on
00:31:07
and I thought, "Oh no, I'm not going to
00:31:09
go round."
00:31:10
Well, when they come back, I said, "How
00:31:12
many?"
00:31:17
And you you just even though I felt that
00:31:21
it probably wasn't best for them to be
00:31:22
doing that that that was those guys and
00:31:25
they had to be able to do it. Fitzy
00:31:28
understood Sean Fitzpatrick understood
00:31:30
me very well. So so did a few of the
00:31:32
senior players, Zinny and so on and and
00:31:36
they
00:31:37
they sort of they were the conduit
00:31:41
between me and and the the younger
00:31:44
players and I think they were the ones
00:31:46
that said don't don't be frightened of
00:31:48
Lori be frightened of them at practice
00:31:51
because you do something wrong you'll
00:31:53
pay but you know have a beer with them
00:31:56
and so on and and I got on I got on
00:31:59
pretty well I think within players out
00:32:01
outside of the official part of being
00:32:05
>> Yeah. Um, speaking of Mark Ellis, um,
00:32:08
there's a story I've heard that at the
00:32:09
95 World Cup where he played against
00:32:11
Japan and scored six tries, which is
00:32:13
still really to this day. Did you tear
00:32:14
him a new one for that?
00:32:17
>> No. I I thought I thought you I thought
00:32:19
I heard him in a podcast saying you like
00:32:20
you told him off like for being selfish
00:32:23
or Yeah. Yeah. But that was a joke.
00:32:27
There there was a couple of if you have
00:32:29
a look at that and as a matter of fact
00:32:31
where was it not that long ago was on TV
00:32:34
those six tries and there were two times
00:32:38
where he beat people that he if if that
00:32:43
their fullback had been a bit sharper he
00:32:44
would have tackled him when he had a a
00:32:47
man running free outside him. So uh I
00:32:51
think I did say something to him about
00:32:54
that but but it was joking.
00:32:56
I also congratulated him on, you know,
00:32:59
breaking a he was sensational on his
00:33:01
feet that day.
00:33:02
>> He was good. Um, a previous podcast
00:33:04
guest is um Rick Citizo who was your
00:33:07
first media liaison officer. Um, he told
00:33:10
a story, I forget the whole backstory,
00:33:12
but had done something to piss you off
00:33:13
when he was a journalist. Like he
00:33:15
stitched you up and he admitted he
00:33:16
stitched you up and then he got given
00:33:17
the All Black the All Black's very first
00:33:20
ever media leazison job without you
00:33:22
without being run past you. Um, and
00:33:24
according to him, um, you you hop on the
00:33:27
team bus and he's sitting there and you
00:33:29
turn to, I think Fitzy or JK and you
00:33:31
say, "What's that prick doing on the
00:33:32
bus?"
00:33:34
>> Does that sound right?
00:33:35
>> Yeah, that sounds about right.
00:33:36
>> Yeah. And then, um, uh, yeah, according
00:33:38
to Rick, uh, JK and Fitzy said to him,
00:33:41
um, uh, Lori doesn't have to like you,
00:33:43
but do a great job and he'll learn to
00:33:44
respect you.
00:33:46
>> Yeah, I got to like Rick. Um, you know,
00:33:49
it's it's some of these journos. I I I
00:33:53
don't want to have a general crack at
00:33:54
jouos, but some of them know they're
00:33:57
being dishonest when they write
00:33:59
[ __ ]
00:34:00
And that that was the bit that annoyed
00:34:03
me. If if if they're prepared to do
00:34:05
that, well, what are they prepared to do
00:34:08
in ordinary life when they're not
00:34:10
writing? Rick was an exception. He
00:34:13
turned out uh to be a confidant of mine.
00:34:17
Uh, I think he did that job extremely
00:34:20
well and and he often forewarned me
00:34:23
about what was going to be coming. I I
00:34:26
And I like Rick and
00:34:28
>> Yeah.
00:34:29
>> Yeah. Oh, he won you over, eh?
00:34:31
>> Yeah, he did.
00:34:32
>> He He chipped away. Yeah. Okay. So, um,
00:34:35
the 90 1995 Rugby World Cup.
00:34:37
>> Now, I just want to make a point. That's
00:34:40
an example of if a senior player comes
00:34:42
to me with a reasonable thing to say,
00:34:46
I'll take notice of it. And and that's
00:34:49
an example of it.
00:34:50
>> Yeah. I Yeah. Speaking of um Yes. So, we
00:34:54
mentioned um JK just then, Sir John
00:34:56
Kerwin. Um Sir Michael Jones is another
00:34:58
one. The these these are like legendary
00:35:01
All Blacks and they're careers that you
00:35:03
had to had to end. How's how's that like
00:35:06
how are those conversations? Uh they're
00:35:09
incredibly difficult. I didn't not with
00:35:11
Michael Jones. I didn't end his career.
00:35:14
He he was
00:35:17
I think there was a problem with South
00:35:19
Africa because he couldn't play on
00:35:20
Sundays and we had a couple of Sunday
00:35:22
games. Um
00:35:24
he he is a fabulous guy. Uh Michael and
00:35:27
I him and I got on very well together
00:35:29
and I he was a he was a player that I
00:35:31
quite often talk to. How do I talk to
00:35:34
Inger about this? you know, the the the
00:35:37
the other island boys who who are very
00:35:41
respectful of authority and you you've
00:35:44
just got to be careful how you talk to
00:35:46
them so you don't do any damage.
00:35:49
>> And and Michael was a big help to me and
00:35:51
quite often I'd ask him to go and have a
00:35:53
chat to so and so about something. Um
00:35:58
JK
00:36:00
uh great player and I you know I so
00:36:03
respected him as a player and he he I
00:36:07
can't remember the exact circumstances
00:36:09
now but I I think he was I think he was
00:36:12
ready to retire anyway.
00:36:16
Um, was the same with Foxy, you know, it
00:36:18
it it was a very I asked Foxy how keen
00:36:22
he was to go on the Northern Tour at the
00:36:26
end of 93
00:36:29
and um he wasn't that keen. He was
00:36:33
building a business and and and we sort
00:36:36
of mutually agreed then it's probably
00:36:38
the right time for him to end his all
00:36:40
black career.
00:36:41
>> Great great All black as he was. Both of
00:36:44
them were great. Yeah.
00:36:45
>> Yeah. These things like I'm um I'm just
00:36:48
intrigued by this stuff because in my in
00:36:49
my own private life, I actively avoid
00:36:51
and put off tough conversations. When
00:36:53
you're in a position like that, you're
00:36:54
forced to have these tough conversations
00:36:56
week in week out.
00:36:57
>> Yeah. I just wonder how you go about
00:36:59
that. They they're always done face to
00:37:00
face or they done over the phone.
00:37:02
>> No, I don't don't like phone calls. Um,
00:37:05
sometimes you had to
00:37:09
uh it's it's it's best like
00:37:13
99% of rugby players are very very
00:37:16
honest. They're they're self-critical.
00:37:19
They know their own failings and when
00:37:22
you come to have a conversation like
00:37:23
that, they're probably half by expecting
00:37:26
it
00:37:27
>> and uh they respect the fact that you
00:37:31
front up and tell them face to face. M
00:37:35
>> yeah Ian Foster in his book he talks
00:37:37
about um having a conversation like this
00:37:39
with Dane Coohl's at the at the what was
00:37:42
it the 2019 oh no maybe the 2023 World
00:37:45
Cup telling him he wasn't required for
00:37:46
the semi and the final um and he he said
00:37:49
he got emotional and quite tearful in
00:37:51
that occasion. Were you were you quite
00:37:52
emotional about it or
00:37:55
>> of course I know
00:37:58
having played so much top level rugby
00:38:01
myself um you know what it feels like
00:38:06
and uh it was in incredibly difficult
00:38:10
for me to give players tough messages
00:38:14
>> not not just to say look you're no
00:38:16
longer required but even tough messages
00:38:18
around what they've got to do in the
00:38:20
team. M
00:38:22
>> um I you know from time to time and and
00:38:26
sometimes you had to do it uh a a player
00:38:30
would let himself down or the team down
00:38:32
or whatever and you pick your times to
00:38:35
do it when the when you want your team
00:38:38
to switch on and start building for the
00:38:40
Saturday right the team meeting you have
00:38:43
before you go to that practice is the
00:38:46
time to sort a couple of guys out if
00:38:48
they needed it. I'd never do it in an
00:38:52
unfair way. It had to be fair criticism,
00:38:56
but I was capable of being pretty blunt
00:38:58
with the players. And it just sort of
00:39:00
shocked many of the other guys that
00:39:02
Right, we better switch on now. He's in
00:39:05
one of those moods. So, we don't want to
00:39:07
get his Roth out on the training field
00:39:10
>> and uh don't poke the beer.
00:39:12
>> Exactly.
00:39:13
>> Yeah. So, um the 1995 Rugby World Cup.
00:39:17
>> Look, if I could just add to that.
00:39:18
>> Yeah, absolutely. I don't think today if
00:39:21
I c if I was starting a coaching career
00:39:23
today I'd be different
00:39:26
>> because people have changed and I I
00:39:30
think some of the methods I used
00:39:33
maybe wouldn't be that well accepted by
00:39:36
some players today
00:39:38
>> like yeah under under today's lens could
00:39:40
potentially be called bullying or
00:39:42
whatever there's there's more of an
00:39:43
emphasis these days on like
00:39:45
vulnerability and uh
00:39:47
>> you know um duty of here and things
00:39:49
things like that. But from what you were
00:39:50
explaining about the way you handled it,
00:39:52
it sounded like you were you were doing
00:39:53
that.
00:39:54
>> Yeah, I was always very mindful of the
00:39:56
players and the ones I picked on um you
00:40:00
know, Steve H. Hotton was one I got to
00:40:03
tell you this story cuz this is good.
00:40:04
Steve Hton was one quite often I'd pick
00:40:06
on. He he was a good rugby player in my
00:40:09
targetago team, but occasionally he
00:40:12
wouldn't be switched on. He have a
00:40:13
pretty average game. So he knew if he
00:40:17
had one of those days that he was going
00:40:19
to turn up to Tuesday's practice or
00:40:21
Monday, whenever it was and life was
00:40:24
going to be pretty tough for him. Well,
00:40:26
I come into Caris one day where we used
00:40:29
to change and go over to Bathgate Park.
00:40:31
Come in there and Steve comes up to me
00:40:34
and he said, "Uh,
00:40:37
Lori, I I've been advised to miss
00:40:39
training today. I've got very bad
00:40:42
bruising on my ankle." and he pulls up
00:40:44
his trousers and his ankle's all blue up
00:40:47
all around his ankle, you know. I said,
00:40:50
"Oh, okay, Steve. Um, hang on a minute.
00:40:54
Just sit down over there."
00:40:57
Ballpoint pen.
00:41:00
It's smudged it all over his ankle cuz
00:41:03
he cuz he knew what was coming.
00:41:07
>> Oh, that's hilarious. Oh my god, that's
00:41:09
so embarrassing. Being caught out. Yeah,
00:41:11
being caught out was a was the big
00:41:13
thing. Yeah.
00:41:14
>> So, um the 95 Rugby World Cup, uh this
00:41:17
is like career defining in a way. Um
00:41:19
yeah, the I think it was June this year
00:41:21
was the 30th anniversary. How was that
00:41:23
for you?
00:41:25
How often
00:41:26
one of my early podcast guests was Shane
00:41:28
Cameron and he he talked about his fight
00:41:30
with David to where he got knocked out
00:41:31
badly like I think in the first or
00:41:33
second round and he said um every day
00:41:36
for at least seven years afterwards he
00:41:37
thought about it. Oh, I've never stopped
00:41:40
thinking about that. And it it's not
00:41:42
that we lost.
00:41:45
>> It was a great game, mate.
00:41:46
>> It's not even how we lost.
