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Tony Brown could be on his way back to Dunedin. Photo: Getty Images
Tony Brown could be on his way back to Dunedin. Photo: Getty Images
Former Highlanders coach Tony Brown is tipped to make a return to the franchise - and may take on the head coaching role.

With the departure of defence coach Glenn Delaney at the end of the season, to the Scarlets side in Wales, a vacancy has opened up in the coaching staff.

Brown is believed to be wanted by the franchise as the side heads into a new era as several leading players are set to leave at the end of the season.

The issue would be if Brown did come back, what role he would take.

Brown is an attack coach and Delaney was the defence coach. A shuffling of roles is possible.

Brown first joined the Highlanders in 2014 as attack coach and masterminded much of the side's flair and enterprise which led it to win the title a year later.

He then took over from Jamie Joseph as Highlanders head coach in 2017, though it was a reluctant acceptance after the franchise struggled to find anyone after Joseph departed.

Brown left at the end of that season to help coach the Japan side with Joseph. He took over as head coach of the Sunwolves side this year.

Both Brown and Joseph are tied to the Japanese team until the World Cup this year and what happens at that tournament will decide the duo's future with the Cherry Blossoms.

Brown's family still lives in Dunedin and he returns to the city as often as possible.

An Otago born and bred player, Brown was very popular in his time with Otago and the Highlanders and is highly rated in coaching circles.

Head coach Aaron Mauger, who signed a three-year deal with the franchise, will still have one year left on his contract in 2020. Mauger has brought a more detailed focus to the side, although it is struggling to make the playoffs this season.

It would be unusual for a head coach to move into a different - and lesser - role but is not unprecedented. Tana Umaga moved from head coach to defence coach with the Blues this season.

The departure of Delaney does not come as a total surprise. His family was supposed to move to New Zealand last year but never did and he spent much of the last off-season back in the United Kingdom.

Highlanders chief executive Roger Clark could not be contacted yesterday.

 

Comments

I find this article disturbing. Don't we already have a Head Coach and assistant.

Have they not both transferred their families to Dunedin, reside here, go to school here and have made a clear commitment to the franchise.

To beat an article up in this manner I would liken to a stab in the back, particularly given they are all overseas at the moment.

Not even certain Tony Brown would be happy about the innuendo.

Not withstanding...what has Tony Brown ever won as a Head Coach?

The article is inappropriately timed and frankly rude in the extreme.

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