logo
John Eales: half CEO, half legend, 100 per cent guru on art of captaincy

John Eales: half CEO, half legend, 100 per cent guru on art of captaincy

Times5 days ago
Let's start with the nickname because, as everyone seems to know, John Eales's nickname is 'Nobody'. As most people also seem to know, it came about because of the saying that nobody is perfect. Eales laughs and protests: 'Nobody ever calls me that.' Not strictly true, but here's how it started.
It's at the end of Australia's tour in November 1996. Eales, by that stage, had a World Cup winners' medal from 1991 and had been captain for a year. He was already a long way to establishing himself as one of the all-time greats.
At the end of the tour, the players had a tradition where they would buy one other player a joke gift. Eales was given a book from the Mr Men series; it was Mr Perfect.
'No one had ever called me that,' Eales, 55, says. 'But then Campo [David Campese] says, 'Oh, that's ridiculous, nobody's perfect' and he must have thought it was funny and said it to a journalist, who interpreted it as what my team-mates called me. The reality was that nobody ever called me that, but once that had happened, it just had a life of its own.'
Only very occasionally thereafter did any team-mates call him 'Nobody' and that, he says, was just 'to annoy me'. Meanwhile, here in Sydney, passers-by still sometimes call him it. 'What's funny,' he says, 'is that over in the UK, I get it all the time.'
If it has somehow stuck, though, it does not feel inappropriate. We are in his offices near the harbour talking about the state of the game, the state of the British & Irish Lions series and the challenges of captaincy. It is fascinating to see how his mind works. He is half rugby legend, half chief executive, 100 per cent cerebral.
I ask him about the psychology of the third Test, with the Lions already 2-0 up. 'People overrate emotion as a defining difference between winning and losing,' he says. 'When you're playing at this level in big Test matches, it's going to be very similar across the board. No one wants it more than someone else.
'Look, I played in a lot of great teams and also in other teams where people said, 'They lack passion' — but in reality what we lacked was skill. I have a strong view that there's often very little difference between the best teams in the world at their best. The biggest difference is when they're at their worst. And it's not being bad for minutes, it's being bad for moments.'
Eales cites the lineout the Wallabies lost straight after half-time in the first Test in Brisbane that led to a Lions try: 'It's just having those lapses for moments. It is what costs you momentum.'
So if he was Harry Wilson, the Australia captain, he wouldn't be focusing on emotion for this final Test? 'Going into a big game like this, your number one, two and three focus has to be: what skills do we need? What are the tactics we're taking into this game? And what are the skills we need to execute expertly to be able to deliver on those tactics and strategy?' Eales says.
'There might be ten different ways you can win a rugby game. So then you've got to say: OK, what is our best chance to beat this Lions team this weekend, and what are we going to focus on to be able to do that?'
I ask him how different the task would be for a captain today; it is 24 years since he left the fray and leading young people is now a different challenge. He says two things. One: he's glad that he didn't have to deal with social media, and two: the standards of competition across leading nations are higher, which makes it harder to get to the top.
Yet he's not persuaded that the way teams work now is really so different. He goes back to when he joined the Australia senior set-up in 1991: 'For a new guy coming in, I hope it's not a lot different to when I first walked into a Wallabies camp and [the captain] Nick Farr-Jones shook my hand and said: 'Great, it's so good to have you as part of this team. We expect you're going to be a part of this for a long time to come,' ' Eales says. 'When I was captain, I always used to think: I want someone to feel like I did that day.
'I also remember before playing my first Test, Tim Gavin [the No8] came up and said: 'Mate, don't worry, whenever you're out there, we're there with you. If you need us, we're there.' '
He sees no reason why that shouldn't be the message today, too. Don't forget that leadership and high-performance is pretty much Eales's specialist subject.
The captain he loved watching as a boy was the Frenchman, Jean-Pierre Rives. 'I found him an inspirational guy,' he says, 'and I later became very friendly with him.' In his playing career, he enjoyed jousting with Martin Johnson — 'a guy I had the highest regard for'.
Eales is the man who retired as a World Cup-winning captain and then looked to see how to apply his understanding of leadership to business. In the process, he wrote two books called Learning From Legends — one where he interviewed 41 sportspeople, the other a business version with 34 commerce leaders.
He recalls the chapter with the tennis player, Pat Rafter: 'I remember him talking about when he was unsuccessful in the early stages of his grand-slam career and the pressure he was under and struggling with that pressure,' Eales says. 'His brother, who was his coach, said to him: 'Pat, what you have to understand is that no one performs well under pressure. It's the people who can remove the pressure from that environment that are actually able to perform well.' That to me was a great insight.'
He then gives his own experience of the same issue: 'When I first started [place] kicking, I struggled. John Connolly [the Queensland coach] was the one who said: 'Mate, you're kicking.' I said: 'No I'm not.' I tried to get out of it but couldn't. Then I'd go to bed the night before the game thinking: I hope I don't get a kick to win or lose a game. That is a horrible thing and the wrong thing to be thinking.'
Eales did two things to help himself: he ingrained a set-kicking routine and persuaded himself that if this process was right, then he could forgive himself whatever the result.
'When I spoke to Pat probably 15 years later, I looked back and saw that it's exactly what I did when I was in my early 20s to remove that pressure of the moment,' he says. 'There's no magic in that. But it's liberating.'
Eales on the learning stages of a captain is brilliant. You start off, he says, 'being unconsciously incompetent, like you don't know what you're not good at. And then you're consciously incompetent: you know what you're not good at and you work at it.
'You've got to be consciously incompetent before you can actually be consciously competent, which is when you know what you're not good at — you still work at it but now you're actually competent at it. The last step is unconsciously competent, where you're just doing things naturally.'
Where he was unconsciously incompetent, he says, was not realising he wasn't having 'the tough conversations' — 'You had to really work at them, and then you became more natural at them.'
The coach, Rod Macqueen, was his problem. 'I don't think we started off on the right foot,' he says. 'Initially I didn't have the confidence to confront him directly.'
This came to a head in 1997. 'He was challenging me saying, 'You're not supporting me enough in my decisions.' And I said: 'Well, actually, you're not including me enough in your decisions.' It was a longer and more colourful conversation than that.'
Yet it was the turning point that forged one of the great coach-captain duos. Together they won the 1999 World Cup. Two years later, Eales captained the most recent Wallabies team to win a Lions series. By then, he had been captain for six years.
It makes you wonder, then, where Saturday's two captains have got to in the learning process. Wilson has only led Australia since last autumn. The Lions' Maro Itoje started as England captain six months ago. Both are presumably still learning fast because, as we know, nobody is perfect.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