00:41:48
>> Um I'll still maintain that Jonah would
00:41:51
have scored a try when he got pulled
00:41:53
back for a forward pass. It wasn't a
00:41:55
forward pass. Was close enough to that
00:41:57
22 m line. You know, when you study it
00:42:00
on TV,
00:42:01
>> certainly wouldn't have been called back
00:42:02
today. But however, having said that, um
00:42:07
we we went through that World Cup with
00:42:10
some incredible stats and incredible
00:42:12
performances. I mean, look what we did
00:42:13
to England, you know, and Scotland. We
00:42:16
won the Grand Slam there easily. Big, we
00:42:20
played Ireland first, then Wales, then
00:42:23
Scotland, then England, and uh that was
00:42:26
a real cleanup, particularly England. Um
00:42:32
and and we were all set to go like for
00:42:35
that final and
00:42:38
as was tradition, we'd leave the team to
00:42:41
their devices on a Thursday and the
00:42:44
management would go out to a restaurant
00:42:46
somewhere for for dinner. Well, we did
00:42:50
that. We came back in and come back into
00:42:53
the hotel. Standing by reception
00:42:57
was Zinzam Brooke.
00:42:59
And the minute I saw him, I turned to
00:43:01
Colin. I said, "There's problems."
00:43:04
And he said, "Oh, half the team are up
00:43:06
in the doc's room vomiting and they're
00:43:09
sick as hell." And if and and when we
00:43:13
went, we normally went and had a a a
00:43:17
little bit of a captain's run on a
00:43:19
Friday, the day before the game at the
00:43:21
venue we were going to be playing in. We
00:43:24
went out there and I I said to uh the
00:43:27
boys, look, we're not going to run.
00:43:29
We'll walk around the park and talk
00:43:31
about what our options are from the
00:43:34
various positions that uh you know,
00:43:37
because we're playing South Africa, we'd
00:43:39
have specific tactics for them. And um
00:43:43
after about quarter of an hour, I just
00:43:45
gave up
00:43:46
>> because the players couldn't
00:43:47
concentrate.
00:43:49
And I knew we were in real trouble. And
00:43:51
I said to Brian Lo, who was our campaign
00:43:54
manager there, I said, "Would we have
00:43:55
any show getting this delayed till
00:43:58
Sunday?" He said, "No,
00:44:02
too too much disruption to everything."
00:44:06
>> And he said, "I don't I think we'll try
00:44:09
and keep just keep it quiet." M so that
00:44:13
you you asked me what was one of the
00:44:15
worst moments in my playing career. Well
00:44:18
now the worst moment in my coaching
00:44:20
career was seeing that team go out and
00:44:23
play knowing that they probably couldn't
00:44:25
give better than 85%
00:44:29
because of what they'd been through. Now
00:44:31
there was three naughty boys.
00:44:35
uh Rush,
00:44:38
Eric Rush, I think Josh Crofeld, someone
00:44:41
else who who
00:44:45
didn't have the tea and coffee. They
00:44:48
went out and ate,
00:44:51
I think they had McDonald's or something
00:44:53
like that on the Thursday night and uh
00:44:58
and so they weren't sick.
00:45:01
>> Amazing. Amazing. and and and I think
00:45:03
Fitzy because he had uh Fitzy might have
00:45:08
had media commitments or something
00:45:10
before dinner and
00:45:13
by the time he came and had dinner, it
00:45:16
was a fresh batch of tea and coffee that
00:45:17
was put out. I'm convinced it was that
00:45:21
first batch of tea and coffee that
00:45:24
>> had been poisoned
00:45:25
>> cuz it's one of the one of the great
00:45:26
sort of um Kiwi sporting folk laws
00:45:29
folklore things. It's sort of up there
00:45:30
with um Chapel's underarm bowl to
00:45:32
Mcknney and cricket in 80 or 81 or
00:45:34
whatever it was. Do is there a Suzie?
00:45:37
Was there like an intentional food
00:45:39
poison? No. Let me tell you the real.
00:45:41
Yes, there was the there there's no
00:45:44
doubt that we were poisoned. Now, I'm
00:45:46
going to tell you a story and and this
00:45:49
confirmed it for me. Ion Edgar
00:45:53
uh who who was a great rugby follower
00:45:56
and and supported me all the way through
00:45:59
my rugby career, coaching career.
00:46:03
We were having at a dinner for something
00:46:06
target sportsman of the year or
00:46:08
something like that in Deneden and he
00:46:09
had just come back from the UK. This is
00:46:11
after the World Cup.
00:46:14
And as soon as I walked in, he came up
00:46:16
to me and he said, "Uh, I got something
00:46:19
that is informative for you." And I
00:46:21
said, "Yeah, what's that, Eon?" He said,
00:46:23
"The word in financial circles in London
00:46:27
is that the bookies
00:46:32
arrange for your food poisoning."
00:46:36
Now
00:46:38
the New Zealand Rugby Union weren't
00:46:40
prepared to do anything about it. Richie
00:46:41
Guy was chairman and I understood the
00:46:44
reasons.
00:46:45
So my wife was South African. So
00:46:49
we hired a private detective over there
00:46:52
ourselves
00:46:53
and asked him to go and find out uh if
00:46:57
he could what had happened.
00:47:00
And the the end result of that was that
00:47:06
uh there was a waitress
00:47:10
that was employed on the Wednesday
00:47:13
and and after Thursday she just
00:47:17
disappeared completely
00:47:20
from the job from the hotel where she
00:47:22
had a permanent job.
00:47:25
and
00:47:28
the the private detective and and the
00:47:30
other staff were pretty convinced that
00:47:33
if something was done that that she had
00:47:35
probably done it. And there's two
00:47:37
theories on what it could be. Uh it
00:47:40
could have been a a a chemical thing,
00:47:42
but there was a an argument that it was
00:47:44
probably a biological a a wild plant in
00:47:49
South Africa. I've forgotten the name of
00:47:51
it. uh if it's put in with your tea
00:47:54
leaves and that sort of thing, it it can
00:47:56
lead to this sort of poisoning, food
00:47:58
poisoning.
00:47:59
And he said she had a name like
00:48:04
Suki Su Soi Suzi, something like that.
00:48:08
He said, you know, the black. Now, I was
00:48:12
silly enough to mention that to Bob H
00:48:16
when he wrote this book. And and so
00:48:18
that's where the Suzie came from.
00:48:22
Um
00:48:23
and and I said to him it was it was only
00:48:27
you know a name something like that. I
00:48:29
didn't say susie was a name or to hell I
00:48:32
never said anything to him about it.
00:48:34
>> Yeah. All all things considered it was a
00:48:35
a hell of a final though. Right. 80
00:48:37
minutes not enough to separate the two
00:48:38
best teams in the world and then 20
00:48:40
minutes of of extra time. But do you do
00:48:43
you do you ever put much thought into
00:48:44
like how different life would look now
00:48:46
if the outcome had been different? Like
00:48:47
you'd be a sir. No doubt.
00:48:49
>> Yeah. that wouldn't bother me. Um,
00:48:55
uh,
00:48:57
I don't know. You see,
00:49:00
life probably would have been different
00:49:02
for a few years after it, but I've I
00:49:06
very rarely go to All Black reunions. I
00:49:09
I've step right away from that sort of
00:49:14
life now. And uh I don't I don't I don't
00:49:18
think it I don't think what I'm doing
00:49:20
now would be any different.
00:49:22
>> And and I sort of I'd rather not people
00:49:25
talk to me about when when I'm playing
00:49:28
golf or things like that. I don't want
00:49:30
people telling me, "Oh, you had a great
00:49:32
career. You did this. You did that or
00:49:34
anything. I just want to be treated as a
00:49:36
normal person."
00:49:37
And um and I'm lucky because uh you know
00:49:42
at Milbrook and it was the same at the
00:49:44
Hills was only very occasionally someone
00:49:46
would ask a polite question you know
00:49:49
about about something and if if people
00:49:53
if people would ask me what was my
00:49:55
opinion of the All Blacks on Saturday.
00:49:56
Yes, of course I'll give an opinion
00:49:59
>> but I don't really want to talk about my
00:50:01
past my career.
00:50:03
But but having said that, I'm I'm very
00:50:06
proud of some of the things I achieved
00:50:09
as a as a player and as a coach. Oh, one
00:50:12
one thing we we've learned. So 95 was
00:50:14
only the third ever Rugby World Cup. So
00:50:17
we I don't think we had an appreciation
00:50:18
even back then about how bloody hard
00:50:20
these things are to win. So I mean
00:50:23
finishing finishing second in extra time
00:50:24
with um you know food poisoning is um
00:50:27
yeah. What was the reaction like when
00:50:29
you came back? I've had Hardy on the
00:50:30
podcast and he had a terrible time after
00:50:32
99 and spiral into a deep depression
00:50:34
after the public backlash. But were were
00:50:38
the public more sympathetic with you
00:50:39
because it was such a good tournament?
00:50:40
>> Yeah. No, they were. And I believe that
00:50:43
the public I I had no negative backlash
00:50:46
whatsoever.
00:50:48
And I think uh the public realized I
00:50:51
mean when you see Craig Dow and Jeff
00:50:54
Wilson vomiting on the side of the field
00:50:57
>> it's only someone like Keith Quinn that
00:51:00
would say the story was made up. Um you
00:51:04
know that that I found
00:51:07
unbelievable that
00:51:08
>> did he did he say it was made up?
00:51:09
>> He said that publicly. Yes. Um,
00:51:13
I I I
00:51:16
think uh I think people were incredibly
00:51:20
sympathetic and they believed that we
00:51:23
were the best team at the World Cup
00:51:25
anyway. I mean, Andrew Mertens had a
00:51:29
fantastic tournament. He missed a drop
00:51:31
goal just before the end of full time.
00:51:35
Uh missed by about two feet.
00:51:39
uh and then
00:51:41
their first 58
00:51:44
he gets one
00:51:46
and uh in extra time. So it's just the
00:51:50
way it is.
00:51:51
>> We if if we had won that game I would
00:51:55
have said that's one of the greatest
00:51:56
sporting achievements of all time given
00:51:59
the circumstances that faced those those
00:52:02
blacks.
00:52:04
Did you did you um get to rub shoulders
00:52:07
or have anything to do with um Nelson
00:52:08
Mandela at that time?
00:52:09
>> Oh yeah. Yeah. No, in '92 I did. Uh he
00:52:12
he it was first year on uh uh that he
00:52:16
was president I think and that that's
00:52:19
what our tour was about.
00:52:22
>> Um oh lovely lovely man
00:52:25
>> was he? And and I I did I was at one
00:52:28
dinner that he was at in 95 as well and
00:52:32
he made a point of coming to talk to me
00:52:34
which I thought was really nice. Um
00:52:37
>> yeah, lovely person.
00:52:39
>> Yeah,
00:52:40
>> one of those people that just has an
00:52:41
aura about him when you meet him.
00:52:42
>> Yes, definitely. And you know, when you
00:52:45
when you meet him and you see him like
00:52:47
that and and you hear him speaking, you
00:52:49
can probably see why he survived
00:52:52
imprisonment and came out without any
00:52:55
bitter feelings. He you know, he he he
00:52:59
was fantastic.
00:53:02
>> Oh, awesome. And were you happy with the
00:53:04
the actor who was cast to play you in
00:53:06
the Invictus movie? I haven't seen it.
00:53:09
>> What? How have you not? Well, are you
00:53:11
not curious to see to see what
00:53:14
>> the act of I saw shorts of it somewhere
00:53:17
and I I Yeah. No.
00:53:19
>> Well, you got no desire to watch it
00:53:20
because you know how the movie ends or
00:53:24
>> I would have had trouble believing
00:53:27
uh that it was a true
00:53:30
um a true account of of what happened.
00:53:35
And so I didn't want to get infuriated
00:53:37
by going to see someone's
00:53:40
twisted version.
00:53:41
>> Yeah.
00:53:42
>> So the the locker room after that 95
00:53:44
World Cup final, what what's that like?
00:53:46
What's your I mean you're you're
00:53:47
disappointed. You're hurting as much as
00:53:48
the team, but do you flip into like
00:53:51
cheerleader mode or like supportive dad
00:53:53
mode?
00:53:55
>> More supportive.
00:53:57
>> Um and Colin Me was very very good with
00:54:01
the guys.
00:54:02
>> Yeah. Uh they,
00:54:05
you know, of all the games we played,
00:54:07
they probably played their heart out
00:54:09
more in that final than any of the
00:54:11
others.
00:54:13
>> Uh there was just a limit as to how much
00:54:15
they could give, you know. Yeah, it's
00:54:19
>> Yeah,
00:54:21
I I I
00:54:23
still feel so sorry for those players
00:54:26
whenever this is talked about. Uh I hurt
00:54:31
for those players.
00:54:32
cuz they're the ones that actually I
00:54:35
mean we all had the illness. I had it.
