When former Springboks coach Jacques Nienaber and attack coach Felix Jones left the team following their 2023 Rugby World Cup win in France, SA Rugby needed to fill their vacancies ahead of the start of the new international season.
Nienaber and Jones were influential figures in the Springboks setup as they were in charge of the defence and attack, respectively. The systems they helped put in place were vital in the runs to win the Webb Ellis Cup in 2019 and 2023. The duo has since moved on, with Nienaber joining Irish province Leinster and Jones linking up with the England national team.
Nienaber and Jones left big gaps and SA Rugby made sure they got coaches of similar stature, recruiting former All Blacks flyhalf Tony Brown and former Ireland hooker Jerry Flannery.
The appointment of Brown and Flannery to Rassie Erasmus’ backroom staff is a statement of intent by the Springboks.
There’s especially plenty of excitement about the arrival of Brown, who will be in charge of the Boks’ attacking play, because of how he went about his job as a player, at the Highlanders and All Blacks and also in stints in Japan and with the Sharks and Stormers in South Africa.
As a coach, he first cut his teeth at Sanyo in Japan in 2006 as an assistant and has since gone on to be an assistant and coach of the Highlanders.
What may have attracted the Boks to Brown is the work he did as the attack coach of Japan, especially at the 2019 World Cup. The Japanese attack was of the best at the tournament, with their ball retention, handling and offloading out of the top drawer.
Brown shed light on his coaching philosophy.
“I control everything around our attack and our game, and how we prepare for each team each week around our tactics and making sure we win more than we lose,” said Brown in an interview with Otago Daily Times in 2019.
“That is what I love about coaching. Creating the style of game we want to play. Creating the week-to-week tactics.
“It always differs from week to week … all based around speed and skill, creating a point of difference around playing in the stadium,” he said.
Flannery as a defence coach is a meticulous appointment by SA Rugby in terms of continuity. He worked with Erasmus and Nienaber during their spell at Munster in 2016 and 2017 , as the forwards coach.
The 41 Test cap hooker should understand the Boks’ defence system because he was there when Nienaber established it at Munster. Combining that with his work as the defence coach of Harlequins, he should improve the Boks’ defence going forward.
Tony Brown:
Date of birth: 17 January 1975
Place of Birth: Balclutha, New Zealand
Playing career:
Coaching experience:
Education:
Jerry Flannery
Date of birth: 17 October 1978
Place of Birth: Galway, Ireland
Playing career:
Coaching experience:
Education:
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