How Prince Andrew slept with 'a dozen women' within a year of marrying Fergie: Astonishing secrets of BOTH their infidelities revealed, her 'Machiavellian' revenge and truth about 'unusual' relationship now, told in book Royals tried to ban
How Prince Andrew slept with 'a dozen women' within a year of marrying Fergie: Astonishing secrets of BOTH their infidelities revealed, her 'Machiavellian' revenge and truth about 'unusual' relationship now, told in book Royals tried to ban

Daily Mail​

time24 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

How Prince Andrew slept with 'a dozen women' within a year of marrying Fergie: Astonishing secrets of BOTH their infidelities revealed, her 'Machiavellian' revenge and truth about 'unusual' relationship now, told in book Royals tried to ban

The father of the groom and mother of the bride – lovers 20 years earlier – sat in the third carriage waving to the crowds. Prince Philip and Susan Barrantes, whose former husband was Prince Charles 's polo manager, had been part of the same social circle for years. Now they were together publicly celebrating the marriage of Prince Andrew to . That morning in the summer of 1986, Andrew had been made Duke of York, the traditional title for the monarch's second son. The red-haired bride looked striking in an ivory satin wedding dress with a 17ft train that bore the letters A and S intertwined in silver beads.

Love Island winners Toni Laites and Cach Mercer reveal their surprising plans for £50,000 cash prize - and it's NOT what you'd expect
Love Island winners Toni Laites and Cach Mercer reveal their surprising plans for £50,000 cash prize - and it's NOT what you'd expect

Daily Mail​

time24 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Love Island winners Toni Laites and Cach Mercer reveal their surprising plans for £50,000 cash prize - and it's NOT what you'd expect