00:54:37
>> Colin and Brian uh had it. Colin was
00:54:41
pretty badly affected. Um but
00:54:45
we we we we all
00:54:48
like I in particular felt sorry for the
00:54:51
players that had to go out on the field
00:54:54
knowing they couldn't do what they were
00:54:56
doing a week earlier.
00:54:57
>> Yeah. Would you would you have wanted to
00:55:00
carry on as coach after that tournament
00:55:02
or was it was it just not an option?
00:55:03
That was a time where you get one crack
00:55:05
at the World Cup and if you don't win
00:55:06
you're you're out. Well, Colin thought
00:55:08
he could fix that. Colin thought I could
00:55:10
get reappointed.
00:55:11
>> And I said to him, I look, I'm mentally
00:55:16
drained. If I could have a year off and
00:55:19
then come back, I'd possibly do that.
00:55:22
Um,
00:55:24
but I I I was drained and I realized I
00:55:28
just had to get on with the next stage
00:55:30
in my life.
00:55:33
>> Did Yeah. That was the year it went um
00:55:35
from amateur to professional. Right.
00:55:37
>> Yeah. But I want to make another point
00:55:39
here.
00:55:41
When I coached, I always coached the
00:55:44
forwards because I I always right from
00:55:46
back in my club days, I coached forwards
00:55:49
because if they didn't do it right, then
00:55:51
you never had a game. Might as well not
00:55:53
have had a backline. Um coached the
00:55:56
backs
00:55:58
and we had a fitness trainer.
00:56:01
We didn't have 20 other coaches floating
00:56:04
around the team like they do these days.
00:56:07
So we Earl and I obviously were under
00:56:10
far more pressure
00:56:12
>> than what coaches are today because of
00:56:16
we had to do all the work.
00:56:18
We could call on a scrum coach if we
00:56:21
needed to. We could call on a um
00:56:24
I I remember calling Andy Aiden and in
00:56:27
one test buildup to sort out a line out
00:56:30
problem or to give us some ideas on a
00:56:33
line out problem.
00:56:35
So, uh, but by and large we were the
00:56:39
coaches.
00:56:41
>> You got a lot done, didn't you?
00:56:42
>> We did get a lot done.
00:56:43
>> Did you Did you um cuz you sort of
00:56:45
missed the whole professional thing. Did
00:56:46
you financially did you do okay out of
00:56:47
the game?
00:56:48
>> No.
00:56:48
>> No. So, just huge amount of sacrifice
00:56:50
putting your career. And
00:56:52
>> Louis Lake paid me okay when I when I
00:56:55
went and coached the Lions in South
00:56:58
Africa.
00:56:59
Uh
00:57:01
but
00:57:03
uh and then I had those two years
00:57:05
coaching the Highlanders, but you know
00:57:08
that that was pretty small money really.
00:57:11
>> Um no, I never made much money out of
00:57:15
rugby at all.
00:57:16
>> But I'll say this, rugby definitely
00:57:19
opened the door for me in business and
00:57:22
and things like that.
00:57:23
>> Yeah. Yeah. So 2001 you move over to
00:57:25
South Africa um to coach the cats. What
00:57:27
what's that like? That was a dangerous
00:57:28
place then, right? Did you Did you feel
00:57:30
it? The security aspect
00:57:33
>> where they uh the flat they put me in
00:57:36
was a pretty safe area. And you know, I
00:57:41
was well advised what not to do and what
00:57:44
and and where not to go. So I I never I
00:57:48
never saw any violence. I never felt
00:57:53
any pressure at any time. Never felt.
00:57:56
But I made sure I wasn't out at night on
00:57:58
the streets or anything like that.
00:58:00
>> Um,
00:58:02
and uh, there was several of the players
00:58:05
in the same complex that that I was
00:58:08
staying in. Uh, so no, no, no, it it was
00:58:13
good. By and large, I enjoyed my time
00:58:16
over there. It was it was interesting.
00:58:18
was a challenge to uh coach a
00:58:23
nationality that I' not had any
00:58:25
experience with and they think
00:58:27
differently to us about rugby and so on
00:58:31
and so forth. They very quickly the team
00:58:35
I had for the Curry Cup which which we
00:58:37
won. They very quickly uh uh fitted into
00:58:42
the way I coached
00:58:45
>> and enjoyed it
00:58:46
>> and loved it. And I still hear, believe
00:58:48
it or not, I still hear from time to
00:58:50
time from some of those players. You
00:58:52
remember Dean Hall, he he was a wing for
00:58:54
South Africa. He went on, I picked him
00:58:56
up as about a 19year-old, promoted him
00:58:59
to Curry Cup Rugby. He's a big strong
00:59:02
lad for a wing. Great player. Then he
00:59:04
obviously went on to become a a very
00:59:06
good spring. Um, lo and behold, he
00:59:10
WhatsApp me oh would have been month ago
00:59:13
probably
00:59:14
>> see how I was getting on and
00:59:16
>> tennisport is another one I'd heard from
00:59:18
and um yeah I suppose the nature of the
00:59:22
job like you're not going to be mates
00:59:24
with everyone there are going to be
00:59:25
personality clashes and there's you
00:59:26
haven't read your own book so I'm
00:59:27
guessing you haven't read the um Rasi
00:59:29
Arasimus book
00:59:31
>> no
00:59:33
I've got I've got I've got a quote here
00:59:34
from from that book he said um I I
00:59:37
learned I I learned from the mistakes
00:59:38
both of us made. I won't have players
00:59:40
who behave as badly as I did feeling
00:59:42
entitled just because they're playing
00:59:43
well. Um how Lori coached and analyzed
00:59:46
is exactly how I don't want to be as a
00:59:47
coach. Um yes, he's admitting some of
00:59:50
his own mistakes. But yeah, is that hard
00:59:53
when there's like personality clashes
00:59:55
with players, players that you just
00:59:56
don't gel with? Well, it's funny he says
00:59:59
that because Andre Fenta, who was a
01:00:01
great all black,
01:00:03
uh I was talking to him one day and he
01:00:06
said, "Russy's doing exactly what you
01:00:09
did that he hated to do and he refused
01:00:11
to do. He's doing it with his players."
01:00:14
So, you can take that comment for what
01:00:17
it's worth.
01:00:18
>> Yeah. Um the only reason I had conflict
01:00:22
with Russy, it wasn't about rugby
01:00:24
issues. Uh it was that he didn't want to
01:00:27
train.
01:00:29
>> And if I'd let he he maybe he kept
01:00:32
himself fit, I don't know. But if I'd
01:00:35
let the whole team be as slack as he
01:00:37
wanted to be wanted to be,
01:00:40
there's no way we would have won games.
01:00:42
There's a lot of those players were big
01:00:45
South Africans like you see and you
01:00:47
you've got to work hard to get them fit
01:00:48
enough.
01:00:50
>> And and it's, you know, uh yeah.
01:00:55
It's um Yeah. It must be hard when when
01:00:57
there's players that you've had like a
01:00:58
falling out with to write about you in a
01:00:59
book and it's like, you know, it's a
01:01:01
free hit really. There's nothing you can
01:01:03
do to defend yourself.
01:01:05
>> No. Well,
01:01:05
>> does it not bother you?
01:01:07
>> Not coming from him because he's not a
01:01:10
No, seriously, he's a he he is a very
01:01:12
dishonest person
01:01:14
>> and I'm not going to get into it now,
01:01:15
but he he had a lot of
01:01:18
>> personal failings
01:01:19
>> in his social life and that sort of
01:01:21
thing. Um
01:01:24
but it it it no it doesn't bother me
01:01:27
coming from you.
01:01:28
>> Yeah. Uh there was I didn't know
01:01:30
anything about this but um researching
01:01:32
this chat um so you came back and you're
01:01:35
coaching um the the Highlanders. Um did
01:01:38
you and Anton have there was some
01:01:40
falling out with Anton?
01:01:41
>> Oh yeah. Well it's it's another example
01:01:46
of
01:01:48
uh a player wanted wanting to do it his
01:01:51
way. Now, this is where I suddenly was
01:01:54
starting to realize, and I made a
01:01:56
comment right at the start of this
01:01:58
interview, if I if I coach now, I' i'd
01:02:01
probably have to be a little bit
01:02:02
different
01:02:04
uh and tolerant with players and than I
01:02:07
was in uh when I coached. Anton was
01:02:11
another player that didn't like being
01:02:13
told what to do. And yes, we had
01:02:17
differences of opinion on certain
01:02:20
things. Um,
01:02:24
yeah. I I didn't realize it was such a
01:02:27
big issue with him. He never he never
01:02:31
This is the bit that disappointed me. He
01:02:34
never came to me and said, "I disagree
01:02:36
with this or this or this. Instead, he
01:02:39
worked behind my back, which was not so
01:02:43
good."
01:02:43
>> Yeah. Dishonest.
01:02:44
>> Yeah.
01:02:45
>> Yeah.
01:02:46
>> Did Did your leadership style evolve
01:02:48
over the years?
01:02:49
uh it did but mainly mainly through
01:02:54
learning what worked and what didn't
01:02:56
work and so one of one of the I mean
01:03:02
in my early years coaching my club team
01:03:06
and coaching at Targetago because I had
01:03:08
played an awful lot more rugby than
01:03:11
those guys any of them probably knew
01:03:14
quite a lot more about rugby than they
01:03:16
did and what works and what doesn't
01:03:18
work. I was pretty dictatorial. But by
01:03:21
the time I got to the All Blacks,
01:03:24
uh I was regularly talking with people
01:03:28
like Frank Bunts and Fitzy and I Jones
01:03:32
and and the Brook Brothers, quite a few.
01:03:35
It's hard to mention all of them.
01:03:38
um about what we should do and and and
01:03:42
it come brings me back to the camp that
01:03:44
we had here in Queenstown
01:03:46
where I sent the players away and said
01:03:48
right you guys go and have an open
01:03:51
discussion without me and then I'd set
01:03:54
up a subcommittee of the senior players
01:03:57
could come back to me and report and I
01:04:00
don't want to know who said what. I just
01:04:02
want to know the content of of what was
01:04:05
said. When it all boiled down, I I
01:04:07
looked at Earl and Earl and I looked at
01:04:10
each other and smiled. Well, guys, got
01:04:13
to tell you what we've been doing
01:04:16
subliminally
01:04:17
has really got through to you guys cuz
01:04:19
that's exactly what Earl and I are
01:04:21
wanting to do with this team. We didn't
01:04:24
want to show the rest of the world how
01:04:26
the All Blacks were going to play at the
01:04:28
World Cup. We did a lot of preparation
01:04:31
stuff and something that worked and I
01:04:34
mentioned that game against Australia at
01:04:37
Carisbrook in 93 with a pick and go.
01:04:40
Well, in the way we cleaned out, we
01:04:43
didn't do that anymore. M
01:04:45
>> so that if because if we did it once,
01:04:50
you know, other coaches and that might
01:04:52
not pick up on it, but if we went
01:04:55
started, it became a part of our game
01:04:57
plan and they'd work out a way to stop
01:04:58
it.
01:05:00
>> So that so what they came back to us
01:05:03
with was exactly the way we wanted to
01:05:06
play the game.
01:05:08
That's got to be a hard thing to keep up
01:05:09
your sleeve as an all black coach,
01:05:10
especially um Yeah, because there's an
01:05:12
expectation to win the World Cup, but
01:05:14
there's also an expectation to win every
01:05:15
damn game along the way.
01:05:18
>> Yeah. Well,
01:05:20
yeah, but at that stage, I think we're
01:05:23
into about was that about the third or
01:05:25
fourth World Cup that had been played.
01:05:27
It it it appeared to us with what had
01:05:30
happened under with Alex. Um it appeared
01:05:35
to us that we had to be prepared to
01:05:38
sacrifice
01:05:40
some performances early on to get the
01:05:43
right players involved and get enough
01:05:46
experience under their belt
01:05:48
>> at that level to be able to give us
01:05:50
their best at the World Cup.
01:05:51
>> And that is in fact what happened. I
01:05:54
couldn't if I when I look back and if
01:05:57
you just take the final out because of
01:05:59
the way the players were, but you look
01:06:01
at all of the other games at the World
01:06:03
Cup,
01:06:05
if you'd told me three years earlier,
01:06:08
this is the way the team's going to end
01:06:10
up playing,
01:06:12
I'd have said that's exactly what we're
01:06:14
trying to achieve.
