As many in the province get their heads around Sean Horan's swift exit as head coach of the Bay of Plenty Steamers, none seem more stunned than the man himself. Kelly Exelby sat down yesterday with Horan to detail his demise.
MONEY.
It might make the world go round but for Sean Horan, head coach of the over-achieving Bay of Plenty Steamers for the past three years, a lack of cash was behind his swift and unexpected exit 11 days ago from the province he led to equal third in the ITM Cup this season.
In a wide-ranging 90-minute interview yesterday, his first since leaving Baypark HQ, the 39-year-old father of two says he is still stunned by his rapid demise from the region's top rugby job, although he makes it clear he doesn't want to go out all guns blazing. The New Zealand coaching landscape is small and coming across as bitter will do him no favours.
There's a lot he won't say publicly, although in typical Horan style what he does say that's printable is short, sharp and direct.
"I said to someone a few years back that the only guarantee in this game is that you'll get sacked at some stage. In the end I resigned, but I wasn't prepared to work within the parameters that they [the union] were trying to put in place," he said.
"When those stipulations have the huge potential to create stress and affect my family, then it's something I wasn't prepared to be part of.
"I'm hopping off the conveyor belt with no idea when or where I might get back on ... I honestly can't tell you what [the union's] motivation was for readvertising my job, although I have a few personal thoughts [but] a review process that takes two months to complete before they decide to readvertise means they're looking for someone else."
ALTHOUGH plenty has been going on behind the scenes, including lots of jockeying and politicking for Horan's job, a falling-out between him and assistant coach Paul Feeney and a failed bid by Horan to win the Wellington Lions job while negotiations for a further term with the Steamers were in limbo, he was ultimately undone by one thing - Bay of Plenty's determination to slash budgets for next year.
It might seem trivial, but after his end-of-year review Horan's new contract - the one he ultimately didn't sign - proposed to cut his salary and give the Steamers less money to work with next season.
It was untenable, he said, particularly with Bay of Plenty again expected to finish in the national championship's top four.
"I met all that was required of me this year, met the four KPIs [Key Performance Indicators] and got paid all my [KPI] bonuses 100 per cent when I left last week yet this was the first year with the Steamers I'd never had my review professionally outlined.
"My first meeting [with chief executive Mike Rogers], there were a few stipulations around personal development and a development plan with a couple of staff that I could barely live with, but where the whole thing unravelled was that I wouldn't agree to stipulations that included giving me less money and less control as head coach-director of rugby without consultation, all by someone who doesn't know how rugby runs professionally.
"I'd been there when the union was insolvent, I'd been there in'08 when the team cooked its own meals and bused places because we couldn't afford to fly and yet they wanted more but wanted to pay less next season.
"I wasn't prepared to stand up in front of guys like John Pareanga, Culum Retallick, Lance MacDonald, Tanerau Latimer and Luke Braid - guys who were there in'08 when we constantly overachieved given our level of resourcing - and deliver them that news."
Horan found it particularly galling to be told he was a victim of his own success.
"It was like 'here's Sean, he's been here for a while, he'll be all right if we cut the bottom line but keep the same KPIs'. I wasn't going to let that happen."
Of his falling out with Feeney, who stepped in late when Horan's assistant Steve Miln went farming, all Horan would say was it was fraught from the start and another example of the union saving money, with Feeney already on the payroll in a high performance role.
"It was a forced marriage because of finances. Milny left, and with it went the cost of his salary, car and phone. Rat [Feeney] was there and ready to be used in a dual role, I had to accept it ... but I'm not God, I'm not going to slay him and anything that went on is between me, him and the team."
ONE Bay player, speaking anonymously, confirmed the tension between the two coaches, saying it was even more evident after the mid-season loss to Auckland which put the team in a losing spiral that would ultimately cost them a place in the ITM Cup playoffs.
"Sean was good but if you know the way he coaches it's intense. The biggest drama all year was him and Rat - they didn't see eye to eye and it was very obvious to the team.
"Sean's such a dominant figure who doesn't like being undermined. Rat's one of the best coaches I've had in terms of a game plan and drills but there was no middle ground and who's to say whose way was better.
"Losing that game to Auckland we got ourselves in the crap and it was the breaking of the season, putting more stress on their relationship. Some of the boys were happy with Sean, some weren't, but I don't think he needed to go. The union just needed someone in there to mediate between two guys who were pigheaded."
There's plenty of behind-the-scenes rumbling for Horan's old job. Applications close next week, with Feeney in the hunt along with what's likely to be plenty of others, including former coach Kevin Schuler, Counties-Manukau's Milton Haig, dumped Hawke's Bay coach Peter Russell and locals Clayton McMillan and Darrell Shelford.
Horan is adamant Bay punched above their weight and said if he was unpopular with some players it didn't bother him.
In 2006 he applied for head coach but lost out to Andre Bell. Two seasons later he applied again and missed out to Waikato's Greg Smith, although the job was soon his anyway when Smith was sacked five days from the season's start.
"In'09 I was told I didn't interview well yet Milny and I were the ones they turned to when it became a shambles. I was blamed for Smith's ousting yet I told them at the time it was a mistake because Greg was good technically but that's it. We'd turned our back on the Steamers culture, imported too many average players and staff from over the hill."
Horan almost chucked it in at the start of Smith's brief reign but was talked into staying by the players and staff. He's proud of what he achieved against provincial heavyweights, especially this year, Bay's second-most-successful in 100 years.
"We were growing. Our recruitment and retention's smart and we base a lot on character and guys wanting to be there, good cats who want to work hard and learn every day.
"I've helped put systems and processes in place that will set us up for many years to come, which is why it's so gutting to see what's transpired."
Horan has no next move beyond spending summer with his kids and wife Jacinta, who owns a busy physiotherapy business and also works with New Zealand athletics and the world champion Black Ferns.
But there's a hole there that will take a long time to fill.
"I love the Bay and already I'm missing the Steamers immensely, which is probably normal when you bleed for something for five years. But I've never done it for the kudos, it's been about the players."