IRFU PERFORMANCE DIRECTOR David Nucifora is set to extend his contract with the union.
The Australian joined the IRFU on an initial five-year contract in what was a newly-created position in 2014.
That contract is due to expire this summer but The42 understands that Nucifora is set to extend his deal with the IRFU for up to four years.
Nucifora with Ireland head coach Joe Schmidt. Source: Dan Sheridan/INPHO
57-year-old Nucifora is essentially the top man in the IRFU, with overarching decision-making power on matters such as development pathways, succession planning, and player and coach contracts.
Capped twice by the Wallabies as a player, Nucifora is a former head coach of the Brumbies and the Blues, while he also spent nearly five years as general manager of the ‘High Performance Unit’ with Rugby Australia.
When he was appointed as the IRFU’s performance director in 2014, the union said Nucifora would oversee “planning and evaluation, the elite player development pathway and succession planning, and professional coach development and succession planning.”
Nucifora’s role also includes responsibility for “national team performance, provincial team performance, national age-grade teams and Women’s team performance, sport science and medical services, elite referee development and National Professional Game Board [NPGB] and policy development.”
The Ireland men’s national team were Grand Slam champions last year, although the quarter-final defeat at the 2015 World Cup was a major disappointment. Ireland Women won the 2015 Six Nations but have since been in decline and are currently ranked 10th in the world.
Nucifora has strongly pushed the development of sevens rugby in Ireland, with the women’s squad improving on the World Sevens Series and the men’s squad – relaunched in 2015 – having qualified for the Series for the first time, with the likes of Ireland 15s internationals Adam Byrne and Rory O’Loughlin passing through the system in recent years.
The Ireland U20s are the current Grand Slam champions and Nucifora has invested much of his time in focusing on the development pathways in this country, pushing the four provincial academies to produce players who are ready for senior rugby.
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