01:06:15
>> And we did. Earl like I I can't
01:06:20
emphasize enough on how important a role
01:06:23
Earl Curtain played. Um Earl's Earl's
01:06:27
Earl. He's different to me and he's
01:06:30
cruisy and he has his gin and lemon in
01:06:32
his pocket.
01:06:34
Whatever the sliced
01:06:37
lemon to put in his gin after at the
01:06:40
aftermatch function. But that's that's
01:06:42
Earl. But we got on like a house on fire
01:06:45
as we did when we played together. And
01:06:48
um
01:06:50
uh it it at the end of that World Cup,
01:06:54
we we were very happy at what we had
01:06:56
achieved. This is what we envisionaged
01:06:59
the All Blacks playing like. And we and
01:07:02
as I said earlier on, we changed the way
01:07:04
test rugby is played.
01:07:06
>> And and that is a legacy. Maybe that
01:07:08
maybe that's a legacy I'm most proud of.
01:07:10
>> Yeah.
01:07:12
Yeah, it's brilliant. I've got another
01:07:14
quote from um Pine Tree. Yep. Um Lori
01:07:18
brought honesty to the coaching role.
01:07:19
It's a hell of a job dropping players,
01:07:21
but he was always completely honest and
01:07:23
he expected honesty from those around
01:07:25
him. It upset him when he didn't get it.
01:07:27
I I just want to know is it is it
01:07:29
possible to be a great leader and be
01:07:31
popular and liked at the same time?
01:07:36
Do you know what
01:07:38
it is? It is very very possible to be
01:07:41
respected and then when the people you
01:07:46
are leading see you outside the battle
01:07:48
zone in a normal situation and they
01:07:52
realize oh you're not such a bad bugger
01:07:55
after all. Uh then I can say it it is
01:08:00
possible. Yes I say it is possible.
01:08:02
>> Who was there one player in particular
01:08:04
that you dreaded having hard
01:08:05
conversations with and why?
01:08:09
someone that you knew was going to react
01:08:10
badly if you were putting them on the
01:08:13
bench for a week or
01:08:16
>> No, I and I'll tell you why. I I I
01:08:18
nobody comes to mind. Okay? And I and
01:08:21
I'll tell you why. It comes back to what
01:08:23
Colin said in that quote. Um
01:08:27
the players I demanded honesty from the
01:08:30
players and the players knew that I was
01:08:34
100% honest. Even if I wasn't right, I
01:08:38
was saying what I honestly thought and
01:08:41
and I was giving everything I had to the
01:08:44
team and to the players. I taught a lot
01:08:47
of those players a lot of good things
01:08:49
about rugby. Made them better players
01:08:52
and they respected that.
01:08:55
>> I I mentioned on um Instagram that
01:08:57
you're coming on the podcast today.
01:08:58
You're not You don't have an Instagram
01:09:00
page?
01:09:00
>> No. No. Um there are so many questions
01:09:03
from people. Um they're sort of all over
01:09:05
the place, but we'll run through these.
01:09:07
Which all black players you've coached
01:09:09
would you most want beside you in a
01:09:11
tough game and why?
01:09:13
Um Fitzy
01:09:16
Zenzan Brookke both the Brook
01:09:20
um Frank Bunts both the Brook brothers
01:09:24
brothers. Uh Richard Low look I do you
01:09:28
know I would go through most of the team
01:09:30
and I'll tell you why. Uh because they
01:09:34
give it 100%
01:09:37
and what their job is meant to be
01:09:41
and they they they are honest in
01:09:44
themselves in the effort that they're
01:09:46
putting into a game of rugby.
01:09:49
See Richard Low is a very underrated
01:09:52
player.
01:09:54
Did you were you close to Was Kully on
01:09:57
your radar in in 95? Was he too young?
01:09:59
Did you?
01:10:00
>> No. In 95 unfortunately
01:10:02
uh Cully
01:10:05
uh
01:10:07
in 95 I think it was or beginning of 96
01:10:12
he starred in the sevens
01:10:14
>> and that was how John Hart picked him up
01:10:17
and replaced Glenn Osburn. Glenn Osman,
01:10:20
I think, played a few games with John,
01:10:22
but Cully came in that year. He wasn't
01:10:24
on the radar in 95.
01:10:28
>> Um, how do you want to be remembered in
01:10:30
New Zealand rugby? This is a question
01:10:32
from Instagram.
01:10:34
Um,
01:10:35
I just want to be remembered as someone
01:10:38
who gave everything he had to his
01:10:41
players, the team, and to New Zealand
01:10:44
rugby. That's all I want. that I I I I
01:10:48
did the best that I could.
01:10:51
>> Well, it has been a life of service for
01:10:53
the sport, hasn't it? As a player and a
01:10:54
coach,
01:10:55
>> like over so many decades as well.
01:10:57
>> Yeah. Well, it has and some of the
01:11:01
things that I I wonder at times not I
01:11:05
mean
01:11:07
not many people
01:11:10
have given as much to a sport in terms
01:11:13
of performance like I played more than
01:11:16
100 game I I think I played 180 first
01:11:18
class games I played
01:11:22
15 or 16 for a targetgo then I turn
01:11:25
around and coach a targetgo oh I don't
01:11:27
It might have been 140 games under
01:11:29
something. I can't remember. But
01:11:32
>> that's a long that's a hell of a long
01:11:34
period of time.
01:11:36
>> And I I you know, then I then I coached
01:11:39
the All Blacks. I I was on the New
01:11:42
Zealand Rugby Union coaching committee.
01:11:44
See, this is something people wouldn't
01:11:45
know. On their coaching committee for
01:11:48
about 10 years and under Bill Freeman.
01:11:53
And um I did I gave my life to it. M
01:11:57
>> and and and I can to this day I can say
01:12:00
that everything I did in rugby I did
01:12:03
with honesty
01:12:05
and in believing that what I was doing
01:12:08
was the best that I could do.
01:12:11
>> And that's how I would would like to be
01:12:13
remembered not so much by what I
01:12:16
achieved but what I gave.
01:12:20
I really like that. Yeah. Yeah, I
01:12:22
mentioned I had Sir Steve Hansen on the
01:12:23
podcast recently and um a lot of what
01:12:25
you've said is even though it's
01:12:26
different areas er areas um similar to
01:12:28
him it's like team first.
01:12:30
>> Yeah,
01:12:30
>> team first in everything and it sort of
01:12:32
it sounds like that's what you were
01:12:34
saying as well with all the decisions
01:12:35
you made. Well, let me tell you I'll
01:12:36
tell you another story.
01:12:39
Uh and and this is media.
01:12:43
Um
01:12:44
I used to protect my players even even
01:12:47
outside rugby. Now Ingera Tuigala was
01:12:50
one. Now, Inger had to live in a garage
01:12:53
at his at his family home
01:12:56
and uh I you know I I used to do what I
01:13:00
could could do for him. And um
01:13:05
Windgray wrote an article
01:13:08
and put it in the New Zealand Herald
01:13:11
about Inger, an all black Inger living
01:13:13
in a garage that embarrassed Inger so
01:13:16
much.
01:13:19
And you know, I had a crack at Win Gray
01:13:21
about that. I said, "Should you not have
01:13:23
run it past Inger or me first before you
01:13:26
wrote a story like that because of the
01:13:28
embarrassment it could cause to him?"
01:13:30
>> Didn't give a [ __ ]
01:13:33
Now, that's where I got offside with
01:13:35
quite a few of the media when they were
01:13:37
dishonest. I don't care how brutal on me
01:13:41
a Juno is if it's honest. You know, if
01:13:45
he's telling the truth, but when they
01:13:47
bend the truth and and you know, give
01:13:50
illinformed opinions that that's when I
01:13:53
used to get frustrated.
01:13:54
>> Yeah. Cuz you care about the players.
01:13:56
But I can't imagine how terrifying that
01:13:58
is getting a spray from Lorie Mains.
01:14:00
Well,
01:14:01
>> it'd be intimidating.
01:14:02
>> Oh, I don't know about that, but
01:14:06
>> um I'm not I'll tell you what be a hell
01:14:08
of a lot worse getting a spray from
01:14:10
column. Now, let me tell you let me tell
01:14:12
you about one. I mean, this is this is
01:14:14
legendary.
01:14:16
We we had a a pretty average game again
01:14:19
in our first test against France in 95.
01:14:23
And I I I don't know the reason for it,
01:14:28
but I was all geared up to uh sort out
01:14:31
one or two players and to have a pretty
01:14:34
brutal session on the Tuesday, not so
01:14:37
much in hard work cuz the players were
01:14:39
fit, but in in uh comments on what we
01:14:45
didn't do.
01:14:47
And um Colin got up at the team meeting
01:14:51
before we went out and gave the guys
01:14:55
what I'd call a genuine Colin me serve
01:14:59
and it was better than I could do
01:15:03
and he was and coming from him cuz he he
01:15:06
didn't interfere with coaching and I I
01:15:08
used to ask him to have an opinion from
01:15:11
time to time and he he was sort of
01:15:12
reluctant to do so but this he he just
01:15:16
got up and did that. And like what what
01:15:20
did it sound like?
01:15:21
>> Just a lot of fbombs.
01:15:22
>> Oh no, no, no, no. He what he spoke, how
01:15:28
he spoke. I said to him, "You you would
01:15:30
have made a good coach tree." He said,
01:15:33
"Oh, I had a bit of a go at it." But he
01:15:34
said, "I never knew what the backs were
01:15:36
doing or words to that effect." Um, no,
01:15:40
he just told them straight about what he
01:15:42
expected from All Blacks. M so much
01:15:47
mana. Oh, incred. Hey, why do you think
01:15:50
I asked for him to be the the allwake
01:15:53
manager? Why do you think I asked for
01:15:55
Brian Lahore to be the
01:15:57
>> campaign manager? See what it did?
01:16:00
There's two things that that did. I
01:16:02
didn't want to be the center of
01:16:03
attention. I bring in a Colin Me and a
01:16:06
Brian Lahore and I can fade off into
01:16:10
insignificance and just do my job as a
01:16:13
coach.
01:16:14
>> And and the spin-off from both of those
01:16:16
guys is they were respected wherever we
01:16:19
went by the home countries and nobody
01:16:24
tried to pull any fast tricks.
01:16:26
>> Yeah.
01:16:27
>> Over Colin past Colin's eyes. He just
01:16:30
wouldn't risk it. If you could change
01:16:33
one rugby rule, what would it be?
01:16:44
It look, I've got to say it's it's not
01:16:46
so much changing the rule
01:16:50
as
01:16:54
I let me put it this way. I can't stand
01:16:58
seeing
01:17:00
15 phases of rugby with oneoff passes
01:17:04
out to a forward bash into forwards out
01:17:07
to another forward bash. And I mean, do
01:17:10
you get bored watching that?
01:17:12
>> You get sick of it,
01:17:13
>> right? Do we need to have a law that
01:17:17
says something like this? Okay, you can
01:17:20
have three or four goes around the ruck
01:17:21
like that. After that, it's got to get
01:17:23
out to at least your center.
01:17:28
or or but I mean you couldn't have a
01:17:30
rule that said that but or do we have to
01:17:34
introduce a law like league have got you
01:17:39
get so many plays with a ball and if you
01:17:40
haven't done something with it you lose
01:17:42
it I don't know but
01:17:45
something's got to happen within the
01:17:47
rules of rugby to stop this
01:17:50
you know 16 or 17 phases along the 5 m
01:17:54
line M
01:17:55
>> I mean it that's ruining rugby
01:17:57
>> m
01:17:58
>> as a spectacle.
01:17:59
>> Do do you think the all black jersey
01:18:01
still means the same to players today as
01:18:03
it did in your era?
01:18:04
>> Some of them it does.
01:18:06
>> You can tell that.
01:18:07
>> Yeah.
01:18:07
>> You you can watch look one new player
01:18:12
that
01:18:14
feels that way is Fabian Holland. You'll
01:18:16
watch him play. But Arty Savia, greatest
01:18:18
player in the world as far as I'm
01:18:20
concerned, Arti Savia,
01:18:22
>> like week in week out, that guy produces
01:18:26
his best and and it's all and and he and
01:18:30
he gives everything he's got in every
01:18:32
game he plays. He's a smart cookie, too.
01:18:36
>> I that he he's my favorite All Black, to
01:18:39
be honest. Um
01:18:42
it it so yeah we'll
01:18:46
leave that there.
