'We've been quite ruthless': The science behind the hectic Worcester recruitment drive amid huge exodus of 20 players
It’s a good thing that ex-Wales international Jonathan Thomas has got a bit of charisma about how he presents himself and an ambitious, well-articulated vision of a brighter future at Worcester, otherwise life would currently be hell 17 weeks into his first-ever job as a head coach.
Twelve defeats have been the 38-year-old’s lot since he stepped up to the plate having initially joined the club last summer as forwards coach (the only W is from a February game cancelled due to Covid). Some reverses have been agonisingly close. The one-point loss to Gallagher Premiership leaders Bristol, a four-point gap versus champions Exeter and just three points separated them from semi-final chasing Sale.
But other setbacks have laid bare the cavernous scale of the mammoth task Thomas has taken on. You can perhaps excuse 24- and 25-point losses as merely bad days at the office, or even this weekend’s second-half fade-out at Chiefs where a 10-8 interval lead became a 10-41 surrender. But there can be no hiding place when your team ships 62 points and gets hammered at home by an embarrassing 48 points – as the Warriors did against Northampton on March 27.
In any other year, it would be panic stations for the ‘Worriers’. Saturday’s latest loss has them firmly anchored to the bottom, 14 points adrift of next-best Newcastle with just four matches remaining this season. However, the pandemic moratorium on relegation means there are no sleepless nights, only industrial style planning to lay the foundation they hope can finally break a legacy of non-achievement.
Worcester’s 15-season Premiership history is perpetual lower-end suffering. There have been two twelfth place relegations, with another on the way this year that is crucially minus the drop, five eleventh place finishes, four tenth places, two ninth places and just the single eighth place, their highest ever in 2005/06.
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The @ExeterChiefs No.8 bags his 16th #GallagherPrem try of the season!
Equalling Thomas Waldrom's record for the most in one campaign by a forward! ? pic.twitter.com/2ATQ7iwMwH
— Rugby on TNT Sports (@rugbyontnt) May 8, 2021
In all that time there have been just 93 wins from 326 outings. It’s a mere 28.5 per cent win ratio, a figure that bleakly illustrates the size of the task embraced by Thomas, the 67-cap ex-Welsh back-rower, who finished out his club career by playing two seasons for Worcester after exiting the Ospreys, the relegation campaign of 2013/14 followed by the successful next year in the Championship.
Those second-tier smiles are a world away, though, from upward mobility in the Premiership, but a grandiose plan has been hatched to shake things up like never before at Sixways and a revolving door is in full swing to try and ensure these improved results materialise in the years ahead.
It was in the wake of the March hammering by the Saints that Thomas – who gave up the cushion of a two-year assistant’s contract extension at Bristol to instead pitch up Worcester ten months ago – gave a fleeting glimpse of the immense level juggling that is going on.
“There are 20 players leaving the club at the end of the season, so there is a lot going on behind the scenes,” he said six weeks ago and Thomas has now given RugbyPass a proper insight into his thinking behind all the Worcester comings and goings, a heavy influx and exodus that would leave the head of a lesser organised coach spinning with the gigantic rate of change.
The upside of having so many players going off-contract is that Thomas doesn’t have to hang around making do with the squad he inherited from Alan Solomons, the director of rugby who left the coaching to the Welshman in early January.
Worcester next season will be very much a team moulded by Thomas, but what actually is the science of the recruitment drive he has embarked on, a flurry of high-end signings (internationals Duhan van der Merwe, Chris Ashton, Willi Heinz, Scott Baldwin, Owen Williams and Sione Vailanu) married with a plethora of mid-tier names (the likes of Christian Judge, Will Chudley, Jack Owlett, Kyle Hatherell and Harri Doel)?
“It has been a challenging process because of the salary cap being reduced and because I have come into a position (as head coach) halfway through the season in January,” he said to RugbyPass. “But it is all about your process and I have worked closely with Solly [Solomons] on that – what is our identity, what identity do we want in two, three years’ time when we want to be the team we want to be?
“What does that look like in terms of style of play, and then once you work out what your vision and your identity are you can then go right, who are the people and the players that we need to recruit to fulfil that vision that we want?
TRANSFER NEWS: https://t.co/789PskgkEG
— RugbyPass (@RugbyPass) May 4, 2021
“We have been quite ruthless in the process. It’s never ideal to have that volume of players off-contract at one time and leaving, 20 players or whatever it is, so that has certainly been really tough, some tough conversations especially when I have got a huge amount of respect and care a lot about the players that are leaving… but we have done really well.
“We have got a couple more players that we would like to bring in but when you look at the whole thing we are pretty pleased with recruitment, with what we have got coming in next year. I’m really excited about the squad we will have. It will be a smaller squad than this year but we don’t mind going with a smaller squad because we have got some good, young homegrown players coming through.
“Part of our vision is to bring through our academy players so if you want to be true to that vision, if you get opportunities to play them you have to have the balls to play them. Having a smaller squad, probably having quality over quantity, is what suits us with where we are at as a squad at the moment.”
