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On Friday's Rugby Daily, Richie McCormack brings you team news ahead of Ireland's W6N game with Italy in Parma on Sunday. We hear from Scott Bemand and Neve Jones on that Azzurri test. Leinster have been linked with a big-name replacement for Jordie Barrett. Conor Murray to reach 200 Munster caps in Castlebar tomorrow. Paul Gustard will not be Leicester coach next season, and Bill Beaumont calls for unity with the RFU.
On Friday's Rugby Daily, Richie McCormack brings you team news ahead of Ireland's W6N game with Italy in Parma on Sunday. We hear from Scott Bemand and Neve Jones on that Azzurri test. Leinster have been linked with a big-name replacement for Jordie Barrett. Conor Murray to reach 200 Munster caps in Castlebar tomorrow. Paul Gustard will not be Leicester coach next season, and Bill Beaumont calls for unity with the RFU.
Ce samedi 21 décembre pour le compte de la 12ème journée de TOP 14, l'USAP se rendra au Stade Jean Bouin pour défier le Stade Français entrainé par Paul Gustard. Deux équipes au coude à coude au classement qui verra définitivement l'une passé devant l'autre au coup de sifflet final. On en parle en compagnie d'Hugo Bové du service des sports.
We're joined by Stade Francais' England international centre Joe Marchant to discuss the timing of his move from Harlequins, adjusting to life in France, his England past and hopefully future, what Steve Borthwick said to him after the World Cup, being frozen out by Eddie Jones, Paul Gustard's use of certain imagery in meetings, his famous prospective father in law, the Top 14 play-offs and the potential of facing Bordeaux in Bordeaux despite finishing in the top two and much more. Plus, we discuss all the action from the final round of the regular season, look ahead to the Barrages and the access match and chat about Vannes' promotion from PRO D2... Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
As human beings – what do we set out to achieve every day? From a human psychology perspective we know that all humans want to have a productive day in a relative sense, need to have a feeling of achievement, attainment or a feeling of being appreciated. As we have said on a regular basis on the podcast – what needs to happen for a person to go home at the end of the day and say “I had a good day”. Throughout our series – we have touched on this topic many times, but there is still much to learn. Many of us operate within a team structure. We discussed team dynamics with the wonderful Paul Gustard and how he aligns, connects and drives the performance of his teams. Damian Hughes very kindly shared his views on how a performance culture is created. But we want to dig deeper into something we believe to be absolutely fundamental and a question that persists – how is the overall climate created and sustained by leaders, but also by the team itself to ensure goals are met, standards are maintained and all parties feel they are operating in a equitable and inclusive environment? The word culture has been front and centre over the last 3 years especially in a business context and culture is integral to achieving on a day to day basis. Climate however is different – climate describes what it “feels like” to be in that team, in that group/situation and how is that climate conducive to people achieving their goals? Its our view that building and sustaining standards requires a considerable effort, building a culture of continuous growth requires a commitment from everyone – so the question persists – how is that done, how is that achieved? We will be exploring all this today with Maggie and tapping into her extensive experiences.
Paul Gustard is a former England assistant coach who has also coached at Saracens, Harlequins, Benetton and now Stade Francais. He discusses life under Eddie Jones, the potential for central contracts to solve some of English rugby's problems, cultural differences coaching abroad, the genuine hatred between Saracens and Harlequins and how that affected his time at the latter and much more... Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
Throughout our careers, many of us will fondly recall successful teams we were a part of with a smile and a glint in our eyes. We will reminisce about the bonds and connections made and the mutual success achieved. There will have been something about the team which made it special – the key question - what was it? What specifically made that team successful and a pleasure to be part of. On the flip side – we can all think back to teams we didn't enjoy being a part of and the variety of reasons that determined that experience. We have concluded through this series that the psychology behind us as people is crucial when we think about the design of work and teams – we need certain things to happen to enable us to be successful. For the majority of people, they want to be successful, they want to grow, be a part of something – but the dynamics of a team can get in the way. The culture of it, the different roles, how is accountability shared, where does the decision-making lie, what if people don't get on – this is the reality of a dynamic team and it doesn't happen by accident. Today we will explore this topic in detail with someone who has been a member of many successful teams and is now heavily involved in the curation, growth and development of a team in the elite sporting arena of Rugby Union.