01:18:48
>> Who's These are questions from Instagram
01:18:50
by the way. Who's um the greatest All
01:18:51
Black of all time and who's the best All
01:18:53
Black coach of all time?
01:18:55
>> Well, you can't go past Fred Allen, I
01:18:57
don't think. And hearing Brian Lahore
01:19:00
and Colin Me talk about Fred is a
01:19:02
needle.
01:19:04
uh you know it it it I remember Colin
01:19:08
saying to me one day you're getting
01:19:10
close to Fred Allen's needle when I was
01:19:13
proddding a few of the players you know
01:19:15
but um so I think Fred Allen Colin me
01:19:20
Richie Mccau
01:19:22
and I'd say by the time he retires Arty
01:19:24
Savvia might be on that pedestal as
01:19:26
well.
01:19:28
>> Yeah. got it made super rugby exciting
01:19:30
this year, didn't it? Seeing him with
01:19:32
the Moana Pacifica,
01:19:34
>> that was fantastic.
01:19:35
>> That was a breath of fresh air into
01:19:38
Super Rugby. And it just shows you, I
01:19:40
mean, how great he is. Turned a team
01:19:42
that was struggling to make it
01:19:44
>> into a team that, you know, was hard to
01:19:46
beat.
01:19:47
>> Yeah. And a fan favorite off the field
01:19:49
as well. Oh, yeah.
01:19:50
>> Um, if you were in charge today, what's
01:19:52
the first thing you'd change about how
01:19:53
the All Blacks are run?
01:20:00
Well, I don't know how they're run. Um,
01:20:04
you know, you know what I think I'd do?
01:20:07
I I' I'd probably have less coaches, so
01:20:10
there's less confusing confusion with
01:20:12
the players. At times, I see examples on
01:20:16
the field of
01:20:18
this player thinking this is what he's
01:20:21
been coached and this player thinking
01:20:22
something different. And if you've got
01:20:26
two, like I don't mind extra coaches
01:20:30
being around to deal with technical
01:20:32
issues like a scrum coach or whatever.
01:20:35
Teach them how to scrum, but don't tell
01:20:37
the players what to do in other parts of
01:20:38
the field. There's got to be one person
01:20:42
driving it. And I, you know, so I'm not
01:20:45
sure how the All Blacks are driven,
01:20:47
whether Scott Robertson drives the whole
01:20:49
thing, not sure. But it it's it's got to
01:20:53
get down to that. So you you heard what
01:20:55
I Jones said in that uh Sky TV
01:21:00
program. Yeah. The end of the day.
01:21:02
>> Uh every Lori taught every player what
01:21:06
his job was
01:21:08
and then that job fitted into what our
01:21:12
team pattern was. Okay. Can you have
01:21:16
that if you've got players being told by
01:21:18
different people what they should be
01:21:20
doing?
01:21:21
>> Can you have that? M
01:21:23
>> and I see examples
01:21:26
at times you see extended periods where
01:21:29
the this all black team is really
01:21:30
playing as a unit and looking very very
01:21:33
good. At other times like just after
01:21:35
Halime
01:21:37
I'm asking myself well hang on this
01:21:40
player doesn't know what that player's
01:21:42
meant to be doing.
01:21:45
Who's the toughest player you've ever
01:21:47
seen? And could they survive in today's
01:21:48
game without getting carded every week?
01:21:55
Do you know and a lot of people
01:21:58
are are not going to agree with this
01:22:02
for all the rugby he played
01:22:04
and how tough he was and everything
01:22:06
else.
01:22:08
Richard Low would probably get
01:22:11
a card a year or two cards a year, but
01:22:14
he wasn't a dirty player.
01:22:16
>> He did some stupid things, yes, but he
01:22:19
wasn't a dirty player. He's one. Um,
01:22:21
>> were you his coach when the eye gouging
01:22:24
incident happened?
01:22:25
>> Yeah.
01:22:25
>> Yeah. I remember that being a big news
01:22:27
at the time.
01:22:27
>> Yeah. I'm not so sure about that.
01:22:29
>> Yeah.
01:22:30
>> Um
01:22:32
I I don't think he I I there was no way
01:22:35
it was an intentional eye gouch.
01:22:39
Um Oh boy.
01:22:44
Do you know I'm just wondering if Arty
01:22:46
Sier is not that person.
01:22:48
>> Wow. That's high praise.
01:22:50
>> Well, see, you've got people like
01:22:53
Colamade. Oh, Richie Mccau,
01:22:56
>> how would he go in today's game? Uh, he
01:22:59
he'd be outstanding rugby player. Um,
01:23:03
but the way the referees interpret it
01:23:05
now, he'd he he would lose confidence
01:23:08
the way he used to go into the tackle
01:23:10
area to gain the ball because he
01:23:11
wouldn't know what the referee's
01:23:12
thinking. Um and and you see such
01:23:16
different interpretations
01:23:19
uh by the referees that there's the law
01:23:22
I'd like to see changed.
01:23:24
>> Coming back to that question earlier on
01:23:27
>> um at the tackle you know uh about
01:23:32
players arriving stealing the ball. When
01:23:35
does it become a ruck and this business
01:23:38
about oh if you put your hands on the
01:23:40
ground it's illegal. That's nonsense,
01:23:44
>> you know.
01:23:46
So that uh
01:23:50
Fitzy was such a tough player, too, but
01:23:52
I'm I'm not not sure how many cards he
01:23:55
would get.
01:23:58
Yeah. But but but you know, you you can
01:24:01
say that. Um Robin Brooks, another one.
01:24:04
He he is so tough. Uh but they're clever
01:24:09
players. They they would just adapt to
01:24:11
what the rules are today. Colum meets
01:24:13
would have adapted to what the rules are
01:24:15
today.
01:24:18
>> God, so many so many amazing names you
01:24:20
mentioned in that one answer.
01:24:21
>> Well, Frank Bunt is another one. Now,
01:24:23
there's a guy. He might be the one that
01:24:26
wouldn't give cards away. That is an
01:24:29
incredibly tough, skillful player.
01:24:32
>> He was tough.
01:24:34
>> He'd be as tough as any of the forwards.
01:24:37
>> Did you see were you his first All black
01:24:38
coach? Did you select him? How old was
01:24:40
he was old e when he
01:24:41
>> Yeah.
01:24:42
>> 30 something when he made his debut?
01:24:44
>> Yeah. 28 I think.
01:24:46
>> 28.
01:24:46
>> 29.
01:24:48
>> Peter Thorburn told me when I got
01:24:51
appointed as All Black coach. Peter was
01:24:54
one of the uh uh assistant selectors
01:24:58
and he
01:25:00
asked me to keep an eye on Frank Bunts
01:25:02
and watch him because he's a far better
01:25:04
player than what he's getting credit
01:25:05
for. And when you do study them, to to
01:25:08
really know what a player's doing in a
01:25:09
game, you got to watch them for 40
01:25:11
minutes, at least 40 minutes. I used to
01:25:14
like to watch 20 minutes in the first
01:25:16
half, 20 minutes in the second half. And
01:25:19
uh
01:25:21
the the work he gets through as well as
01:25:24
having a high level of skill, it's just
01:25:26
incredible.
01:25:28
>> So he's another one there. Brilliant.
01:25:31
So, feels like you're at a sort of
01:25:33
reflective stage of life now in your in
01:25:35
your late 70s. You seem really happy and
01:25:37
you seem at peace and in a good place,
01:25:39
but um are there things you're still
01:25:41
working on as a man?
01:25:45
Yes. Um
01:25:48
being
01:25:50
a a uh a much more, how do I put it?
01:25:56
accommodating
01:25:58
uh
01:26:00
think thinking about other people more
01:26:03
particularly my partner in in around the
01:26:06
house
01:26:07
>> uh making sure I'm
01:26:11
whatever I do I consider her first
01:26:14
whatever uh and and the people I play
01:26:17
golf with um most of the people that are
01:26:20
my age I'm you know probably the the
01:26:24
best golfer in the four or whatever
01:26:26
and having the tolerance and and being
01:26:30
supportive of them.
01:26:31
>> And if we got to look for a ball, so be
01:26:33
it. We're looking for a ball. We can all
01:26:35
lose all put a ball in the rough.
01:26:37
>> Um,
01:26:39
>> so I I think I've learned and and I'm
01:26:43
much more mellow and and much more
01:26:46
considerate of other people now than I
01:26:49
ever was previously.
01:26:52
>> Yeah, that that's it's a good space to
01:26:55
be in. Hey,
01:26:55
>> if I hurt someone else's feelings, I
01:26:58
would be incredibly disappointed with
01:27:00
myself.
01:27:02
>> I try very very hard not to do that.
01:27:05
>> Do you do you um ruminate at all or do
01:27:08
you think about like conversations
01:27:09
you've had over the years and things you
01:27:10
could have done differently? And
01:27:12
>> of course,
01:27:12
>> yeah, I think we all do. It's not a
01:27:14
healthy space to play in, but we can't
01:27:15
help,
01:27:16
>> you know. You know, if I could go back
01:27:18
to when I was 32 years old coaching my
01:27:21
first rugby team
01:27:24
and start again, I could be a world
01:27:27
beater because of what I know, what I
01:27:31
learned and the and and the great
01:27:34
players that I coached that taught me
01:27:36
heaps. That's something I haven't said
01:27:38
enough of in this interview is what I
01:27:40
learned off the players.
01:27:42
>> Uh just in general discussions and and
01:27:46
opinions about how we should do this or
01:27:49
how we should do that. I learned a hell
01:27:50
of a lot off the players
01:27:52
>> and they had the confidence to tell me
01:27:54
what they thought cuz they knew they'd
01:27:56
never get slapped down for giving me
01:28:00
their honest opinion.
01:28:02
Um,
01:28:04
so I I would, you know, I often think
01:28:07
about it and I think how much better
01:28:09
coach I would be uh with all the
01:28:12
experience I've had behind me.
01:28:14
>> Yeah.
01:28:16
>> Yeah. There's that saying, youth is
01:28:17
wasted on the young, right?
01:28:19
>> Yes.
01:28:19
>> Yeah.
01:28:20
>> Correct.
01:28:20
>> Um, how do you personally define
01:28:22
happiness now? Has it changed over the
01:28:24
years?
01:28:26
>> Yeah, it does. It It has changed. happy.
01:28:28
I got happiness out of making I I've
01:28:31
always had happiness out of making other
01:28:33
people happy, believe it or not.
01:28:35
>> Um, even more so now.
01:28:38
But, um, being successful
01:28:43
helps with happiness. And it doesn't
01:28:45
necessarily mean in your job or your
01:28:47
sport. In life in general, being being
01:28:51
successful
01:28:53
uh, makes me happy. If I can do good
01:28:56
things for other people, it makes me
01:28:59
happy.
01:29:00
It made me happy when I saw players that
01:29:05
I coached and teams that I coached go
01:29:07
out there and play so well and then come
01:29:11
into the dressing room and they're very
01:29:12
buoyant and up. That that was the
01:29:16
biggest enjoyment I got out of coaching
01:29:18
rugby
01:29:19
>> was seeing the success and the happiness
01:29:22
of the players when they had done what
01:29:24
they went out there to do.
01:29:26
>> Seeing someone reach their potential.
01:29:28
>> Yeah. Oh, absolutely. Getting a player
01:29:31
to reach their full potential, Jonah
01:29:33
Lamu,
01:29:34
>> you know, as an example, um is is Yeah,
01:29:40
that that that is so satisfying. M
01:29:43
>> I you know if there's one thing I'm
01:29:45
proud of I was never in these things for
01:29:48
me
01:29:50
I was in it for rugby and I was in it
01:29:53
for the for the team. Mhm.
01:29:56
>> I never I never
01:30:00
as a player
01:30:04
I it was a lot more for me as a player
01:30:07
and that's why I trained so hard and
01:30:10
practiced so hard and everything else.
01:30:13
But as soon as I became a coach, it was
01:30:16
not about me at all. I wasn't in it for
01:30:19
me. M
01:30:20
>> I was in it for the team, for the club,
01:30:23
the province or country, whatever, and
01:30:27
for those players.
01:30:28
>> And the all black jersey, I got to say
01:30:30
this, the targetago jersey, the southern
01:30:32
jersey, a targetgo, and the all black
01:30:35
jersey. That's it. That was it for me.
01:30:38
That's what I was in it for.