But what about the mechanics in Worcester chasing a particular player, who does the heavy lifting with Thomas? “Solly and I work closely together on that. I’m in charge of the rugby programme so myself, together with the other coaches and Solly, will identify what is our identity and who do we want to recruit to that identity.
“The relationships didn’t connect as much… sometimes personalities don’t match, faces didn’t fit"
– England's Chris Ashton has fronted the media – including @heagneyl ??? – just 2?? days after joining Worcester from Harlequins #GallagherPremhttps://t.co/oW3OwnwWf6
— RugbyPass (@RugbyPass) January 26, 2021
“We would earmark certain players that we would want to bring in and in terms of who deals with the negotiations, that would be Solly. Solly does the dealings with the agents because my position as head coach is to focus on the performance of the team and the coaching Monday to Saturday, but we will go through that process. Myself and Solly will sit down and we will say right these are the players we want to target and then Solly goes and does the negotiations as the DoR.”
What is the Worcester identity, though, and what is the common denominator in the signings they have secured? “First and foremost we play on a 4G. You have to be cognizant of the fact that every team that plays on a 4G goes wow that was a fast game so you have to recruit players that are fast, who have the ability to play a fast game.
“There is no point bringing in players that can’t because then you are not being true to your identity. We are a team that if we play on a 4G we want to have the ability to play a fast game, we want to be a team that takes the space a defence gives us.
“What does that mean? If we need to attack and need to go through phase play then we can do that, we need a good kicking game and we need to have connected width on our attack on both sides, a two-sided attack so it gives us the ability to get the ball to edges.
The changes at Sixways continue under Jonathan Thomas https://t.co/q8LEkwA0rW
— RugbyPass (@RugbyPass) April 27, 2021
“We want to develop our whole game over the next few years but also, first and foremost, I’m a forwards coach and I want to have a powerful forward pack and that is something that is part of our evolution. The reality is you look at La Rochelle last weekend, you look at Leicester, there are some monster packs out there at the moment and the Prem has always been a little like that.
“So we need to have powerful men who reproduce big efforts. Part of that is your recruitment and your genetics, but also part of that is how you condition them so that is the appointment of David Drake (as head of performance and head of strength and conditioning).
“We need to be able to play any style of game in any weather conditions on any given day with any give referee on any given surface so we need to be able to adapt, we need to be able to play fast, to have a good skill set, to be able to play any type of game, but we need to be big, to have big powerful men who can repeat effort as well. That summarises where we want to go but that takes time. We are right at the start of the journey in terms of that recruitment process so we are excited with what we have for next year.”
The international standard of some of the signings illustrates how the Warriors are no mugs at the moment in the recruitment market, their financial savvy and ambition to become a top-end Premiership club piquing the interest of X-factor talents whose arrival at Worcester under Thomas has made rival clubs sit up and take notice how they mean business next term.
The reasons van der Merwe has gone and bagged himself an all-expenses trip home?#LionsRugby #Lions2021 #Lions
https://t.co/G5PjRSGKFX— RugbyPass (@RugbyPass) May 7, 2021
“It’s really important,” said Thomas about the Warriors bagging some big names. “I guess you can put players into two categories – you have got the soldiers and you have got the artists and you certainly don’t underestimate how important the soldiers are, the guys who pitch up every week, great mindset, really good work ethic, go hard, really physical, do a lot of the unseen work, really important.
“They are going to be the majority of your squad so it is really important with those guys that you have a really good balance there. They don’t always have to be X-factor. That can sometimes be players that aren’t born with natural talent but they certainly are world-class at things that don’t require talent.
“But then the reality is you need your artists who can light up games, who can put bums on seats, who can win you games in the moments that matter. The number of games I played with Shane Williams, I wouldn’t like to think the number of games I played with Shane but it is really handy when you are a forward and you’re getting out of the bottom of a ruck and you can see Shane going 40 metres and scoring the winning try of the game.
“That is pretty useful and the number of times that he did that for Ospreys and Wales was ridiculous, so you need those players, the van der Merwe, the Melani Nanai, the Ollie Lawrence. You need those players in your team. The balance is important between the soldiers and the artists and we think we have got a pretty good balance next year.”
Comments on RugbyPass
Billy's been playing consistently well for 2 - 3 seasons now and deserves a look in at the top level. Ioane and ALB are still first choice but there needs to be injury cover and succession. His partnership with Jordie gives him first dibs you'd think. Go the Hurricanes.
3 Go to commentsIt’s not up to Wales to support Georgian Rugby. That’s up to International Rugby and Georgia. I sympathise with Georgia’s decent attempt to create this fixture. But for Wales the proposed match up is just a potential stick to beat them with and a potential big psychological blow that young Welsh team doesn’t need. (I’m Irish BTW.)
2 Go to commentsCale certainly looks great in space, but as you say, he has struggled in contact. At 23 years old, turning 24 this year, he should be close to full physical maturity and yet there exists a considerable gap in the power and physicality required for international rugby. Weight doesn’t automatically equate to power and physicality either. Can he go from a player who’s being physically dominated in Super rugby to physically dominating in international rugby in 1 or 2 years? That’s a big ask but he may end up being a late bloomer.
