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JOHN CONNOLLY continues to tease and tantalise about his future in rugby.
He is indicating he would never say never about applying for the position of Wallabies head coach, but it may be another key position will be created for him.
As far as the Australian Rugby Union is concerned, Connolly is finishing up after the World Cup and is proceeding on that basis, drawing up a high-profile panel headed by chief executive John O'Neill to choose his successor and advertising the job worldwide.
O'Neill does not envisage Connolly remaining in the job, although he revealed yesterday the two of them had discussed the possibility of another position being created for the Wallabies coach to ensure his knowledge and expertise were not lost to the game in Australia.
"I've had one brief conversation with John about him staying on after the World Cup, possibly structuring a position for him in the talent identification area, in which he is outstanding," O'Neill said. "But him staying on as head coach has never been raised.
"I inherited John's arrangements with my predecessor (Gary Flowers) and it's my understanding that it's his intention that, win, lose or draw, he would step down at the end of the World Cup."
If Connolly's Wallabies were to qualify for the final, that almost by definition would mean the All Blacks had been eliminated. In the blood-letting that would follow in New Zealand, Canterbury's Robbie Deans -- the man favoured to succeed Connolly as coach of the Australia -- almost certainly would be installed as the new All Blacks coach.
In that event, the question being asked in Australian rugby is, "who's next in line"? None of the potential candidates has credentials the equal of Connolly, who took over the Wallabies when they were a wreck of a team at the end of a 2005 campaign in which they had lost eight of their nine previous Tests.
Connolly, meanwhile, is being portrayed in Wales as a whingeing Australian for complaining that it is unfair for the Wallabies to have to concede home-ground advantage to Wales in Cardiff on Saturday in a match that forms part of a World Cup hosted by France.
Yet Wales coach Gareth Jenkins has virtually conceded Connolly has a point. "There is no question that we have an advantage by playing Australia at home," Jenkins told The Guardian newspaper.
"But it is one that will only count if we are united as a nation. Playing Australia in Cardiff for us is better than it would have been in France but it will still be about our performance. The difference is that we will have, I hope, 70,000 voices roaring us on."
http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au...012430,00.html