01:30:40
>> Yeah. You you bleed black and blue and
01:30:42
gold, don't you?
01:30:43
>> Yes, I do.
01:30:44
>> Those three colors. I can tell. Hey,
01:30:46
something that's um a massive sort of
01:30:48
discussion these days um which was not a
01:30:51
discussion at all even um in the ' 90s
01:30:53
when you were coaching is like mental
01:30:54
health and mental wellness and actually
01:30:56
your old mate Sir John Cwin has had a
01:30:58
huge impact on this. Um one thing I've
01:31:00
learned is that no one gets to the the
01:31:02
the privileged position of being in
01:31:04
their late 70s without being kicked in
01:31:05
the ass by life a few times. How's your
01:31:09
mental health been over the years? Let
01:31:11
me say for a start, I'm I'm absolutely
01:31:14
delighted and proud of what John Cwin
01:31:17
has done.
01:31:18
>> I I think it's a real tribute. You can
01:31:20
be one of the greatest All Blacks and
01:31:23
still be a real thoughtful person in
01:31:27
helping others.
01:31:28
>> Um
01:31:30
I've been through stages I I've I don't
01:31:33
believe I've ever had depression.
01:31:36
I've been through stages where I've been
01:31:40
a bit down, but they don't last that
01:31:42
long. And uh nowadays, for example, if I
01:31:47
if I get a bit down, I'll pick up my
01:31:49
golf clubs and go and hit a few balls
01:31:52
>> and uh take it out on them, you know,
01:31:55
and and get it out of my system.
01:31:57
>> I like driving nice cars.
01:32:00
>> I do. I I sometimes I'll get in my car
01:32:02
and just go for a drive to somewhere I
01:32:05
haven't been for a while, you know, but
01:32:08
I I
01:32:10
don't get me wrong, when I was coaching,
01:32:14
I was under incredible pressure,
01:32:16
particularly at the time of the All
01:32:18
Blacks where all of Aland thought John
01:32:22
Hart should have been the All Black
01:32:24
coach
01:32:25
and
01:32:27
that was there the whole time. and the
01:32:30
the Oakland media sniping whenever we
01:32:33
didn't have a good game. It was my
01:32:35
fault. It was never the players.
01:32:38
And uh there are sometimes when quite
01:32:41
frankly it is the players's fault.
01:32:43
>> The coach will never say that publicly,
01:32:46
but it is sometimes the players's fault,
01:32:49
not the coach's fault.
01:32:51
You can't have a team that goes so well
01:32:54
one week and they play to the pattern
01:32:56
and they do well and then the next week
01:33:00
we see what we saw against Argentina
01:33:02
with Have you ever seen an all black
01:33:04
team throw so many loose passes?
01:33:07
>> No. Well, you can't blame the coach for
01:33:09
that, you know.
01:33:11
>> Yeah. So uh but in that in that time
01:33:16
that I had that was probably the hardest
01:33:19
time in my life was in coaching the All
01:33:21
Blacks. While I got a lot of
01:33:22
satisfaction out of it and I loved the
01:33:24
rugby environment,
01:33:27
the dishonesty of the media
01:33:30
>> uh created nothing to do with John. It
01:33:34
wasn't his fault, but the media thought
01:33:37
they were doing him a good service and
01:33:40
that they would be able to make a
01:33:42
change. Well, New Zealand Rugby Union in
01:33:44
those days, all that media was doing was
01:33:47
giving them harder resolve.
01:33:50
>> They're not going to turn around and do
01:33:51
what the media tell them to do. M I mean
01:33:54
we had we used to have great people on
01:33:56
that, you know, John Ding and um uh oh,
01:34:01
West Coast,
01:34:03
John Sturgeon, you know, uh um
01:34:07
Russ Thomas, there there was, you know,
01:34:10
that's just mentioning a few. David
01:34:12
Galvin, that's just mentioning a few.
01:34:14
There were great people who were
01:34:16
single-minded men who weren't going to
01:34:19
be pushed round by anybody, and they
01:34:21
never were. they they would defy the
01:34:23
prime minister and go to South Africa. I
01:34:26
mean, that's the sort of people they
01:34:28
were. So, the media were never going to
01:34:30
influence them and what they're doing.
01:34:32
>> Do you do you feel like the media this
01:34:34
is like history repeating itself? Do you
01:34:35
feel like the media had an impact on the
01:34:37
the Ian Foster Scott Robertson thing a
01:34:40
couple of years ago?
01:34:42
I I I
01:34:46
can I say that I think the all the the
01:34:48
the New Zealand Rugby Union handled it
01:34:51
badly.
01:34:53
>> Um
01:34:55
I don't want to get into should Ian
01:34:58
Foster have been removed earlier or not.
01:35:01
Uh but I think it was not handled
01:35:05
correctly by the New Zealand Rugby Union
01:35:08
to put it down. I mean, they made it
01:35:11
public. It became public that if the All
01:35:14
Blacks lost in South Africa,
01:35:17
you know, Ian was going to be gone.
01:35:19
Well, that's one game shouldn't
01:35:23
determine anybody's fate. If they were
01:35:25
saying to themselves, you know, he he's
01:35:29
the team's not going well enough and we
01:35:31
need to change a coach. One game's not
01:35:34
going to alter him as a coach.
01:35:36
>> Okay. And for him to have to go through
01:35:38
that indignity
01:35:40
and and and some of the indignity that
01:35:43
he went through
01:35:45
um
01:35:47
was not fear.
01:35:50
Okay. And uh it it it's
01:35:55
you know Scott Robertson, don't get me
01:35:57
wrong, he had great claims
01:36:00
to beat, but it needed to be handled
01:36:02
better. I remember being questioned
01:36:04
about it one day and I said, "Well,
01:36:07
here's a point I make.
01:36:10
We expect every All black to play well
01:36:13
week after week after week and to
01:36:15
succeed, and if he doesn't, if a player
01:36:18
doesn't, he gets dropped." Well, all
01:36:21
black coaches should put themselves in
01:36:23
that same situation. They don't perform,
01:36:26
they need to be changed. In other words,
01:36:28
if they don't, if the team doesn't
01:36:30
perform, then the coach is not
01:36:32
performing. M
01:36:34
um now it's not that simple because you
01:36:38
you you have to look at things like are
01:36:41
we rebuilding
01:36:42
you know what are the reasons you have
01:36:45
to you know administrators have to be
01:36:49
rugby n enough and I'm going to come
01:36:52
back to that in a minute uh rugby n
01:36:54
enough to know what is actually
01:36:57
happening now when I was all black coach
01:37:02
uh and get appointed. You remember John
01:37:04
Graham, the great all black all black
01:37:06
skipper. Him uh and Brian Lahore
01:37:11
were on an advisory panel to the New
01:37:14
Zealand Rugby Union on who should be the
01:37:16
all black coach.
01:37:19
Now that's what we need now. Those two
01:37:22
guys were apart from being very highly
01:37:25
respected, they were very balanced in
01:37:28
their thinking. I I knew both of them
01:37:30
well.
01:37:32
And Brian Lore I had tremendous
01:37:35
admiration for and it was such an honor
01:37:39
to have him uh as my campaign manager at
01:37:44
at the World Cup. Uh but they
01:37:48
knew how to read what a coach was doing
01:37:50
and and was the coach doing a good job.
01:37:53
What was his fault? What was the
01:37:54
player's fault? What was the referee's
01:37:56
fault? I mean, referees can lose games
01:37:59
for teams through 50/50 calls going the
01:38:03
wrong way
01:38:05
and in some cases bad calls.
01:38:07
Like,
01:38:09
probably shouldn't say this, but I'm
01:38:11
going to. When the All Blacks played in
01:38:13
Johannesburg last year, South Africa got
01:38:16
awarded a try
01:38:18
when the Springbolt prop dropped the
01:38:22
ball a foot off the ground. He dropped
01:38:25
it and then fell on it. The try was
01:38:27
awarded and and the referee didn't even
01:38:31
go to the video ref.
01:38:35
Now, the video ref had interfered in
01:38:38
other parts of the game. Why didn't he
01:38:40
interfere then? M
01:38:44
see that's now if Scott Robertson had
01:38:47
won that game the All Blacks had won
01:38:49
that game there'd be a much more
01:38:51
positive attitude about how the team's
01:38:54
building than there has been. And that's
01:38:58
I mean that's where people like John
01:39:01
Graeme, Brian Lahore, they notice those
01:39:04
things. They see those things that swing
01:39:07
the balance of the scales.
01:39:10
God, you're still so into it, aren't
01:39:11
you? You're just passionate about it.
01:39:13
Passionate about the game. Um, at the
01:39:16
start of the chat, we we touched upon
01:39:18
you being a a granddad. Now, what what
01:39:19
do you Yeah. What do your grand What do
01:39:21
your grandkids call you? You popa
01:39:23
grandad?
01:39:24
>> I try to get them to call me Lori, but
01:39:26
they don't.
01:39:27
>> Um,
01:39:28
>> why do you want to be called Lori?
01:39:29
>> Oh, what's your name?
01:39:31
>> Yeah. Um,
01:39:35
granddad.
01:39:36
>> Yeah, grandad. Yeah. Yeah. How how
01:39:39
>> my daughter my daughter calls me one of
01:39:40
my daughters calls me pops. The other
01:39:42
one calls me dad.
01:39:44
>> Yeah. You like that? You like being
01:39:45
called pops.
01:39:46
>> Yeah. Yeah.
01:39:47
>> It's whatever they're comfortable with.
01:39:50
So when I text her back, which is
01:39:52
regularly, I sign off as pops. When I
01:39:55
text the other one back or email, it's
01:39:58
dad.
01:40:00
How do you hope your grandkids see you
01:40:02
as a man?
01:40:04
Um what are you like? Are you are you
01:40:07
you playful and cuddly?
01:40:09
>> I was when they were young. I I I I've
01:40:13
got a I've got a grandson
01:40:16
who's
01:40:18
got the seafaring blood in him that I
01:40:20
had and he, you know, he loves his
01:40:23
fishing. He's gone into contracting. Um
01:40:27
I I've given him quite a lot of advice
01:40:30
um and so on and and that's where the
01:40:33
fishing gear is going to go. Uh
01:40:37
so yeah, unfortunately
01:40:41
uh my other daughter hasn't had any
01:40:43
children,
01:40:44
>> but uh I I haven't seen as much of my
01:40:47
grandchildren as I would love to have
01:40:49
because my daughter moved to Oakuckland
01:40:52
and um
01:40:54
that that had my two grandchildren. But
01:40:59
yeah, they're still there and I yeah
01:41:00
>> see them from time to time and
01:41:03
>> next year when the big 80 comes over I'm
01:41:06
going to get them all down.
01:41:07
>> How good how good.
01:41:10
>> Um are you are you very emotional these
01:41:12
days in this stage of your life? Like
01:41:14
when was the last time you cried?
01:41:21
I find as as I get older, like I reckon
01:41:23
through my 20s and 30s, I could probably
01:41:25
count on a couple of fingers how often I
01:41:28
cried. It would have just been maybe my
01:41:29
nana's funeral. Maybe that was the only
01:41:31
time. But as I get older, I get I find
01:41:33
I'm getting more and more emotional all
01:41:34
the time.
01:41:35
>> Yeah. Yeah. Well, you do. Obviously, I
01:41:37
did um you know, when when my mother
01:41:40
died and when my father died.
01:41:43
>> Um
01:41:44
this one will surprise you. Uh
01:41:49
my older brother had had a dog that was
01:41:54
the dog of the century.
01:41:57
I swear the the dog used to come and
01:41:59
stay with me from time to time and
01:42:04
uh I swear you could talk to it and it
01:42:06
understood what you were saying or she
01:42:09
and um the most amazing little border
01:42:14
collie, intelligent, unbelievable. And
01:42:17
every time I went there, she'd go turn
01:42:20
around to the front of their house and
01:42:21
come back with a bit of rope about so
01:42:24
long for me to play with her.
01:42:28
Uh,
01:42:29
she died rather suddenly and I I I had a
01:42:33
tear or two over that. Um,
01:42:38
and I I I've
01:42:42
just, you know, recently uh I don't
01:42:46
really want to talk about what caused
01:42:48
it, but I've had a pretty emotional
01:42:51
experience a couple of times in the last
01:42:54
two years. And
01:42:56
yeah, I I had a little bit of a thing
01:43:00
about not being able to do anything
01:43:02
about it,
01:43:03
>> you know, not being able to help or
01:43:06
whatever. So, I think it happens to
01:43:09
everybody.