The couple were crowned the winners of the twelfth series of Love Island on Monday evening. And now, Toni Laites and Cacherel 'Cach' Mercer, both 24, have revealed what they plan to spend their £50,000 cash prize on - and it's far from what you would expect. When asked how she plans to spend the money, Toni, a Las Vegas cabana waitress, candidly admitted: 'I need to pay off my student loans. I want to invest it. I don't want to go on some crazy shopping spree.' While Cach, a dancer from London, agreed with her, adding: ' Cost of living crisis, I'll save it!' Toni made history as the first American contestant to enter the UK Love Island villa, and she and Cach seem set on making their relationship work despite the transatlantic distance. The couple had a rocky beginning after meeting during Casa Amor, as it wasn't long until the pair found themselves in a major love triangle with Harrison. Yet once Harrison decided to leave the villa with Lauren, Toni set her sights on Cach, and the pair went from strength to strength. Reflecting on her journey, Toni said: 'I feel like I'm representing a whole nation! I didn't expect to make it past week one. 'Hopefully now we will just find time to enjoy one another's company and not let everything else take over.' Cach added: 'It feels amazing to win. I was 100 per cent authentically myself, and luckily, the public liked it, so I'm buzzing. 'I appreciate every moment on the show, it's a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity and I wouldn't have done it any other way.' Toni will also be remembered as part of the series' fan-favourite 'Big Three' – a name coined by viewers to describe her close friendship with runners-up Shakira Khan and Yasmin Pettet, who placed second and third, respectively. She said: 'Friends I will have for life. That was a big takeaway. The girls were my rock for the eight weeks.' But it looks like Toni and Cach may be spending even more time together in front of the camera, as ITV are reportedly planning to offer the couple a spin-off show chronicling their long-distance relationship, according to The Sun. A source told the publication: 'Even without the win, Cach and Toni's story should make great TV just due to their exciting lives. 'It will also be a chance to include Shakira and Yasmin when they visit Toni and catch up on the outside.' Daily Mail has contacted ITV for comment. The couple's interview follows ITV's release of the voting breakdown for the final, confirming it was the closest result in the show's history. In total, Toni and Cach received 33.5% of the vote, with Shakira Khan and Harry Cooksley taking 26.2% - showing the result was a close call. Yasmin Pettet and Jamie Rhodes came third with 22% and Angel Swift and Ty Isherwood placed fourth with 18.3%. Toni and Cach won despite the bookies' odds revealing it was Harry and Shakira in the running to win, just hours ahead of the live final. And fans seemed delighted with the decision as they took to Twitter to wish the couple congratulations. They penned: 'Justice served well done Toni & Cach .. what a gentleman man he is'; 'Congratulations Toni and cach. First American and she won. Iconic moves'; 'a bombshell + a casa boy winning love island - iconic!'; 'Love island didn't disappoint with Cach & Toni winning';

Curling champion Constantini set to throw rocks at 'special' hometown Winter Games
Curling champion Constantini set to throw rocks at 'special' hometown Winter Games

Reuters

time24 minutes ago

  • Reuters

Curling champion Constantini set to throw rocks at 'special' hometown Winter Games

Aug 6 (Reuters) - In exactly six months' time the spotlight will shine on the tiny Alpine town of Cortina d'Ampezzo, which along with the city of Milan will be staging the Winter Olympics. The Games also took place in the resort in 1956 but for Cortina native and Olympic champion curler Stefania Constantini, the 2026 edition promises to be extra special. "I think it will be a really big event in a really little mountain village," Constantini told Reuters by video call. "Cortina is a little village, yes, but it's huge for me. I think Cortina is special, it is a really beautiful place, which also survives thanks to the tourists. "When Cortina will host the Olympics, a lot of people will come and see us compete. People will have the chance to see a really good level of sport, but also to enjoy a great place. It will be a really special moment." Constantini will be a defending champion at next year's Games after teaming up with Amos Mosaner to secure Italy's first curling medal in the mixed doubles three and half years ago in Beijing. The 26-year-old, among the athletes who are part of the Italian police force, said her success at the 2022 Games had transformed both the sport's profile in the country, and her own life. "In Italy, curling is not a very big sport," she added. "What me and Amos did in Beijing really made a difference. It's really good to see how Italians right now are cheering for us and follow us during our tournaments, our preparation. "Curling is not very big, but we are growing ... My life really changed a lot in one week, before leaving for China I was just a normal girl working part time and playing. "I came back a week later with a gold medal. We were nobody and then we came back and it was 'Okay, now we know you. Now you are someone important in Italy'." As hosts, Italy are guaranteed spots in all three curling events at the 2026 Games, with Constantini saying the nation's curlers would relish the prospect of having a home crowd cheering them on. "I have lived two different experiences. I played in China, really far from home, where it was easy to focus just on curling," she added. "I was just me, my sport, my team. In less than one year, it will be really different, because we will play in Italy. I will play in my hometown with my family, my friends. "It will be a little weird. Usually we don't have someone that is cheering for us during the competition, because we play a lot in Canada. It will be really fun to compete with fans that are cheering for us, making some noise for us." After parting ways following their Beijing triumph, Constantini once again linked up with Mosaner this year and the pair are favourites to bring home another gold medal after taking the title at the world championships in May. "It's funny because we played together in the Olympics and then we didn't play together for three years," Constantini said. "I think we did great, we didn't practice very much before the world championships. We did just some practice together, throwing rocks and trying to find our dynamics again. "But it was not a problem at all. I think we really communicate well. We work together. We listen to each other. I think we can really find that perfect dynamic on the ice." The opening ceremony of the 2026 Winter Olympics will be held on February 6, though curling will kick off the action two days earlier at the Cortina Olympic Stadium.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store