Dan speaks to Paul Gustard, now defence coach at Benetton, formerly England defence coach, Harlequins head coach and coach with Saracens.Paul, who won two England caps and represented the Barbarians, also played for Leicester Tigers, London Irish and Saracens,They reflect on Paul's journey to Italy and how he feels reinvigorated.They talk about the following:Why do you love coaching?What gets players to buy into a coach quickly? Conversely, what puts the players off?How you can simplify the way you coach to get more from the players?How to change group work to make it more powerful and impactful?What's holding back coaches from being better versions of themselves?Using a "game face" in coaching and matches.You've lost on Saturday in a game you could have won. In training sessions, do you address the errors or move on?The contact area seems to be favouring the team that "jackals" best. Where you would focus your coaching tactically and technically to improve your ball retention?How do you break down a defence that comes at you?
Jim, Goodey and Andy Rowe are back to discuss the best Premiership final ever and revel in Harlequins' achievement! Plus, we hear from Quins coach Jerry Flannery about how angry he was when Paul Gustard left, the unique culture at the club and how they turned things around. We chat about how big a blow Alun Wyn Jones' shoulder injury is for the British & Irish Lions and whether the tour will still go ahead. And, Big Jim's nemesis Tim Swinson is on the show to talk about taking his spot in the Scotland squad in 2015 and replacing him at Saracens and going on to becoming player of the year this season! Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
Harlequins coach Nick Evans joins us this week after their record comeback in the Premiership semi-final against Bristol and Big Jim is eating plenty of humble pie as he admits he ain't seen nothing like the mighty Quins! We discuss how the current coaching group have turned things around since Paul Gustard's departure, just how far Marcus Smith can go, whether that was the best Premiership game we've ever seen and much more. Plus, we look at Exeter's win over Sale and ahead to the final, chat about the additions to Eddie's England squad and the start of the Lions tour this weekend and debate whether a global club competition is needed after Benetton's win in the Rainbow Cup and the Blues' Super Rugby Trans-Tasman victory. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
We're joined by the hottest property in English rugby at this moment in time in the legendary - Danny Care. In an incredibly entertaining episode Danny opens up to reveal his honest thoughts on the most controversial happenings and relationships throughout his career. From revealing the truth behind what happened with his fall out with Eddie Jones, his thoughts on Paul Gustard, missing out on the lions and analysing his teammates C.H.A.T plus much much more. In this episode we also have a new segment where we analyse the listeners stories behind their friends weirdest nicknames and of course another instalment of 'Club House Stories'. ---- Look incredibly charming this summer and get 20% off all of Beaufort & Blakes incredible new summer collection and beyond - no code needed - https://www.beaufortandblake.com/Also don't embarrass yourselves now that the world has opened up and go to the Manscaped website and sort our your; bush, ears and nose so that you don't get caught short by the chicas! CHICA'S HATE A BUSH - Get 20% off everything and free shipping with the code - RIGBIZ20 - https://uk.manscaped.com/
Paul Gustard is a professional rugby coach who is the current assistant coach at Treviso. Paul also spent time coaching Saracens, England & Harlequins. In this episode, we talk about his roots, his coaching philosophy, working under Eddie Jones, punch ups in training and his aims in Italy. Rallen's Rant Patreon Page : www.patreon.com/user?u=12324770 Rallen's Rant Spotify Podcasts Link : open.spotify.com/show/3gcUGQrJzDdCxYKnWfbSjG Rallen's Rant YouTube Link : www.youtube.com/user/Richieallen2/videos
