Mooney sacked as Qld Reds coach
Ewen McKenzie is at, or near, the top of a "long list" of candidates to be embattled Queensland's seventh Reds coach in a decade of turmoil.
But the man whose own axing in 2000 triggered a domino-like sequence of short-term coaching stints, John Connolly, is near the bottom.
McKenzie has emerged as a favourite for what's been a poisoned-chalice post after the sacking of a shattered Phil Mooney, two unsuccessful Super 14 seasons into his three-year contract.
McKenzie led the Waratahs to three Super 12/14 finals series in five years in charge and is a close friend of new QRU chairman Rod McCall, who delivered the news to Mooney on Friday morning.
McCall admitted he'd already sounded out an interested McKenzie just days after his 1991 World Cup-winning Test teammate had himself been sacked as coach of Paris glamour club Stade Francais.
The Melbourne-raised former Wallabies prop has been seen as a leading contender as coach, or even chief executive, for the proposed Victorian team in an expanded Super 15 in 2011.
"He has been lined up with all this talk of Melbourne but the only thing he said to me was `Melbourne is a long way away' and of course he'd be interested," McCall said.
"Other people, and Ewen included, have mentioned that this is a great challenge and something they would look forward to."
The QRU have only once in their long history recruited an outsider to coach the Reds and that ended in disaster when Eddie Jones took them to the wooden spoon in 2007.
But McCall stressed maroon blood was not a pre-requisite, as they look for a "quality" coach whose reputation can help overturn their perennial problem of luring stars from interstate and overseas.
"I think we're about getting the best coach available, a high-profile person who can attract a couple of international players from other franchises," he said.
But McCall bluntly denied Connolly, who last coached the Wallabies at the 2007 World Cup, was a prime candidate.
"It's a long list and I don't know how close to the bottom he would be but he'd be pretty close to the bottom," he said of the former 12-year Reds mentor.
"I just think John hasn't coached for a while and there's quite a lot of blokes right in the middle of high-level professional coaching delivering good results and we need to be focussed on someone like that."
Connolly's long-time lieutenant Michael Foley, now forwards coach at NSW, who played a key role in Reds vice-captain Berrick Barnes' defection to the Waratahs, also looms as a potential successor to Mooney.
The QRU will aim to have a short-list in place in a fortnight with a view to appointing Mooney's successor well before players reassemble for pre-season training in five weeks.
Mooney, who initially did well to instill spirit and an attacking brand of play after Jones' forgettable tenure, wanted to see out his contract.
But McCall was against the idea, stressing that appointing a new coach was the only way to prevent extra instability at Ballymore when 23 players are due to come off contract in 2010.
"With a new Super 15 franchise expected to begin recruiting in Australia very soon we could not have afford the risk of being stranded in no man's land," he said.
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