01:43:10
>> Yeah, absolutely. Do you have any
01:43:11
regrets,
01:43:13
personal, professional, or otherwise?
01:43:17
>> Yeah, I do. I do.
01:43:20
I think I think anyone that anyone that
01:43:21
gets to 80 that says they don't hasn't
01:43:24
lived a hasn't lived a thorough life.
01:43:26
Well, I I have regrets
01:43:31
uh
01:43:33
that I spent so much time away from my
01:43:36
family when when my daughters were at an
01:43:39
age early teenagers
01:43:43
uh and and a little bit younger.
01:43:45
>> Uh and their mother,
01:43:48
I believe, suffered quite badly from me
01:43:51
not being there very often. being an all
01:43:54
black coach in those days, you were just
01:43:56
all over the place.
01:43:58
>> Um, I have
01:44:02
regrets about that and and
01:44:06
she
01:44:10
ended up with a problem over it. Um,
01:44:16
so I I definitely have regrets about
01:44:19
that. I think that maybe I could have
01:44:22
managed it better.
01:44:25
Uh although, you know, those same years
01:44:27
we had the most fabulous fun
01:44:30
Christmases.
01:44:31
>> Uh and and that as a family, uh I was
01:44:35
into my water skiing and and jet boating
01:44:37
and all that sort of stuff. And my
01:44:39
daughters just loved it.
01:44:40
>> Yeah.
01:44:41
>> And uh and fishing out on the lakes and
01:44:44
things like that. They were they were
01:44:46
fabulous Christmases and always had a
01:44:49
very good friend of mine, Lindseay
01:44:50
Clark, who I played 100 games for Rago
01:44:53
with. Uh he's played more than me for a
01:44:56
targetgo. Uh we used to go away camping
01:44:58
together and and and other members of
01:45:01
our team. Well, there used to about six
01:45:03
or seven of our club team used to go
01:45:04
away together.
01:45:05
>> Yeah.
01:45:07
>> Wow. Do you um do you still set goals?
01:45:09
Do you have do you have future goals?
01:45:12
>> Yep. Uh,
01:45:15
I I I got I was really doing well at
01:45:18
golf and I got my handicap down to 3.8
01:45:22
about 3 months ago, three or four months
01:45:24
ago. And then I had a fall, compressed a
01:45:29
nerve in my neck. And
01:45:32
it's like being a rugby player. You play
01:45:34
with injuries. And I had this terrible
01:45:36
pain under my shoulder blade. And I
01:45:38
still thought I could play golf and
01:45:40
couldn't. and and in
01:45:43
3 months or 2 and 1/2 months, my
01:45:46
handicap went from 3.8
01:45:48
to about 8, which which it's at now. Now
01:45:53
is the time. My goal now is to get back
01:45:56
to I think a reasonable handicap slope
01:45:58
for me is four or five.
01:46:02
>> I mean, I don't know many other 80y olds
01:46:05
that are there. So, that's a goal.
01:46:08
>> Um, that's one I enjoy. I'm a very very
01:46:11
keen gardener. I Oh, tomatoes,
01:46:14
cucumbers. Lori's got the best tomatoes
01:46:17
in the district. Feed half I was feeding
01:46:21
half the staff at the hills with
01:46:23
cucumbers and tomato
01:46:25
and uh my friends. Um but I grow
01:46:29
vegetables for you know just eating
01:46:31
parnips and carrots out of the garden
01:46:33
now. And um yeah, so I love my garden
01:46:38
>> and and I'm very keen on my landscaping
01:46:40
too. I do all my own landscaping.
01:46:43
>> Um so I still
01:46:46
and that included building a 30 m fence,
01:46:50
you know, 2 m high fence and things like
01:46:52
that at the back of the house. Um
01:46:56
so I I Yeah.
01:46:59
And your your relationship with your own
01:47:00
mortality, what what's that like? I
01:47:02
mean, we've mentioned so many names
01:47:03
today of people that are no longer with
01:47:05
us. You know, you brought from Brian
01:47:07
Lahore and Colin Mez to even younger
01:47:09
players like Jonah.
01:47:11
>> Um, yeah. Yeah. What's your relationship
01:47:14
with death like?
01:47:16
>> So, it's a very bleak question, but it's
01:47:18
a reality for all of us. I I
01:47:21
do you know I I have sort of thought
01:47:24
about it but I I think because of the
01:47:28
how I feel and how I play golf
01:47:32
uh you know a year ago I was saying I'm
01:47:36
hitting the ball just about as far as I
01:47:37
did when I was 50
01:47:39
>> and and and I'm uh
01:47:43
you know walking around a golf course
01:47:46
uh in wet weather and
01:47:49
things like that. And and I'm thinking,
01:47:52
"Oh, I got a while to go yet." You know,
01:47:54
um I'm looking forward to 90 to be
01:47:57
honest.
01:47:58
>> Yeah.
01:47:58
>> And uh I don't think I I know it'll
01:48:02
happen one day. And I have the feeling I
01:48:06
can't I can't think seriously about it
01:48:08
at the moment, but I have this feeling
01:48:10
that when the time comes, I'll be ready
01:48:13
for it. I'll accept it. M uh if if next
01:48:18
week I was diagnosed with a terminal
01:48:21
cancer
01:48:23
uh then
01:48:25
I' I'd be
01:48:28
disappointed it's happened, angry that
01:48:30
it's happened. Uh say right what have I
01:48:33
got to get done in the next 3 months or
01:48:35
6 months or whatever uh that that's in
01:48:39
the bucket list uh and and then accept
01:48:42
it
01:48:43
>> and get round and do it. But but I'm not
01:48:46
even
01:48:48
thinking about the days when I can't go
01:48:51
out and play golf or I can't do my
01:48:53
garden. My garden seems to get a bit
01:48:55
bigger every year. I seem to have more
01:48:57
time and uh just as much energy to look
01:49:01
after it.
01:49:02
>> That's wonderful. Well, as I said at the
01:49:03
beginning, like the the man sitting in
01:49:05
front of me today, like he seems in
01:49:07
really good nick.
01:49:08
>> Yeah. Yeah. I I I feel really good. you
01:49:11
know, I as I say, I get up I I I've got
01:49:14
some historical rugby injuries and uh so
01:49:18
I get up in the morning and stretch and
01:49:20
you know, to keep on top of them. Um and
01:49:24
I do a little bit of weight training but
01:49:26
with one of those Chuck Norris uh
01:49:30
>> home gym thing.
01:49:31
>> Home gym thing on pulley. So I don't
01:49:32
want impact.
01:49:33
>> Yeah. Um, and and I I I don't want to do
01:49:37
heavy weights cuz that at my age that's
01:49:39
not a sensible thing to do.
01:49:41
>> Um, so I I I just keep I just keep going
01:49:46
and uh I don't think about
01:49:50
I mean, yeah, okay, I I I accept the
01:49:52
fact that I'm going to be 80 soon, but I
01:49:55
don't think about that as old.
01:49:58
>> Uh, I'll start to feel old when I can't
01:50:00
do the things I like doing.
01:50:04
Yeah. So, I'm I'm 52 now. I've become
01:50:06
mildly obsessed with um the aging
01:50:08
process. And you see someone like I see
01:50:10
someone like you and I think, okay,
01:50:12
what's the secret? Same as like Winston
01:50:14
Peters or even Yeah. Donald Trump, the
01:50:16
guys in their late 70s or early 80s and
01:50:18
they're still crushing it.
01:50:19
>> Yeah.
01:50:20
>> Just getting on with it. I think you
01:50:21
have to keep active. E that's the key.
01:50:22
>> Well, you got to keep active mentally
01:50:24
and and and physically. M
01:50:27
>> mentally is just as important cuz if you
01:50:29
go old mentally you go old physically
01:50:32
>> and vice versa.
01:50:33
>> So uh that good healthy diet and
01:50:38
something that I'm not quite so good at
01:50:41
is getting plenty of sleep. I I seem to
01:50:45
think 5 hours is enough for me at night,
01:50:48
you know, and and when there's things
01:50:52
like
01:50:53
uh fed up golf on TV and whatever,
01:50:58
>> always something to watch.
01:51:00
>> There is and um
01:51:03
you know, rugby matches in the middle of
01:51:05
the night and that, but I had the
01:51:07
discipline. Now, here's a good thing. I
01:51:10
needed a decent sleep on Saturday night.
01:51:12
So, I had the discipline to record the
01:51:15
Spring Bach Australia game and then I
01:51:18
watched it yesterday.
01:51:19
>> Jesus, what a second half.
01:51:20
>> Yeah. Incredible. I I tell you what,
01:51:22
we're going to have we're going to have
01:51:24
some trouble with Australia. You know,
01:51:27
you get them Australia confident. They
01:51:29
they've had their backsides kicked the
01:51:31
last few years, but all of a sudden
01:51:34
they're now believe in themselves.
01:51:36
>> We're in for a hell of a battle.
01:51:38
>> Yeah.
01:51:41
What three words would family and
01:51:42
friends use to describe you? This is
01:51:44
something I ask all my guests. It was
01:51:46
actually um I had a guy on the podcast
01:51:47
called Doo Allen who's like a coast to
01:51:49
coast legend and he did one of those
01:51:50
24-hour adventure races with Richie
01:51:52
Mccor. And he said it's something Richie
01:51:53
asked the teammates in the middle of the
01:51:55
night when they were doing it. And he
01:51:57
one of Richie's words for himself was
01:51:58
integrity. And this guy Doo said, "It's
01:52:00
funny. You know, I've only been with you
01:52:01
a couple of days, but that's a word I'd
01:52:03
use for you."
01:52:04
>> Yeah. Uh loyalty,
01:52:07
honesty, and in integrity. Yeah,
01:52:09
>> would would probably
01:52:12
probably cover it. Loyalty is very
01:52:16
important one for me and and uh
01:52:20
yeah, honesty when you deal with people.
01:52:24
>> Great words. Are you you like who you
01:52:26
see in the mirror? Are you someone you'd
01:52:28
want to go and have a beer with?
01:52:30
>> Yeah. I' I'd have a hell of a lot of
01:52:33
questions to ask me.
01:52:36
>> Would you like what? So just the things
01:52:38
like I try to not to talk too much about
01:52:41
myself or or that sort of thing. I'd be
01:52:43
asking plenty
01:52:44
>> about because of what I've been through,
01:52:47
you know, and and where I've been and
01:52:50
and things like that. By by the way, I I
01:52:52
I was also a wine connoisseur for quite
01:52:56
a few years. I I had quite a big wine
01:52:59
seller in one of my houses. Uh, but
01:53:02
because I drink so little now, I haven't
01:53:04
had to buy wine for a long time because
01:53:07
I I'm drinking Oh, some of my reds are
01:53:09
just fabulous. But I might have half 3/4
01:53:13
of a glass twice a week.
01:53:15
>> Wow.
01:53:16
>> More likely once a week. And in
01:53:20
summer, I'll have a hazy pale ale on a
01:53:23
hot day.
01:53:24
>> So, I don't drink much now. That That's
01:53:26
another thing. I've I've really cut that
01:53:28
back intentionally.
01:53:30
>> Yes. M yeah. Well, I you know I say to
01:53:33
myself, well, yes, I like the taste of
01:53:36
it, particularly the hazy pale alle
01:53:38
having a beer and and and that's fine to
01:53:40
have one of them. Uh red wine, a great
01:53:45
friend of mine years ago I played rugby
01:53:47
with who's one of the top heart surgeons
01:53:50
in the country, Richard Bundon. He's
01:53:52
retired now, but
01:53:54
>> he he told me one day, you know, a
01:53:57
little bit of red wine is good for your
01:53:59
heart.
01:54:00
And it's I love I love the flavor of a
01:54:03
good I love to drink a good quality red
01:54:06
wine.
01:54:06
>> So do I. Do you like a heavier one or a
01:54:08
pino? What are you into?
01:54:10
>> No, not so much on pinos. I'm I'm uh or
01:54:14
although a pinatage I I really enjoy.
01:54:17
South African pinage is very very good
01:54:19
wine. But I've you know Cabernet
01:54:23
>> Mhm.
01:54:24
>> I've I've got quite a few of them still
01:54:26
to go. M. Oh, I've got some wine at home
01:54:29
that'd be worth thousands of dollars.