Jonathan Davies joins Sean O’Brien and Lee McKenzie from inside the Wales camp as they discuss some of the new faces that’ll be on show in the upcoming 6 Nations. The guys recall the time they won their first international cap and Foxy tells the story behind one of the most controversial selection calls in Lions history. Rugby player turned professional boxer Nick Campbell, talks about his career change and how he still keeps in touch with his former Glasgow teammates Finn Russell and Richie Gray. And Adam Jones pops in to reflect on the news that Paul Gustard has left Harlequins. Join the House of Rugby Facebook GroupWant to hear more great podcasts from JOE?All To Play For, Joe Cole and Tom Davis bring huge guests and hilarious stories from football’s front linesTKO with Carl Frampton, bringing you unprecedented access and brutal honesty from inside the world of boxingSportspages - Dig into the stories behind some of the greatest sports books ever writtenBoys Don't Cry with Russell Kane, the show that gets men talking about the things men never talk aboutUnfiltered with James O'Brien, our critically-acclaimed and award-nominated interview seriesPioneers with John Amaechi - Meet the trailblazers behind Britain’s most exciting businesses
Big Jim and Goodey are back with the inside scoop on all the drama that happened at Quins with Paul Gustard leaving the club and we catch up with England's new star Paolo Odogwu to talk Eddie Jones, the Italian alternative, Cov, clothing lines, building a brand and much more. Plus, we dissect the Six Nations squads, share some juicy rumours and Jim goes full Scottish for Burns night... See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Eddie Jones joins the pod to chat about his Six Nations squad, catching waves and England's style of play. Ugo Monye, Danny Care and Chris Jones discuss Paul Gustard leaving Harlequins and why it didn't go to plan. Chris Ashton stops by in full Worcester gear to talk about his latest move. Plus, we discuss Dan Lydiate's return to Wales and Scotland snapping up Cameron Redpath.
Despite little or no rugby (there were a few Pro14 match) we still manage to find plenty rugby related stuff to jabber on about. The Six Nations squads reaction, Paul Gustard leaving Quins, Covid testing issues, among other talking points. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Episode 1 of Two Woods, Four Quarters: A Harlequins Podcast. Hosted by cousins; Will Wood & Michael Wood.
Our Great Coach for this episode is Paul Gustard. Paul is Head Coach at Harlequins Rugby club in the United Kingdom. In a ten year career, he played more than 150 rugby Premiership games for Leicester Tigers, London Irish and Saracens. He started coaching in 2009 at his old club Saracens guiding them to Premierships in 2013, 2015, 2016 and a European Championship in 2016. Paul was appointed England Rugby's Defense Coach in 2015, under Eddie Jones, where more success followed; two Six Nations titles, one Grand Slam, a series win for the first time in Australia and two series wins in Argentina. If you would like to send us any feedback or if you know a Great Coach who has a unique story to share, we'd love to hear from you. Either send us an email at thegreatcoachespodacst@gmail.com You can also follow us here Twitter @CoachesGreat Instagram @the_great_coaches_podcast YouTube The Great Coaches Podcast channel page LinkedIn The Great Coaches Podcast showpage
With Rupert in Los Angeles at the Sevens, Will Greenwood caught up with former Leicester teammate Paul Gustard. The Harlequins Head of Rugby opens up about 4am starts, lack of sleep and the difficulties of contract negotiations. The 44-year-old also speaks about Saracens and their troubles, working with Eddie Jones, plus he reveals the reason he left his England role.
After the Champions Cup quarter finals brought some scintillating rugby, this week Brian Moore is joined by Harlequins lock James Horwill to go through the weekend's European results We speak with James as he tells us how to go about beating Saracens, what makes them stand out, and whether they are the team to beat in this year's competition. With Ireland making up half the teams left in the competition, Malcolm O'Kelly speaks with us on Stockdale's apology, why the Irish internationals are struggling, and whether Leinster and/or Munster will get through their semi finals. For a Scottish perspective Rory Lawson joins to discuss a disappointing weekend for Glasgow and Edinburgh. We ask whether losing might be beneficial for Edinburgh in the long run, how important the rest of their season is, and why Glasgow just couldn't keep up with Saracens. We speak with James about life at Quins including the impact and importance of Chris Robshaw, and what Paul Gustard has brought to the club. Plus we get his thoughts on what chances the Australian team have at the World Cup. Finally we speak with Maggie Alphonsi about the growth of the women's game and how to continue it.
