JUST AS HIS playing career always demanded attention, the post-playing odyssey Ronan O’Gara has embarked on over the last seven years — from Paris, Christchurch and now the Bay of Biscay — is as fascinating as it is unique.
It would have been easy for O’Gara to remain settled in Cork in retirement and follow the path of so many of his former team-mates, learning their coaching trade within the Irish system and rising the ranks from within.
O’Gara had two successful years with the Crusaders. Source: Martin Hunter/INPHO
But the former Ireland out-half has taken a different route — the scenic one, perhaps — up the coaching ladder, by firstly cutting his teeth in France with Racing 92 and then further proving his credentials as an exciting, innovative and ambitious coach by joining Scott Robertson’s Crusaders coaching team.
While in New Zealand, O’Gara helped the Crusaders to back-to-back Super Rugby titles and, on an individual level, developed a new perspective on the sport and life, expanded his rugby intellect, and earned a reputation as an outstanding, and sharp, tactician amongst a dressing room of All Blacks.
It may well have been easy to stay in Christchurch beyond this season and continue to work with the Crusaders into 2020, but O’Gara was keen to broaden his horizons further and, amid speculation linking him with a return to Racing and a role with France at the World Cup, fancied a new challenge at La Rochelle.
Days after the Crusaders lifted the Super Rugby title, O’Gara was upping sticks with his young family again and relocating to western France, where he has little time to get his feet under the table as La Rochelle’s new head coach.
Working alongside director of rugby Jono Gibbes, the former Leinster forwards coach and Ulster head coach, the 42-year-old has just three weeks to settle into the role before La Rochelle’s Top 14 opener away at Clermont on 24 August.
“It’s pretty hectic,” O’Gara, who was back in Ireland for the weekend, admits.
“It’s exciting. They have a good attitude. It’s different obviously the fact that it’s an 11-month season. It’s important we put a good solid foundation in place and then just try and get better every month.
“It’ll be a pretty clear message we about how we want to play and what we put importance on.”
While O’Gara was an attractive proposition for a number of clubs and received offers from other Top 14 outfits, the Cork native was firm in his mind over his next career step.
O’Gara doesn’t get distracted by job titles, rather the job spec, and at La Rochelle, he’ll have the chance to continue to coach the players on a daily basis, both in defence and attack having fulfilled both of those separate roles at Racing and then at the Crusaders.
The former Ireland out-half helped the Crusaders to back-to-back Super Rugby titles. Source: Photosport/John Davidson/INPHO
“Jono is obviously director of rugby and he has responsibility for areas and I have responsibilities for areas so,” Ireland’s all-time record points scorer continues.
“It just gives me a good opportunity to see which side of the ball I prefer coaching and also getting more and more into the attack.
“I’ve done the defence but it keeps moving on. You just need to keep adding strings to your bow in that regard. It will be good for me to be able to coach both sides of the ball and then obviously have the responsibility of the global vision.
After two highly successful years in New Zealand, O’Gara — now in his seventh season as a coach — believes he is returning to France with a number of layers of experience on his coaching CV, but he knows he can’t just bring the same philosophy to La Rochelle and expect it to work in a completely different environment and culture.
But that in itself is part of this journey of discovery and learning he finds himself on. The external theory is that O’Gara is biding his time abroad before returning home to take over one of the big jobs here, namely the Munster head coach role.
His name, along with Paul O’Connell, has been consistently linked with a position at his native province, but O’Gara firmly believes staying away from Thomond Park in the early years of his coaching career is helping him become a better coach.
“It can so easily happen [go back to Munster] but at the minute I don’t think it was the right move for either party,” he says. “This challenge [at La Rochelle] jumped out at me so once you get that inner feeling, I always trust my instincts in that regard and just said it seems right.
“I had a good opportunity to do something I love. I’m very young as a coach so I just think that the most important thing is you keep getting better.