01:54:31
The bottles, you know, the big jerobams
01:54:33
and things like that, but
01:54:35
>> wow.
01:54:36
>> I'm not Yeah, but I didn't buy them for
01:54:37
someone else to drink.
01:54:40
>> Um, how have you This has been a lot of
01:54:42
fun.
01:54:42
>> Some of some of these are going to come
01:54:44
out in my 80th next year.
01:54:45
>> Yeah. Oh [ __ ]
01:54:47
>> I have to push for an invite.
01:54:49
>> Um, how have you found this today as
01:54:50
someone that's not a huge fan of talking
01:54:53
about themselves? Like, is it quite
01:54:55
cathartic? Is it nice to reflect on some
01:54:57
of the stuff? Uh Dom, I've got to give
01:54:59
you some credit here. You you
01:55:01
immediately
01:55:03
relaxed me and and made me realize that
01:55:06
this is just a chat. There's no angles.
01:55:09
And that's something I really appreciate
01:55:11
when I get interviewed and that there's
01:55:13
not an angle. And uh reminiscing for me
01:55:19
with a with a complete stranger is
01:55:22
really enjoyable.
01:55:24
Uh, and you you you were did quite a lot
01:55:29
of this off the cuff based on what I had
01:55:32
talked about and things I'd said and I
01:55:36
found it very enjoyable and very
01:55:38
refreshing.
01:55:40
>> And put me in a really good mood to go
01:55:42
and pick up my new car this afternoon.
01:55:44
>> What is it? I I noticed you walked in
01:55:46
today with um an Audi umbrella, which
01:55:47
looks like you get complimentary when
01:55:49
you buy a new one. What's the new car?
01:55:51
Well, the new car is an Audi SQ6,
01:55:55
uh, which is a new model, and it's 100%
01:56:00
electric.
01:56:02
I love electric cars. I've had two. I
01:56:05
had a Porsche Tyan and and the Audi RX
01:56:09
GT
01:56:10
Ron. and uh they're fabulous cars, but
01:56:15
realistically now the I moved past cars
01:56:18
in into the hatchback or not the
01:56:21
hatchbacks of smaller station wagons. So
01:56:24
I'm really this is a it's a it's a whole
01:56:27
new concept of battery and uh uh uh
01:56:32
electrical platform that the Porsche
01:56:34
TYON and no the Porsche Macan and Audi
01:56:39
SQS have uh used together developed
01:56:44
together because they're the same parent
01:56:46
company and I'm really looking forward
01:56:48
to getting it.
01:56:50
>> Wow. Well, you heard it here first. If
01:56:52
anyone's um standing at a charging
01:56:54
station and there's someone there that
01:56:55
looks like Lori Mains, it probably is
01:56:56
Lori Mains.
01:56:57
>> Probably is.
01:56:58
>> Especially if there's if if you need if
01:57:00
you're not 100% sure, just look in the
01:57:01
boots, see if the golf clubs are there.
01:57:03
>> Yeah. See, I don't go far without them.
01:57:05
>> Yeah. Hey, this has been really neat.
01:57:06
Are you Are you proud of yourself?
01:57:11
>> Most
01:57:13
I I'm proud of what I achieved and what
01:57:16
I gave to rugby is probably a better way
01:57:18
to put it. I'm proud of what I gave to
01:57:20
rugby.
01:57:22
Uh
01:57:26
my daughters say that I should be very
01:57:28
proud of myself for them.
01:57:30
>> Um
01:57:31
>> cool.
01:57:32
>> And that's
01:57:34
>> that's the ultimate.
01:57:35
>> Yes. But
01:57:38
I I I come back to that issue. I have
01:57:41
regrets about not being there enough in
01:57:45
their formative years because of rugby.
01:57:49
M
01:57:49
>> but they both turned out pretty good.
01:57:51
I'm I'm very happy with them as people.
01:57:54
>> M
01:57:54
>> and um
01:57:57
yeah. So yeah,
01:58:02
I'm like, yeah, I can look back on my
01:58:05
life and say,
01:58:08
uh, yeah, I've I've I've done a fair
01:58:10
bit. And I think I've pushed myself to
01:58:15
the limits of my ability
01:58:17
>> in in whatever I I think that's
01:58:19
something I'd say that I'm very proud
01:58:21
of, that I pushed myself to the limits
01:58:24
of my ability and I'm still doing it
01:58:26
with golf.
01:58:28
Uh, I just wish to hell I'd played golf
01:58:30
when I was younger. I might not have
01:58:34
been through all this rugby pain. I I
01:58:36
might have been a professional golfer.
01:58:37
>> Yeah. And there's longevity there, eh?
01:58:39
>> Yeah. Well, the thing is, uh, I I'm I'm
01:58:42
actually quite proud of the fact that
01:58:44
last year I was I was down or over
01:58:47
summer I was down to a 3.8
01:58:51
handicap and I'm 79 years old. Wow.
01:58:54
>> And I'm saying, geez, how good could I
01:58:56
have been if I'd taken it up, you know,
01:58:59
when I could have hit the ball another
01:59:01
60 yards or 70 yards, you know, meters,
01:59:05
>> you know,
01:59:05
>> who knows?
01:59:07
>> Well, Lori Mains, this has been this has
01:59:09
been great. Um,
01:59:10
>> oh yeah, one thing I forgot to mention,
01:59:12
I read in an interview that Jon, he he
01:59:15
when he was still alive, he said you
01:59:16
were his favorite coach, which I think
01:59:17
says says a lot. Have you heard that? Uh
01:59:20
I I didn't but um I knew Jonah liked me
01:59:25
and and one of the things I I had helped
01:59:29
with other island players about how to
01:59:32
deal with him and Jonah was a very shy
01:59:34
individual initially
01:59:36
and I if I needed to speak to Jonah
01:59:40
about something I'd always go to his
01:59:42
room and speak to him on his own. I'd
01:59:44
never even suggest a criticism in front
01:59:47
of other players. And what I used to do
01:59:49
at trainings was give Jonah a couple of
01:59:52
things that he is very good at doing
01:59:54
like like we'll do a move off the back
01:59:57
of the line out. Now Loey, would you get
01:59:59
out there with a tackle bag to stop him?
02:00:03
And then it' come Jonah
02:00:06
and he'd sit Richard low on his
02:00:09
backside, you know, and everybody would
02:00:11
crack up and Jonah would feel really
02:00:13
good about it, you know. And I I was
02:00:16
taught by Earl for a start who who in
02:00:19
Wellington coached a lot of island
02:00:21
players, but by uh Michael Jones, Ronnie
02:00:25
Clark was another one who was very good
02:00:28
for me to talk to about the island
02:00:30
players. And I learned how to deal with
02:00:34
them. And I learned that you just
02:00:37
treated them totally different. And
02:00:39
here's the great thing about all blacks.
02:00:41
They all understand that. Even the ones
02:00:43
I used to rip up occasionally
02:00:46
occasionally they knew why they they had
02:00:51
not done what they should have done or
02:00:53
had been a bit off the pace and they
02:00:55
knew they were the whipping boys and
02:00:57
they accepted it.
02:00:59
>> It you know Steve Hton of this world on
02:01:03
but
02:01:04
>> yeah jeez stories for days. Um hey this
02:01:07
has been amazing mate. Thank you so much
02:01:09
for being so generous with your time. E
02:01:11
>> yeah well I Let me tell you something,
02:01:14
Dom. I'm now I'm over the moon that you
02:01:18
asked me to do this. This discussion
02:01:22
chat we've had today has done me
02:01:24
wonders.
02:01:25
>> How so?
02:01:27
>> Um,
02:01:28
it's really lightened me up about about
02:01:31
rugby and about that. It's reinforced in
02:01:35
my mind that there's nothing going on up
02:01:37
here because I can remember so many
02:01:40
things. um and and talking about it
02:01:43
again with someone who understands,
02:01:47
someone who is excited to be hearing it.
02:01:50
That that that all rubs off on me.
02:01:53
>> And uh you you've drawn more out of me
02:01:57
than I think any other uh media person
02:02:00
has ever done. Oh [ __ ] the camera's
02:02:04
still rolling. We got this. And I
02:02:06
appreciate it. Yeah. No, no agenda, no
02:02:09
gotcha. Just um just a good conversation
02:02:11
with a great New Zealander.
02:02:12
>> Yeah. Well, I look forward to doing it
02:02:14
again sometime.
02:02:15
>> Yeah. Well, let's do it at your place
02:02:16
next time and we'll crack into some of
02:02:17
those reds.

Podspun Insights

In this episode, the conversation flows effortlessly as Lori Mains, a legendary figure in New Zealand rugby, shares his reflections on a life dedicated to the sport. With a candidness that reveals both pride and regret, Lori recounts his journey from player to coach, emphasizing the importance of honesty and integrity in his approach. He reminisces about the highs and lows of coaching the All Blacks, including the infamous 1995 Rugby World Cup final, where circumstances beyond their control led to a heartbreaking loss. The discussion touches on the evolution of rugby, the pressures of coaching, and the deep connections formed with players over the years. Lori's passion for the game is palpable, and his insights into leadership and legacy resonate beyond the rugby field. As he reflects on his life, he expresses a desire to be remembered not for his achievements, but for what he gave to the sport and his players. The episode is a heartfelt exploration of a life well-lived, filled with laughter, lessons, and a touch of nostalgia.

Badges

This episode stands out for the following:

  • 92
    Most heartbreaking
  • 92
    Best performance
  • 92
    Most iconic moment
  • 90
    Most emotional

Episode Highlights

  • A Life Well Lived
    Lori shares his philosophy on life, health, and the desire to live fully.
    “I want to live life to the maximum and then ideally just drop off one night.”
    @ 02m 49s
    September 07, 2025
  • Regrets of a Rugby Coach
    Lori discusses the sacrifices made during his rugby career, particularly regarding family time.
    “There are things that are more important than your own pleasure and your own sport.”
    @ 11m 17s
    September 07, 2025
  • Rebuilding the All Blacks
    Discussing the challenges and goals of rebuilding the All Blacks team after previous failures.
    “The aim was the next World Cup.”
    @ 24m 11s
    September 07, 2025
  • Building Media Relationships
    The evolution of a relationship with a media liaison officer who initially caused frustration.
    “I got to like Rick.”
    @ 33m 49s
    September 07, 2025
  • Food Poisoning Before the Final
    The team faced a food poisoning crisis before the World Cup final, affecting their performance.
    “I’m convinced it was that first batch of tea and coffee that had been poisoned.”
    @ 45m 24s
    September 07, 2025
  • Meeting Nelson Mandela
    The coach shares a memorable encounter with Nelson Mandela, highlighting his warm presence.
    “He made a point of coming to talk to me which I thought was really nice.”
    @ 52m 34s
    September 07, 2025
  • Legacy of Coaching
    Reflecting on the impact of coaching and the importance of honesty in leadership.
    “Maybe that's a legacy I'm most proud of.”
    @ 01h 07m 08s
    September 07, 2025
  • Reflections on Rugby Rules
    Thoughts on the need for rule changes to enhance the game.
    “Something's got to happen within the rules of rugby to stop this.”
    @ 01h 17m 50s
    September 07, 2025
  • Personal Growth
    A reflection on becoming more accommodating and considerate in later life.
    “I try very very hard not to hurt someone else's feelings.”
    @ 01h 27m 00s
    September 07, 2025
  • Regrets of an All Black Coach
    He opens up about his regrets regarding time spent away from family during his coaching career.
    “I have regrets about that and I think I could have managed it better.”
    @ 01h 44m 10s
    September 07, 2025
  • Aging Gracefully
    At 52, the speaker reflects on aging and staying active, emphasizing mental and physical health.
    “You have to keep active. That's the key.”
    @ 01h 50m 21s
    September 07, 2025
  • Pride in Legacy
    The speaker expresses pride in their contributions to rugby and their daughters' achievements.
    “I'm proud of what I gave to rugby.”
    @ 01h 57m 18s
    September 07, 2025

Episode Quotes

Key Moments

  • Team Rebuilding24:11
  • Media Dynamics33:49
  • Coaching Philosophy1:05:08
  • Rugby Rules Debate1:16:44
  • Emotional Growth1:41:31
  • Aging Thoughts1:49:55
  • Pride in Achievements1:57:18
  • Reflective Conversation2:01:24

Words per Minute Over Time

Vibes Breakdown

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