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Super Rugby winner Rob Penney tight-lipped on Crusaders coaching future

Super Rugby winner Rob Penney tight-lipped on Crusaders coaching future

Straits Times22-06-2025
Crusaders head coach Rob Penney and players celebrate with the trophy in the dressing room after their victory over the Chiefs in the Super Rugby Pacific grand final at Apollo Projects Stadium in Christchurch on June 21, 2025. PHOTO: AFP
Canterbury Crusaders coach Rob Penney refused to be drawn on his future at the team's helm after leading his side to the Super Rugby Pacific title with victory over the Waikato Chiefs on Saturday.
Penney's side sealed a 16-12 win in a tense clash in Christchurch to earn the Crusaders a record-extending 15th Super Rugby title, but the 61-year-old gave no indication whether he would return for a third season in charge.
'Not just yet,' said Penney told a press conference after Saturday's match, when asked if he had made a decision on his future.
'You wouldn't want to work anywhere else. I'm never going to work anywhere else in the industry. I'll just take time to see what falls out of the (end of season) review.'
The Crusaders' Super Rugby title win marked a significant turnaround after the struggles of 2024, when the team missed out on the play-offs at the end of Penney's first season in charge.
Despite that failure, management decided to stick by the former New South Wales Waratahs coach and Penney delivered, with the Crusaders finishing second in the regular season standings behind the Chiefs.
His side then went on to extend their remarkable run of success on home soil, winning a 32nd consecutive play-off match in Christchurch to reclaim the trophy once more.
'Winning's fantastic,' said Penney.
'Last year we had some hiccups and some things that didn't go well for us. This year we've been on the other side of the ledger.
'We've had some calls that have gone for us and we've had some injured boys available a lot. Small margins. At the business end the right people know how to do the right things and that was evident today.
'There's some people here that were contributing today that are going to be here for a long time, and it's just exciting what the future holds.' REUTERS
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Sign up now: Get ST's newsletters delivered to your inbox Diogo Jota and his brother died after the Lamborghini they were in had veered off a motorway and burst into flames on July 3. SINGAPORE – It was a regular work afternoon for Eddy Chua on July 3 when the Singaporean received a Telegram notification that read 'Diogo Jota died'. Stunned, he turned to Google to check if it was true and saw early reports from several outlets claiming the Liverpool footballer had passed away. Soon after, chatter picked up in a WhatsApp group comprising fellow Liverpool fans, and reports from more established sources – Liverpool Echo, Sky News and the BBC – confirmed the worst: the Portuguese forward and his brother Andre Silva, also a professional footballer, had died in a car crash in Zamora, Spain. The authorities said Jota, 28, and Andre, 25, died after the Lamborghini they were in had veered off a motorway and burst into flames shortly after midnight on July 3. Chua, 29, found it difficult to return to work after reading the news. The content lead said: 'Throughout the late afternoon, I was just stoning in front of my screen, trying to take in the fact that one of our own just left like that. 'Some of the fans posted Jota's wedding photos to the chat too which made me even more emotional. He had just won the Premier League , gotten married and Liverpool had also been making ambitious signings this summer. 'It was supposed to be like a start of something new for Jota, in his career and family. But he is just gone like that.' Like Chua, many Singaporean Reds fans were still coming to terms with the news hours after it broke. Real estate agent Eric Kwek recalled how a month ago, he was in Liverpool among hundreds of thousands of fans, as Jota and the rest of the squad marked the club's 20th top-flight league title with an open-top bus parade through the city. 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PHOTO: REUTERS While many praised his abilities on the pitch, what left a lasting impression on Kwang Yu, who runs online sports platform Grandstand alongside his day job in marketing, was Jota's personality. When Liverpool visited Singapore as part of their pre-season tour in 2023, the 32-year-old recalled that Jota took the time to answer questions in the media mixed zone. He said: ' He was one of the players who stopped for a post-match interview by one of our media colleagues. It was very chill, nice chat, down-to-earth and very humble. 'One of the questions that was asked to him is which fantasy player would he pick for the new season, and cheekily he mentioned himself. Very, very nice guy, I would say. Not every player would stop for an interview, so kudos to him.' Benjamin Raj, 32, a senior executive at a statutory board, said the news was a sobering reminder of life's fragility. He said: 'The game has lost a true legend. 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