28 Go to commentsIf rugby wants to remain interesting in the AI era then it will need to work on changing the rules. AI will reduce the tactical advantage of smart game plans, will neutralize primary attacking weapons, and will move rugby from a being a game of inches to a game of millimetres. It will be about sheer athleticism and technique,about avoiding mistakes, and about referees. Many fans will find that boring. The answer is to add creative degrees of freedom to the game. The 50-22 is an example. But we can have fun inventing others, like the right to add more players for X minutes per game, or the equivalent of the 2-point conversion in American football, the ability to call a 12-player scrum, etc. Not saying these are great ideas, but making the point that the more of these alternatives you allow, the less AI will be able to lock down high-probability strategies. This is not because AI does not have the compute power, but because it has more choices and has less data, or less-specific data. That will take time and debate, but big, positive and immediate impact could be in the area of ref/TMO assistance. The technology is easily good enough today to detect forward passes, not-straight lineouts, offside at breakdown/scrum/lineout, obstruction, early/late tackles, and a lot of other things. WR should be ultra aggressive in doing this, as it will really help in an area in which the game is really struggling. In the long run there needs to be substantial creativity applied to the rules. Without that AI (along with all of the pro innovations) will turn rugby into a bash fest.
24 Go to commentsSouth Africa rarely play Ireland and France on these tours. Mostly, England, Scotland and Wales. I wonder why
1 Go to commentsIt was a let’s-see-what-you're-made-of type of a game. The Bulls do look good when the opposition allows them to, but Munster shut them down, and they could not find a way through. Jake should be very worried about their chances in the competition.
2 Go to commentsHats off to Fabian for a very impressive journey to date. Is it as ‘uniquely unlikely’ as Rugby Pass suggests, given Anton Segner’s journey at the Blues?
1 Go to commentsSad that this was not confirmed. When administrators talk about expanding the game they evidently don’t include pathways to the top tier of rugby for teams outside of the old boys club. Rugby deserves better, and certainly Georgia does.
2 Go to commentsLions might take him on if they move on Van Rooyen but I doubt he will want to go back, might consider it a step backwards for himself. Sharks would take him on but if Plumtree goes on to win the challenge cup they will keep him on. Also sharks showing some promising signs recently. Stormers and Bulls are stable and Springboks are already filled up. Quality coach though, interesting to see where he ends up
1 Go to commentsAnd the person responsible for creating a culture of accountability is?
3 Go to commentsMore useless words from Ben Smith -Please get another team to write about. SA really dont need your input, it suck anyway.
264 Go to commentsThis disgraceful episode must result in management and coach team sackings. A new manager with worse results than previous and the coaching staff need to coached. Awful massacre led by donkeys.
1 Go to commentsInteresting article with one glaring mistake. This sentence: “And between the top four nations right now, Ireland, France, South Africa, and New Zealand…” should read: And between the top four nations right now, South Africa, Ireland, New Zealand and France…”. Get it right wistful thinkers, its not that hard.
24 Go to commentsHow did Penny get the gig anyway?
3 Go to commentsNice write up Nick and I would have agreed a week ago. However as you would know Cale & co got absolutely monstered by the Blues back row of Sotutu, Ioane and Papaliti and not all of these 3 are guaranteed a start in the Black jumper. He may need to put some kgs before stepping up, Spring tour? After the week end Joe will be a bit more restless. Will need to pick a mobile tough pack for Wales and hope England does the right thing and bashes the ABs. I like your last paragraph but I would bring Swinton, Hannigan into the 6 role and Bobby V to 8
28 Go to commentsThe Crusaders can still get in to the Play Off’s. The imminent return of outstanding captain Scott Barrett and his All Black team mate Codie Taylor will be a big boost.There are others like Tamaiti Williams too. Two home games coming up. Fellow Crusader fans get there and support these guys. I will be.
2 Go to commentsCant get more Wellington than Proctor.
3 Go to commentsWhy not let the media decide. Like how they choose the head coach. Like most of us we entrust the rugby system to choose. A rugby team includes the coaches. It's collective.
14 Go to commentsHi NIck, I have been very impressed with him and he seems a smart player who can see opportunities which Bobby V _(who must be an international 6_) doesn’t see or have the speed to take advantage of. If he continues to improve and puts on 5kgs then he could be a great 8. He is a bit taller than Keiran Reid at 1.93m and 111 kgs, so his skill set fits his body size and who knows where it will lead. I hope the spate of Achilles tendon issues have been dealt with by the S&C people. It’s been a very long time since Mark Loane and Kefu stood out at 8. The question is will we be able to hold onto him, if he does make it he will be pretty hot property. I disagree with the idea of letting them go to the Northern Hemisphere and then bring them back.
28 Go to commentsBilly Fulton 🤣🤣🤣🤣 garrrmon not even close
14 Go to comments