We've put together some highlights from our first few months of Superfan content, including interviews with Joe Marler, Wayne Barnes, Nick Mullins, James Horwill, Matt Hampson, Nick Evans, Siya Kolisi, Paul Gustard and Andy Powell. Thanks to everyone who is supporting us to make this extra content, and if you’d like to listen to all of these interviews, as well as all of the upcoming content for 2019, check out Patreon.com/therugbypod See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
LISTEN TO LIAM NAPIER TALK WITH RADIO SPORT BREAKFAST ABOVE England coach Eddie Jones has described South Africa's shock victory over the All Blacks as great for world rugby but resisted the urge to stoke fires ahead of a showdown with Steve Hansen's men later this year."The All Blacks' losses are quite cyclical. They're batting 90 per cent. They lose one test every year. Everyone's excited but they're still a great team," Jones said today in response to the All Blacks' 36-34 defeat in Wellington.England and the All Blacks will clash at Twickenham on November 10, the first time in four years the two sides will meet as well as the first under Jones."It was a great effort from South Africa. The thing that always strikes me – and I've been coaching 20 years – is the value of emotion in our game. South Africa are under the pump, the coach is going to get sacked, they go to Wellington, they can't win. They come out with this unbelievable defensive effort. New Zealand are just slightly off their game, and they win."The test is: can you keep batting at that intensity? At the World Cup you've got to win seven games in a row. "Who's going to have the consistency to get up there and challenge. We're aiming to be that team. Like any great team they are beatable. Every team is beatable but you've got to have the consistency to sustain that effort. "South Africa have done it this year but can they sustain that? We've seen Australia do it last year, we've seen Ireland do it." England's chance arrives soon. With newly appointed assistant coach John Mitchell they may be better placed to cause an upset. But with two big coaching personalities, they could just as easily implode over the next 12 months. All bets are off which way this dice will roll.Mitchell's arrival in England camp next week shapes as something of make or break for Jones' coaching tenure. Winning one of the past six tests is dire for any major test nation, let alone one with the world's greatest resources. Jones is, therefore, under significant pressure to find an immediate when England welcomes the Springboks, All Blacks, Japan and Wallabies to Twickenham in November. And, so, after many of his core management team deserted him, one year out from the World Cup Jones has turned to Mitchell, a man he has known for 20 years, to help spark a revival and restore confidence. It is an intriguing move. Whatever lavish praise Jones shelled out today there is no denying Mitchell's polarising history. His time with the Lions in South Africa and Perth-based Western Force were marred by allegations of player mistreatment and revolt which, ultimately, led to his exit. With Mitchell on board, it seems England can expect more stick than carrot. "I don't know the circumstances, unfortunately what you read is not necessarily the truth, as some politicians say," Jones said after naming his 36-man squad for a three-day camp in Bristol. "I'm sure he's had difficult situations with teams - we all have. Any coach who's been successful has, but you move on and learn from it and I don't expect that to be an issue with our team or with John. "Do we need that? No. We need good relationships. That's not a hand on the knee and lovey-dovey. You need to have robust conversations. And robust conversations drive better performance, which is what we are after." With 17 jobs in the last 24 years, Mitchell has a colourful CV but his long-time association with Jones now sees him take on the defensive responsibilities previously held by Paul Gustard, who left to coach Harlequins this season.England's RFU forked out £200,000 (NZD$398,000) to extract him from the Bulls, and despite Jones suggesting he always wanted to recruit another experienced coach, the disruptive turnover of management makes Mitchell's appointment appear the last roll of the dice."If you look at the last three World Cups, how many senior coaches has each team had that's won them? 2007, 2011, 2015 all had two senior coach...
Brian Moore is back for another season of no nonsense rugby discussion as he and a host of guests dissect the week's top stories on and off the pitch. This week he is joined in studio by Telegraph Rugby News Correspondent, Gavin Mairs as they go through the opening weekend of domestic rugby. Listen in to hear what they think of Leicester's sacking Matt O'Connor after one match, why Brian thinks Todd Blackadder "is about to explode", and how much ground England need to cover a year out from the World Cup. We speak with Harlequins' forwards coach Alex Codling about life under Paul Gustard and their dominant win over Sale, and with James Downey for everything that happened in the PRO14.
