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- In a new book, Ivan Cleary opens up on his unhappy exit from the New Zealand Warriors, saying club management “didn’t want me”.
- Speaks of depression battle, including struggling to get out of bed while coaching the Warriors.
- Recalls the tragic death of rising star Sonny Fai and the impact it had on his Warriors teammates.
The modern-era league super coach – who both played for and coached the Warriors – has opened up in his new book about the highs and lows of his career, Not Everything Counts, But Everything Matters.
That includes the highs such as four premiership successes with Penrith and coaching his son and one of the world’s best players, Nathan, and lows such as battling depression, Sonny Fai’s tragic death and his messy exit from the Warriors.
And in a revelation that would make long-suffering Warriors fans shudder, mentor and former All Blacks coach John Hart – who was the Warriors’ executive director of football – says if things were handled better, both Ivan and Nathan Cleary could be at the Warriors.
And in his new book – released in Australia on Wednesday – it was a job he wanted to keep, asking Warriors management in mid-2011 for a contract extension after he was approached about a potential shift to coach the Penrith Panthers.
“The club replied that they wanted to wait before they extended me, which only confirmed my suspicions,” Cleary reveals in the memoir.
“It was my sixth season in charge, and although we’d made the finals consistently, the management – not including John Hart – didn’t think I had what it took to take the club to its maiden title.
“I hadn’t wanted to leave the Warriors, but they didn’t want me. They wanted someone to take them to the next level. It was a business decision, which was their prerogative.”
Cleary said he had feared after the 2009 season – where the club was rocked by tragedy and finished 14th – that he was “on borrowed time as head coach of the New Zealand Warriors”.
He felt then club owner Eric Watson and the board wanted a Kiwi coaching the side, with Brian McClennnan the favoured choice.
McClennan did ultimately replace Cleary.
But it was a decision that started a coaching merry-go-round at the club, with McClennan quitting within a season of his two-year deal.
“John tried his best to convince the Warriors to keep me,” Cleary wrote, “but when he realised that he too wasn’t being supported any longer, he was instrumental in orchestrating an early exit for me so I could join the Panthers for season 2012.”
Hart also writes about Cleary’s exit from the Warriors at the end of the 2011 season in the book’s foreword.
He said the pair had a “close bond” and that he “held him the highest regard”.
“I thought he could be the Warriors coach for decades to come. He could still be there now,” Hart wrote in the book.
“But he’d asked for a contract extension earlier that year after Penrith came calling, hoping to lure him back. When management wasn’t prepared to give it to him straight away, preferring to wait until the end of the season, the relationship broke down.
“I often wonder how those leading the Warriors look back at 2011. Had they made the right decision and kept Ivan Cleary, he might well still be the club’s head coach today. And who knows? They might have Nathan, his son, as well.”
Navigating a tragedy that would rock a club, forever putting things into perspective for me’
On January 4, 2009, rising Warriors player Sonny Fai sprinted into the surf at Bethells Beach, west of Auckland.Fai – who Cleary described as “a lovely kid with so much potential ... a superstar in the making” - had rushed into the water to save his younger brother and four cousins who had been caught in a rip.
Tragically, he was not to return and 14 years on his body has never been found.
In the book, Cleary writes about his feelings in the aftermath of Fai’s death, the impact it had on his teammates, and what it was like “navigating a tragedy that would rock a club, forever putting things into perspective for me”.
Fai – who was aged just 20 – went missing the day before the Warriors were to return to pre-season training after the side’s Christmas break.
It was Cleary who had the job of revealing the heartbreaking news to the playing group.
“I can still see Simon Mannering’s face,” he wrote.
“His expression went from happy as Larry to absolute shock and sadness in an instant. It was horrendous.
“Instead of training, we got on a bus and drove 40 minutes to the beach and the whole team walked along the shoreline, looking for Sonny. Devastatingly, his body would never be found.”
Cleary wrote how the death “shattered the Warriors community”.
Younger members of the squad were among Fai’s best friends.
“As the pre-season went on, the tougher it was for our players.”
Putting his playing number and an embroidered version of his signature on playing jerseys were among ways the club tried to honour Fai in 2009.
The side went on to finish 14th in the 16-team competition.
“It’s very hard to coach around those times because football means nothing,” Cleary confided.
“I think some of the players felt guilty because they were playing footy and Sonny wasn’t there with them.”
Cleary added it was an experience that also showed him “how vulnerable a team can be when its members are reeling”.
Cleary opens up on his battle with depression – struggled to get out of bed at the Warriors
From the outside, Cleary has exuded a calmness about him throughout his head coaching career; including his early days as Warriors coach.But in the book, Cleary revealed the battles he has faced with depression and at times self-doubt.
He said he first “encountered depression” in 2009 during his fourth season coaching the Warriors.
“I couldn’t get out of bed, at times, and I’d cry for no reason,” he wrote.
“That would only ever happen around Bec [Cleary’s wife], who was perfect as always in helping me through it. As I say, at the time I didn’t know it was depression. I just knew I was feeling pretty s****. It was an unexplained vulnerability.”
The year had been a tough one at the club; first, there was Fai’s tragic death, then poor results saw them finish well down the points ladder.
Cleary said he also made some “bad decisions” around recruitment which he regretted, including releasing some players early from their contracts.
“Nothing erodes trust and connection within the playing group more than cutting guys out of the blue.”
Cleary said he was also facing “mounting” pressure from Watson.
“After things went pear-shaped, I could feel the club had begun the search for the next coach.”
Cleary first mentions his battle with depression in the prologue of his book.
That centres around May 2019 – the first season of his second stint coaching at Penrith – when he felt “the world is closing in on me”.
“I am looking at the box of antidepressants in my hand, wondering if I should take them or not.
“’S***’, I say to myself, ‘I can’t take much more’.
“It’s May 2019. I’ve seen my doctor and explained how the world is closing in on me. It has become too much. I feel overwhelmed and I need help.
“Coaches aren’t supposed to be vulnerable. They’re supposed to carry the load of the entire club.
“I know people look at me and think I’m calm, even laid-back. But what you see on the outside doesn’t reflect what’s happening on the inside.”
The stresses included a succession of losses on his return to Penrith, unhappiness with sections of the culture of the club he had returned to and claims of nepotism around how he treated Nathan.
He also contemplated quitting Penrith, a club he has gone on to coach to victories in the past four NRL grand finals.
“In the end, I don’t quit and I don’t take the antidepressants,” he wrote.
“For a coach, the best medication is success. We beat Parramatta in round 11, then win our next six games, eventually finishing the season one win outside the top eight.”