Man of the moment Tadhg Beirne joins us to discuss his first Ireland call-up, reaching the PRO14 final, Scotstoun scars, delivering pizza to Sean Cronin and much more. We preview the PRO14 and Premiership finals, look at Paul Gustard's appointment at Quins and get the lowdown from Goodey after his visit to England training. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
This weekend sees Scarlets and Exeter defend their titles, Saracens and Leinster look to add to their overflowing trophy cabinets, and Pat Lam’s star-studded Barbarians attempt to rip up the form book at Twickenham. We’ll talk about Paul Gustard and to Lord of the Fan Van himself - Scott Quinnell - in this week’s episode.
#96: Illtud Dafydd and Steff Thomas ask who's answerable for players' injuries on plastic pitches? Who replaces Paul Gustard as England's defence coach as he joins Harlequins and how frustrated will Luke Charteris, Josh Adams and Tomas Francis be after being released from the Wales' summer squad? They preview the Guinness Pro14 Final with TodayFM's Neil Treacy, look ahead to the Aviva Premiership Final before assessing Crusaders v Hurricanes and the Barbarians' trip to Twickenham Twitter: twitter.com/therugbyconvo Facebook: Facebook.com/TheRugbyConversation Website: therugbyconversation.wordpress.com
Stephen Jones welcomes Alex Lowe of The Times, Adam Hathaway from various tabloids and Duncan Bech from PA.The panel bring you incisive royal wedding analysis, before focusing on the strange timing of Paul Gustard's move to Harlequins, with England 15 months out from a World Cup what does it say about morale, does it reveal a vote of no confidence, and who should replace him?There's also a full review of the Premiership/Pro 14 and preview of the finals. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
We now know the four teams in the Aviva Premiership and PRO14 finals, Saracens, Exeter, Scarlets and Leinster. Joining Brian Moore to discuss the latest news and action from rugby is former Fiji coach Ben Ryan. We discuss the appointment of Paul Gustard to Harlequins, as Ben reveals he was down to the final two for the role. Former Leinster prop Reggie Corrigan joins to debate the upcoming PRO14 final, and whether rugby is becoming boring. Nigel Owens is back from referee camp in Australia to tell us all about the discussions had down under. We speak with CEO and founder of the RPA, Damian Hopley, about mental health, how the RPA helps players and coaches alike to have open conversations on this subject, and we reflect on the RPA Awards ceremony. Plus, Brian and Ben have a candid conversation about how Ben's childhood experiences have affected the way he coaches and friendships.
Paul Gustard and Shaun Edwards are contenders for the vacant head coach role at Premiership side Harlequins. Read more >> https://ift.tt/2rDfzCx
Hear the full media conference of England head coach Eddie Jones and his assistants Neil Hatley, Steve Borthwick and Paul Gustard, ahead of the defending champions' tournament-opener against France at Twickenham.
Russell Hargreaves looks back on events at Twickenham before speaking to England defence coach Paul Gustard, number 8 Nathan Hughes, lock George Kruis and wing/try scorer Marlon Yarde.
England head coach Eddie Jones, defence coach Paul Gustard and forwards coach Steve Borthwick speak to the media, after downing the Pumas in a brutal showdown at Rugby HQ!
England defence coach Paul Gustard talks to Russell Hargreaves of the England Rugby Podcast at the national side's three-day training camp in Brighton - where judo has been the order of the day against of next month's autumn internationals! #CarryThemHome
Two arch procrastinators find out what an actual working week looks like from England coach, Paul Gustard. They also talk about some other things from the Presidential Suite they now call home. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Murray Kinsella chats to former Ireland coach Eddie O'Sullivan about England's new head coach Eddie Jones, their attack, and their defensive system under Paul Gustard. Eddie joined us via video link so apologies for the drop in sound quality in places. This podcast is the audio version of our Six Nations Show video series, which is available here: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=--Oy-28j5hA Theme music credit: Pitx - Found Smoke (Creative Commons licence)
New look England – we hear from Eddie Jones, Steve Borthwick and Paul Gustard plus Elliot Dally and Dai Young give their reactions #englandconnected
Hear new England head coach Eddie Jones, plus assistants Paul Gustard and Steve Borthwick address the media at Twickenham, after naming their first 33-man squad ahead of next month's Six Nations championship.